![The Past, Present, and Future of Social Inequality](http://s1.studyres.com/store/data/002382574_1-626896ea621ec14451e7cb140c1c8b7a-300x300.png)
OPINION ON THE PROHIBITION OF FINANCIAL CONTRIBUTIONS
... from abroad if it comes from member States of the European Union (EU). Such exceptions exist for example in Spanish legislation (donations to political parties by other states or other public foreign organs are forbidden, with the exception of subsidies given by the European Parliament), in Germany ...
... from abroad if it comes from member States of the European Union (EU). Such exceptions exist for example in Spanish legislation (donations to political parties by other states or other public foreign organs are forbidden, with the exception of subsidies given by the European Parliament), in Germany ...
Political Participation by Race - American Studies @ The University
... not as strong for blacks.7 Lower-income blacks are far more likely than their white counterparts to belong to organizations, particularly those with political and religious affiliations. Not only are low-income blacks more likely to join associations, but they are also more likely than low-income wh ...
... not as strong for blacks.7 Lower-income blacks are far more likely than their white counterparts to belong to organizations, particularly those with political and religious affiliations. Not only are low-income blacks more likely to join associations, but they are also more likely than low-income wh ...
Popular Music as a Public Relations Resource in Political Campaigns
... would use a campaign song that included a specific platform or even a reference to a candidate’s individual identity. All campaign music after 1980 consisted of unmodified popular songs used just as they were written.”10 As political campaigns began appropriating, rather than producing, music for th ...
... would use a campaign song that included a specific platform or even a reference to a candidate’s individual identity. All campaign music after 1980 consisted of unmodified popular songs used just as they were written.”10 As political campaigns began appropriating, rather than producing, music for th ...
Civil-Military Relations in a Civilized State: Panama
... elite. The Guard was multi-racial and multi-class in character, which put it at ...
... elite. The Guard was multi-racial and multi-class in character, which put it at ...
Ch.3
... Carry out the most deplorable acts of violence Carlos Marighella Give that violence meaning Targets should have symbolic significance Violence designed to be frightening Those who supported the revolution would not need to fear terrorist violence Revolutionary terrorism in an urban setting would des ...
... Carry out the most deplorable acts of violence Carlos Marighella Give that violence meaning Targets should have symbolic significance Violence designed to be frightening Those who supported the revolution would not need to fear terrorist violence Revolutionary terrorism in an urban setting would des ...
Rational Choice as an Explanation
... has, perhaps, been overdrawn. Other research suggests that people do have privileged knowledge of their own reasons for acting (White 1980). Earlier findings that people do not know their reasons for acting may be the result of people forgetting their reasons for engaging in trivial actions (McClure ...
... has, perhaps, been overdrawn. Other research suggests that people do have privileged knowledge of their own reasons for acting (White 1980). Earlier findings that people do not know their reasons for acting may be the result of people forgetting their reasons for engaging in trivial actions (McClure ...
Two faces of „relational turn“ in the social sciences
... a position to both submit to and exercise this power. They are never the inert or consenting targets of power; they are always its relays. In other words, power passes through individuals. It is not applied to them … The individual is in fact a power effect, and at the same time, and to the extent t ...
... a position to both submit to and exercise this power. They are never the inert or consenting targets of power; they are always its relays. In other words, power passes through individuals. It is not applied to them … The individual is in fact a power effect, and at the same time, and to the extent t ...
Key Problems - Stanford University
... domestic social forces. The concept of dependency, nevertheless, has maintained its core principle through these various uses: “the analysis of dependency is above all the analysis of ‘restricted choice.’”2 In both structuralist and Marxist traditions, the asymmetrical relationship between core and ...
... domestic social forces. The concept of dependency, nevertheless, has maintained its core principle through these various uses: “the analysis of dependency is above all the analysis of ‘restricted choice.’”2 In both structuralist and Marxist traditions, the asymmetrical relationship between core and ...
citizenship questions and environmental crisis in the niger delta
... of public policy are political conflict. In essence, political conflict is ultimately about publicly determined access to public goods and services. Such goods and services, we may note, may be as a result of environmental exploitation and exploration. For example, government's direct policy on the ...
... of public policy are political conflict. In essence, political conflict is ultimately about publicly determined access to public goods and services. Such goods and services, we may note, may be as a result of environmental exploitation and exploration. For example, government's direct policy on the ...
Conflict Linkages: Democratic Institutions and Their Effect on Ethnic
... The literature on divided and plural societies is particularly relevant as it discusses institutions allow groups to coexist in a state. Although most authors agreed on the importance of “grand” coalition building, proportional elections, and mutual veto powers to bring all groups into the ...
... The literature on divided and plural societies is particularly relevant as it discusses institutions allow groups to coexist in a state. Although most authors agreed on the importance of “grand” coalition building, proportional elections, and mutual veto powers to bring all groups into the ...
Evolutionary Socialism
... the German Social Democratic Party. To clarify and defend his position, Bernstein was induced to write the present work whose title, rendered literally, is The Presuppositions of Socialism and the Tasks of ...
... the German Social Democratic Party. To clarify and defend his position, Bernstein was induced to write the present work whose title, rendered literally, is The Presuppositions of Socialism and the Tasks of ...
Civil War Iowa and the Copperhead Movement
... little attention here. Wubben's major emphasis throughout is upon the political struggle within the state and even more upon the Democratic division between those who generally supported the Union war efforts and those who opposed these efforts in different ways and in varying degrees. Since the so- ...
... little attention here. Wubben's major emphasis throughout is upon the political struggle within the state and even more upon the Democratic division between those who generally supported the Union war efforts and those who opposed these efforts in different ways and in varying degrees. Since the so- ...
module guide 2010/11 - University of Warwick
... Kenny, M., ‘The Case for Disciplinary History: Political Studies in the 1950s and 1960s’, British Journal of Politics and International Relations, vol.6, 2004, 565-83. Mackenzie, W.J.M., The Study of Political Science Today, Macmillan, 1971. Marsh, D. and Stoker, G., Theory and Methods in Political ...
... Kenny, M., ‘The Case for Disciplinary History: Political Studies in the 1950s and 1960s’, British Journal of Politics and International Relations, vol.6, 2004, 565-83. Mackenzie, W.J.M., The Study of Political Science Today, Macmillan, 1971. Marsh, D. and Stoker, G., Theory and Methods in Political ...
David Graeber What is Anarchism?
... revolutionary thought had made much of an impression (e.g., Dirlik 1991), but over the course of the early twentieth century was largely displaced by it.8 Any number of prominent figures of the time, from Picasso to Mao, began their political lives as anarchist and ended up Communists. But one can a ...
... revolutionary thought had made much of an impression (e.g., Dirlik 1991), but over the course of the early twentieth century was largely displaced by it.8 Any number of prominent figures of the time, from Picasso to Mao, began their political lives as anarchist and ended up Communists. But one can a ...
No Way Out: Travel Restrictions and Authoritarian Regimes
... giving citizens more ‘space’ follow from the freedom of movement, the process has the potential to destabilize autocracies. We hew closely to the definition of freedom of movement provided by the CIRI Human Rights Data Project. The Project’s ‘freedom of foreign movement and travel’ indicator embodies ...
... giving citizens more ‘space’ follow from the freedom of movement, the process has the potential to destabilize autocracies. We hew closely to the definition of freedom of movement provided by the CIRI Human Rights Data Project. The Project’s ‘freedom of foreign movement and travel’ indicator embodies ...
29-1 Comeau.pmd
... between regime type and economic growth. In addition to the types of political regimes prevailing in the period of study itself, the political legacy from previous years is also accounted for. The basic hypothesis is that regime type, whether democratic or autocratic, is likely the result of a relat ...
... between regime type and economic growth. In addition to the types of political regimes prevailing in the period of study itself, the political legacy from previous years is also accounted for. The basic hypothesis is that regime type, whether democratic or autocratic, is likely the result of a relat ...
Reconciliation as a Political Value
... The objective requirements of reconciliation seem to be morally more minimal than the requirements of justice. Consider the case of a political order that is widely accepted, and that permits contestation over remaining disagreements in democratic fora, under background conditions of political equal ...
... The objective requirements of reconciliation seem to be morally more minimal than the requirements of justice. Consider the case of a political order that is widely accepted, and that permits contestation over remaining disagreements in democratic fora, under background conditions of political equal ...
Article - Universidad Complutense de Madrid
... the controversial underlying conceptual assumptions and the multiple meanings of the ESM concept, this notion has acquired such hegemony in the debate about intervention paradigms? We wish to discuss the ‘invention’ – by Salais et al. (1986) – of this concept in the framework of the building and ins ...
... the controversial underlying conceptual assumptions and the multiple meanings of the ESM concept, this notion has acquired such hegemony in the debate about intervention paradigms? We wish to discuss the ‘invention’ – by Salais et al. (1986) – of this concept in the framework of the building and ins ...
State (polity)
![](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Leviathan_by_Thomas_Hobbes.jpg?width=300)
A state is an organized political community living under a single system of government. Speakers of American English often use state and government as synonyms, with both words referring to an organized political group that exercises authority over a particular territory. States may or may not be sovereign. For instance, federated states that are members of a federal union have only partial sovereignty, but are, nonetheless, states. Some states are subject to external sovereignty or hegemony where ultimate sovereignty lies in another state. The term ""state"" can also refer to the secular branches of government within a state, often as a manner of contrasting them with churches and civilian institutions.Many human societies have been governed by states for millennia, but many have been stateless societies. The first states arose about 5,500 years ago in conjunction with the rapid growth of urban centers, the invention of writing, and the codification of new forms of religion. Over time a variety of different forms developed, employing a variety of justifications for their existence (such as divine right, the theory of the social contract, etc.). In the 21st century the modern nation-state is the predominant form of state to which people are subject.