Conceptualizing the West in International Relations
... pretend to establish a new grand theory, or paradigm, within International Relations. It does not suggest that culture provides the principal organizing or explanatory principle in world politics. However, it does suggest that the discipline would benefit from more consciously reflecting on how the id ...
... pretend to establish a new grand theory, or paradigm, within International Relations. It does not suggest that culture provides the principal organizing or explanatory principle in world politics. However, it does suggest that the discipline would benefit from more consciously reflecting on how the id ...
Public Relations: Diaspora, Media, and the State(s)
... The possibility of enacting a diasporic public sphere therefore depends on the possibility of transgressing the “Westphalian political imaginary” of public sphere theory. This dissertation understands diasporic literature as participating in such a transgression; its means and ends, however, deserve ...
... The possibility of enacting a diasporic public sphere therefore depends on the possibility of transgressing the “Westphalian political imaginary” of public sphere theory. This dissertation understands diasporic literature as participating in such a transgression; its means and ends, however, deserve ...
ibn khaldun`s conception of dynastic cycles and
... (Yurdusev, 1993), because it is stressed throughout the study that the core (or we may call it as ‘unit’) of political works of Khaldun is the state (dynasty). Therefore, this study does not exclude the state in a post-modern approach while discussing the Khaldun’s approach. The third reason for put ...
... (Yurdusev, 1993), because it is stressed throughout the study that the core (or we may call it as ‘unit’) of political works of Khaldun is the state (dynasty). Therefore, this study does not exclude the state in a post-modern approach while discussing the Khaldun’s approach. The third reason for put ...
Pierre Bourdieu as a Post-cultural Theorist
... necessarily wrong with respect to the range of subject matter that Bourdieu’s work addressed, but that they overreach in suggesting that whatever they are talking about was Bourdieu’s ‘concept of culture’. One thing to notice is that none of these commentators can actually quote Bourdieu as providin ...
... necessarily wrong with respect to the range of subject matter that Bourdieu’s work addressed, but that they overreach in suggesting that whatever they are talking about was Bourdieu’s ‘concept of culture’. One thing to notice is that none of these commentators can actually quote Bourdieu as providin ...
Can Tocqueville Karaoke? Global Contrasts of
... ideas were stressed in the Schumpeter, Jane Jacobs tradition and pursued further by Richard Florida, Edward Glaeser, Richard Lloyd, Elizabeth Currid, and Michael Fritsch among others. The core idea is that a bohemian neighborhood and lifestyle encourages or at least reflects more tolerance which in ...
... ideas were stressed in the Schumpeter, Jane Jacobs tradition and pursued further by Richard Florida, Edward Glaeser, Richard Lloyd, Elizabeth Currid, and Michael Fritsch among others. The core idea is that a bohemian neighborhood and lifestyle encourages or at least reflects more tolerance which in ...
Bristolmainlatest2
... principles do not exist in some value-free, Platonic realm; rather, they are the product and process of what already-has-been – values which serve the status quo and/or emerging social forms. This phenomenological structural relation is a product of environmentally structural conditions, which offer ...
... principles do not exist in some value-free, Platonic realm; rather, they are the product and process of what already-has-been – values which serve the status quo and/or emerging social forms. This phenomenological structural relation is a product of environmentally structural conditions, which offer ...
Sc h o o l o f Ph ilo so... St u d ie s
... The general requirements are 480 credits over a period of normally 4 years (and not more than 5 years) or part-time equivalent; the final two years being an approved honours programme of 240 credits, of which 90 credits are at 4000 level and at least a further 120 credits at 3000 and/or 4000 levels. ...
... The general requirements are 480 credits over a period of normally 4 years (and not more than 5 years) or part-time equivalent; the final two years being an approved honours programme of 240 credits, of which 90 credits are at 4000 level and at least a further 120 credits at 3000 and/or 4000 levels. ...
Consociational Democracy: The Views of Arend Lijphart and
... factors, plus one indirect explanation and one comprehensive explanation. (Politics 1968, ch. 5) The two factors are firstly, the basic sense of nationalism among the members of all four blocs, which is reinforced by a few national symbols, and secondly, the crosscutting of the religious and class c ...
... factors, plus one indirect explanation and one comprehensive explanation. (Politics 1968, ch. 5) The two factors are firstly, the basic sense of nationalism among the members of all four blocs, which is reinforced by a few national symbols, and secondly, the crosscutting of the religious and class c ...
The History and Philosophy of Social Scienceee
... philosophers of the modern era, comes into the discussion here and there but is not given a chapter or section of his own. Some important topics are neglected as well, most conspicuously perhaps the history of socialism. In outlining this book I had originally planned to devote a chapter to a survey ...
... philosophers of the modern era, comes into the discussion here and there but is not given a chapter or section of his own. Some important topics are neglected as well, most conspicuously perhaps the history of socialism. In outlining this book I had originally planned to devote a chapter to a survey ...
Externalities: Problems and Solutions
... by this plant (Figure 5-2) and to compare the private benefits and costs of production to the social benefits and costs. Private benefits and costs are the benefits and costs borne directly by the actors in the steel market (the producers and consumers of the steel products). Social benefits and cos ...
... by this plant (Figure 5-2) and to compare the private benefits and costs of production to the social benefits and costs. Private benefits and costs are the benefits and costs borne directly by the actors in the steel market (the producers and consumers of the steel products). Social benefits and cos ...
If there is nothing beyond the organic…
... American ethnography. His The Natural and Cultural Areas in Native North America (1939) carved out the major ‘culture areas’ – as opposed to natural, geographic areas – and introduced the concept of ‘culture climax’, which was thought to replace the concept of culture centres, then common in diffusi ...
... American ethnography. His The Natural and Cultural Areas in Native North America (1939) carved out the major ‘culture areas’ – as opposed to natural, geographic areas – and introduced the concept of ‘culture climax’, which was thought to replace the concept of culture centres, then common in diffusi ...
Introduction to "Fieldwork Is Not What It Used to Be"
... research visible; they think of the broadening horizons of research projects and deliver critical assessments of fieldwork while still holding the aesthetics and the regulative ideals of the Malinowskian paradigm of research—more crucial than ever to the signature identity of anthropology—centrally ...
... research visible; they think of the broadening horizons of research projects and deliver critical assessments of fieldwork while still holding the aesthetics and the regulative ideals of the Malinowskian paradigm of research—more crucial than ever to the signature identity of anthropology—centrally ...