Yannis Stavrakakis How did `populism` become a pejorative concept
... does not merely reflect an objective truth but dynamically constructs our (social) reality. And this construction never takes place in a vacuum. It is over-determined by various economic, class, symbolic and imaginary contexts; it expresses interests and inclinations; finally, it reflects the divisi ...
... does not merely reflect an objective truth but dynamically constructs our (social) reality. And this construction never takes place in a vacuum. It is over-determined by various economic, class, symbolic and imaginary contexts; it expresses interests and inclinations; finally, it reflects the divisi ...
Unburdened by Objectivity: Political Entertainment News in the 2008
... competition with their increasingly popular cable competitors (2000). With this increase in power, obligations to the public have eroded into slim segments on political issues trumped by blocks of entertainment programming (Dahlgren, 1995). News programs dedicated to entertainment news, such as The ...
... competition with their increasingly popular cable competitors (2000). With this increase in power, obligations to the public have eroded into slim segments on political issues trumped by blocks of entertainment programming (Dahlgren, 1995). News programs dedicated to entertainment news, such as The ...
full paper - coimbra business review
... Democracies are a stage for the interaction of various interest and pressure groups, seeking to influence the development, adoption and implementation of public policies. The ability to influence is not symmetrically distributed among these groups. The definition of public policies in democracy is n ...
... Democracies are a stage for the interaction of various interest and pressure groups, seeking to influence the development, adoption and implementation of public policies. The ability to influence is not symmetrically distributed among these groups. The definition of public policies in democracy is n ...
Rawls in Germany - Princeton University
... rights agreed upon. ‘Natural justice’ was first transformed into social and finally into institutionalized or political justice, which meant justice backed by stateadministered ‘non-coercive coercion’ to which all parties had consented.21 Ultimately, then, justice was measured through an impartial j ...
... rights agreed upon. ‘Natural justice’ was first transformed into social and finally into institutionalized or political justice, which meant justice backed by stateadministered ‘non-coercive coercion’ to which all parties had consented.21 Ultimately, then, justice was measured through an impartial j ...
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY Objective 1.1
... 1. _____ A researcher has been approved to collect data at a shopping mall. 2. _____During new student orientation, a researcher appears before an assembly of orientation participants and asks them to complete a survey of racial attitudes. Some students receive a survey with a cover page that states ...
... 1. _____ A researcher has been approved to collect data at a shopping mall. 2. _____During new student orientation, a researcher appears before an assembly of orientation participants and asks them to complete a survey of racial attitudes. Some students receive a survey with a cover page that states ...
A ttitudes, Uncertain t
... Even imperfect indicators of uncertainty may provide better leverage in estimating statistical models than models which lack any such measures. Several studies (Alvarez 1996; Campbell 1983) make use of existing survey measures to develop an indicator of respondent uncertainty. Here we take the appro ...
... Even imperfect indicators of uncertainty may provide better leverage in estimating statistical models than models which lack any such measures. Several studies (Alvarez 1996; Campbell 1983) make use of existing survey measures to develop an indicator of respondent uncertainty. Here we take the appro ...
Power Politics and Contentious Issues: Realism
... In a recent article (Hensel 2001: 82-83), I present what I consider the three central tenets of an issue-based approach to world politics. The central tenet is that "foreign policy is issue directed. Rather than acting randomly, constantly pursuing national power or the "national interest," and rath ...
... In a recent article (Hensel 2001: 82-83), I present what I consider the three central tenets of an issue-based approach to world politics. The central tenet is that "foreign policy is issue directed. Rather than acting randomly, constantly pursuing national power or the "national interest," and rath ...
When First Amendment Principles Collide: Negative Political
... registration and motor-voter registration may increase voter turnout. See Staci L. Rhine, Registration Reform and Turnout Change in the American States, 23 AM. POL. Q. 409, 421-22 (1995). Rhine observes that "[m]otor-voter registration is found to have a positive and significant effect on turnout." ...
... registration and motor-voter registration may increase voter turnout. See Staci L. Rhine, Registration Reform and Turnout Change in the American States, 23 AM. POL. Q. 409, 421-22 (1995). Rhine observes that "[m]otor-voter registration is found to have a positive and significant effect on turnout." ...
Chapter 4 - Bakersfield College
... of reinforcement. The responses are cumulative, which means new responses are added to those that come before, and all graphs begin after the learned pattern is well established. Slash marks mean that a reinforcement has been given. In both the fixed interval and fixed ratio graphs, there is a pause ...
... of reinforcement. The responses are cumulative, which means new responses are added to those that come before, and all graphs begin after the learned pattern is well established. Slash marks mean that a reinforcement has been given. In both the fixed interval and fixed ratio graphs, there is a pause ...
Schultz 10e IMTB Chapter 09
... committee to investigate Clever Hans, with Carl Stumpf as a member. He appointed Oskar Pfungst to investigate, who found that Hans’ owner and onlookers would unwittingly give subtle visual cues as to how to respond. In essence, there was no evidence of Hans having extraordinary cognitive abilities, ...
... committee to investigate Clever Hans, with Carl Stumpf as a member. He appointed Oskar Pfungst to investigate, who found that Hans’ owner and onlookers would unwittingly give subtle visual cues as to how to respond. In essence, there was no evidence of Hans having extraordinary cognitive abilities, ...
ABSTRACT Title of Document: THE ROLE AND EFFECTS OF DISCRETE
... oversimplified. Empirical studies reveal that voters approve of negative issuecomparison ads over image-based personal attacks on candidates (Kahn & Kenney, 1999; Kaid, 2004). Specifically, negative ads are perceived more positively when they focus on issues instead of the opposition’s personal char ...
... oversimplified. Empirical studies reveal that voters approve of negative issuecomparison ads over image-based personal attacks on candidates (Kahn & Kenney, 1999; Kaid, 2004). Specifically, negative ads are perceived more positively when they focus on issues instead of the opposition’s personal char ...
MultipleTraditionsinPopulismResearch: Toward a Theoretical
... as a foundation for any study of populism, regardless of geographic focus or the ideological orientation of the populist claims in question. II. The Case for an Analytically Thin Approach to Populism In developing his definition of populism as a “thincentered ideology,” Mudde (2004) argues for a mi ...
... as a foundation for any study of populism, regardless of geographic focus or the ideological orientation of the populist claims in question. II. The Case for an Analytically Thin Approach to Populism In developing his definition of populism as a “thincentered ideology,” Mudde (2004) argues for a mi ...
political responsibility and ) structural injustice
... uncoordinated but mutually influenced actions over them. Those collective actions have produced determinate effects on the physical and cultural environment which condition future actions in specific ways. Housing options certainly are constrained by the practico-incrt in this way. Past planning dec ...
... uncoordinated but mutually influenced actions over them. Those collective actions have produced determinate effects on the physical and cultural environment which condition future actions in specific ways. Housing options certainly are constrained by the practico-incrt in this way. Past planning dec ...
The Power of Compassion - Cambridge Scholars Publishing
... We who lived in concentration camps can remember the people who walked through the huts comforting others, giving away their last piece of bread. They may have been few in number, but they offer sufficient proof that everything can be taken from a person except one thing: the last of human freedoms— ...
... We who lived in concentration camps can remember the people who walked through the huts comforting others, giving away their last piece of bread. They may have been few in number, but they offer sufficient proof that everything can be taken from a person except one thing: the last of human freedoms— ...
agreeing to disagree: diversity and the social contract
... to meet the condition laid out by a successful contract theory. Diversity can creep into the political system in any number of ways. Even a society that is relatively ...
... to meet the condition laid out by a successful contract theory. Diversity can creep into the political system in any number of ways. Even a society that is relatively ...
Clarissa`s Treasonable Correspondence: Gender, Epistolary Politics
... rather than the historical context that might have caused the structural development of complex novelistic characters. Richardson and the Eighteenth-Century Puritan Character (Hamden, Conn.: Shoe String Press, 1972). Lawrence Stone uses the example of Clarissa as "literary evidence" of "a prolonged ...
... rather than the historical context that might have caused the structural development of complex novelistic characters. Richardson and the Eighteenth-Century Puritan Character (Hamden, Conn.: Shoe String Press, 1972). Lawrence Stone uses the example of Clarissa as "literary evidence" of "a prolonged ...
The Epistemology and Politics of Ignorance
... politically ignorant: ignorant of the facts that underpin political debate, which are brought to our attention by theories that, as Max Weber emphasized, can be tested only through counterfactual thought experiments. Public-opinion and political-psychology research suggest that human beings are far ...
... politically ignorant: ignorant of the facts that underpin political debate, which are brought to our attention by theories that, as Max Weber emphasized, can be tested only through counterfactual thought experiments. Public-opinion and political-psychology research suggest that human beings are far ...
Nonprofits as Civic Intermediaries: The Role of
... contends that the relationship between government and nonprofits is a complementary one that is both necessary and desirable. Government funding provides the resources for nonprofits to expand their capacity, while government is able to capitalize on the resources of nonprofits, including voluntary ...
... contends that the relationship between government and nonprofits is a complementary one that is both necessary and desirable. Government funding provides the resources for nonprofits to expand their capacity, while government is able to capitalize on the resources of nonprofits, including voluntary ...
UNDERSTANDING BUREAUCRATIC BEHAVIOR: IMPLICATIONS
... oversight committee, city council, county commission, or any other individual or group with legislative powers) has a good deal of control over a bureau. Niskanen (1975, 1994: 275-278) also accepted the Breton-Wintrobe (1975) critique, and considered active oversight monitoring in his reformulated m ...
... oversight committee, city council, county commission, or any other individual or group with legislative powers) has a good deal of control over a bureau. Niskanen (1975, 1994: 275-278) also accepted the Breton-Wintrobe (1975) critique, and considered active oversight monitoring in his reformulated m ...
public opinions of the impeachment of president william jefferson
... their wants and the tradeoffs among these wants, and that agents maximize their utility by choosing from an action set that is limited by available information, material resources and time, cognitive capacity, and the agent's physical capacities. Choice is also contingent upon beliefs concerning the ...
... their wants and the tradeoffs among these wants, and that agents maximize their utility by choosing from an action set that is limited by available information, material resources and time, cognitive capacity, and the agent's physical capacities. Choice is also contingent upon beliefs concerning the ...
Political ecology and the epistemology of social justice
... terms, post-structuralist narrative analysis aims to identify how these statements of presumed certainty have been ‘stabilized’ by selective social processes, with the implication of reinforcing certain political objectives. The second transition in political ecology was an increased awareness of th ...
... terms, post-structuralist narrative analysis aims to identify how these statements of presumed certainty have been ‘stabilized’ by selective social processes, with the implication of reinforcing certain political objectives. The second transition in political ecology was an increased awareness of th ...
... therefore, to speak of the ideological seems to be to propose a senseless discussion. However, this depends on how we define Ideology. If we believe that Ideology is constituted in false consciousness (or alienated consciousness), in the sense of classical Marxism, then we would undoubtedly be deali ...
Political ecology and the epistemology of social justice
... work are often missed by analysts who ask what is essentially political or ecological about political ecology, or by those who argue that a critical approach to environmental knowledge should mean deconstruction alone. This paper reviews Blaikie’s work since the 1980s and focuses especially on the m ...
... work are often missed by analysts who ask what is essentially political or ecological about political ecology, or by those who argue that a critical approach to environmental knowledge should mean deconstruction alone. This paper reviews Blaikie’s work since the 1980s and focuses especially on the m ...
Beyond prejudice: are negative evaluations the problem and is
... John Dixon* (Department of Psychology, Lancaster University) Mark Levine (Department of Psychology, Lancaster University) Steve Reicher (School of Psychology, St Andrews University) Kevin Durrheim (School of Psychology, University of KwaZulu-Natal) * Address correspondence to: Professor John Dixon, ...
... John Dixon* (Department of Psychology, Lancaster University) Mark Levine (Department of Psychology, Lancaster University) Steve Reicher (School of Psychology, St Andrews University) Kevin Durrheim (School of Psychology, University of KwaZulu-Natal) * Address correspondence to: Professor John Dixon, ...
Assessing the Potential of ICTs for Participatory
... production and sharing of political knowledge. Mobile phone users are not constrained by physical location and become thus able to search for information about social and political issues wherever and whenever they wish to. They are also enabled to upload and share politically and societally relevan ...
... production and sharing of political knowledge. Mobile phone users are not constrained by physical location and become thus able to search for information about social and political issues wherever and whenever they wish to. They are also enabled to upload and share politically and societally relevan ...