Technical Progress and Technical Schools
In: Review of social economy: the journal for the Association for Social Economics, Volume 26, Issue 1, p. 40-49
ISSN: 1470-1162
1226596 results
Sort by:
In: Review of social economy: the journal for the Association for Social Economics, Volume 26, Issue 1, p. 40-49
ISSN: 1470-1162
In: International journal of academic research in business and social sciences: IJ-ARBSS, Volume 10, Issue 3
ISSN: 2222-6990
In: Political science quarterly: a nonpartisan journal devoted to the study and analysis of government, politics and international affairs ; PSQ, Volume 50, Issue 2, p. 264-271
ISSN: 1538-165X
In: Environment and planning. C, Government and policy, Volume 30, Issue 6, p. 1045-1060
ISSN: 1472-3425
With this paper I focus on international legal norms and organizational roles and relations applicable to migration induced by environmental change. I examine movements stemming directly and indirectly from environmental factors related to climate change—including, for example, movements resulting from intensified drought and desertification affecting livelihoods, rising sea levels, intensified acute natural disasters, and competition for resources that result in intensified conflict. The analysis focuses on the extent to which legal and institutional responses affect patterns of mobility, especially in slow-onset situations, and the extent to which governance, more generally, affects the likelihood that people will migrate as a result of environmental factors, especially in humanitarian emergencies. I conclude that immigration policies, governance, and the level of development in affected countries play a crucial role in determining the responses to natural hazards and conflict. They also help determine if migration poses technical or managerial challenges or presents political challenges. Given the current gaps in appropriate migration policies, more attention needs to be placed on identifying and testing new frameworks for managing potential movements. Attention needs to be given to both sides of the environment and migration nexus: (1) identifying adaptation strategies that allow people to remain where they currently live and work; and (2) identifying migration and relocation strategies that protect people's lives and livelihoods when they are unable to remain.
In: International social science journal: ISSJ, Volume 26, Issue 4, p. 637-650
ISSN: 0020-8701
If one considers that the reorientation of biology towards the neurosciences was steered by a small group of first-rank scientists who seemed to have independently selected their aims, & if one observes the applications to which their findings have been put, one must conclude that neuroscientists, despite their relatively independent (from military agencies eg) status, must assume responsibility for the use of the knowledge generated by them. The industrial-military complex, in the service of the dominant classes, has the infrastructure, the expertise, & the necessary amount of financial, political, & technical power to make use of that knowledge, made freely accessible to all interested in the subject through the many international journals. Leaders of the scientific community, in fact, offer opinions on the conduct of public affairs & predict the future in their capacity as scientists & in a manner supportive of the repressive status quo. Inventing & propagating among fellow scientists & laymen doctrinal explanations of the intrinsic nature of human violence, they reinforce the pessimism & hopelessness which the majority of the world population already feels about their deteriorating conditions & justify their 'solutions' to poverty, hunger, violence, overpopulation & pollution, which are consistent with the interests of powerful groups fighting to maintain the status quo. Those solutions include interrogation techniques based on the findings about sensory deprivation; psychodrugs, & electrical stimulation of the brain (ESB) to suppress violence which is really caused by objective conditions (the class antagonism eg), but which is viewed as a mere reflection of precultural 'instinctive' or 'innate' aggressiveness by the leaders of ESB research; the mystification of the powers of artificial intelligence. When intelligence is viewed in terms of 'genetic endowment' or 'the secondary instructions derived from fetal life' (John C. Eccles, THE FUNCTION OF THE BRAIN, New York, NY, 1972), ie, apart from any consideration of the environment (the fact eg, that 2,000 million people are hungry) as determinant in the creation of intelligence, this underscores how much science shares the values of the system in which it develops. K. Schmitt.
In: Science and public policy: journal of the Science Policy Foundation
ISSN: 1471-5430
When one wishes to formulate, evaluate and implement public projects or policies, the existence of a plurality of social actors, with interest in the options being assessed, generates a conflictual situation. In this article, I show that the compensation principle was invented by Kaldor and Hicks to achieve two clear objectives: to compare individuals' preferences according to the efficiency oriented utilitarian calculus, explicitly avoiding the principle one individual, one vote; to implement an objective evaluation criterion, that could be accepted in the framework of the dominant positivistic philosophical paradigm. Here, I try to prove that in the compensation principle, there is no escape from value judgements, it is not the positivistic objective evaluation criterion. A relevant question is: are the original Kaldor-Hicks objectives still relevant in the 21st Century?Keywords: public policy, well-being, Social Multi-Criteria Evaluation
BASE
In: Legal issues of economic integration: law journal of the Europa Instituut and the Amsterdam Center for International Law, Universiteit van Amsterdam, Volume 36, Issue 3, p. 197-213
ISSN: 1566-6573, 1875-6433
As currency crises revealed the limitations of pegging a country's currency to another country's currency through currency boards, the focus of the monetary community turned to dollarization and euroization. De jure dollarization/euroization is the unilateral adoption of the dollar/euro as sole legal tender in lieu of the prior domestic currency through a formal political decision, thereby irreversibly giving up the chance to influence money supply and exchange rates through national monetary and political authorities. After showing the origins of unilateral euroization, I will list the costs and benefits of currency replacement and identify which countries could most probably benefit from euroization. In the second part, I will explain why European Union (EU) institutions – in contrast to US policy makers with respect to dollarization – oppose the unilateral adoption of the euro. Then, I will describe the official route for euroization envisaged by the EU and finally focus the discussion on whether EU institutions can legally prevent unilateral euroization under European or international law and whether the involved states have any other rights or obligations under customary international law. Furthermore, I will show the implications of the current financial crisis for future trends of euroization.
[SPA] El suelo es un recurso afectado por fuentes de contaminación que lo pueden convertir en un recurso contaminado. El contenido en metales pesados del suelo es uno de los criterios empleados para la estimación de la calidad ambiental del suelo, siendo necesario, el establecimiento de niveles de fondo en los metales y sus correspondientes niveles genéricos de referencia. El suelo tiene unos valores naturales de presencia de determinados elementos traza, metales, que son los valores de fondo, que generan un riesgo admisible. Pero cuando ese riesgo se convierte en inadmisible, se han de establecer otros valores. Estos valores serían los niveles genéricos de referencia del suelo, y son los valores que nos indicarán si estamos ante un suelo potencialmente contaminado, o contaminado. Los "elementos traza" aparecen mayoritariamente en los residuos mineros relativos a las industrias extractivas. Estos materiales ya sean residuos, recursos o subproductos reciben, por lo general, el tratamiento de residuos inertes, cuando en realidad deberían ser tratados como residuos peligrosos. El presente estudio critica las disposiciones normativas que regulan los residuos y suelos propios de los distritos de minería metálica, con la finalidad de proponer mejoras normativas que permitan la adecuación de la legislación aplicable a los nuevos conocimientos científico-técnicos. [ENG] Soil is a resource affected by sources of pollution that can become contaminated resource. The heavy metal content of the soil is one of the criteria for estimating the environmental quality of the soil, being necessary to establish background levels in metals and their corresponding levels generics de reference. The floor has natural presence values of certain trace elements, metals, which are the background values, which generate an acceptable risk. But when that risk becomes unacceptable, they have to set other values. These values would be the generic reference levels of soil, and are the values that will tell us if this is a potentially contaminated or contaminated soil. The "trace elements" appear mostly in mining waste relating to extractive industries. These materials either waste resources or byproducts are, in general, the treatment of inert waste, when they should be treated as hazardous waste. This study criticizes the regulatory provisions governing waste and soils own metal mining districts, in order to propose improvements regulations that facilitate adjustment of the legislation applicable to new scientific and technical knowledge. ; Agradecer al equipo del TAIDA el poder formar parte de este grupo de doctorado.
BASE
In: SIPRI chemical & biological warfare studies 17
In: New political science: official journal of the New Political Science Caucus with APSA, Volume 45, Issue 3, p. 555-558
ISSN: 1469-9931
In: International affairs: a Russian journal of world politics, diplomacy and international relations, Volume 50, Issue 6, p. 105-111
ISSN: 0130-9641
In: Slovak foreign policy affairs: review for international politics, security and integration, Volume 1, Issue 2, p. 92-107
ISSN: 1335-6259
World Affairs Online
In: Arms Control, Volume 5, Issue 3, p. 27-36
In: The Arms Race at a Time of Decision, p. 80-87