Political institutions in traditional China: major issues
In: Major issues in history
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In: Major issues in history
In: Schriften zur Entwicklungspolitik 2
In: The international journal of social psychiatry, Band 69, Heft 8, S. 1843-1844
ISSN: 1741-2854
In: International interactions: empirical and theoretical research in international relations, Band 47, Heft 3, S. 530-558
ISSN: 1547-7444
Are emergency zones effective counterinsurgency measures? In response to Kurdish rebellion, the Turkish state put 13 provinces under emergency rule (1987–2002). In this paper, we investigate the link between emergency rule and electoral support for a pro-insurgent party. First, using the first-differencing method, we show that the tenure of provinces under emergency rule contributes to the vote share of the pro-insurgent party. Second, we investigate which counterinsurgency policies worked as a mechanism to connect emergency rule to pro-insurgent vote. We find that detentions targeting activists shifted electoral preferences toward the pro-insurgent party, whereas population displacement and party identifications with emergency rule led to an opposite outcome. These results show that (1) the legal-institutional framework of counterinsurgency affects civilians' political perceptions in fundamental ways, and (2) it can lead to failure when its repressive arm target activism. Overall, the paper presents an institutionalist account of civilian perceptions during wartime.
World Affairs Online
In: Outre-terre: revue française de géopolitique, Band 58-59, Heft 1, S. 107-125
ISSN: 1951-624X
In: European Journal of Business and Innovation Research 2021, Band 9, Heft 4
SSRN
In: https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-psm1-jk77
Many countries use mechanisms to prevent foreign investor disputes while improving regulatory aspects and institutional governance to attract and retain FDI. This Perspective focuses on investment ombudspersons, who facilitate between investors and agencies at various levels of government, exploring the Brazilian experience and efforts to improve the country's investment climate.
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Many countries use mechanisms to prevent foreign investor disputes while improving regulatory aspects and institutional governance to attract and retain FDI. This Perspective focuses on investment ombudspersons, who facilitate between investors and agencies at various levels of government, exploring the Brazilian experience and efforts to improve the country's investment climate.
BASE
In: Shestak, Band & Savenkova, S. Amnesty as an Institution of modern Criminal Law Criminal legislation of Russia: the main problems of application and areas for improvement: Materials of all-Russian scientific and practical conference 28 November 2019 Mahachkala: the North-Caucasus Branch
SSRN
In: The Canadian review of sociology: Revue canadienne de sociologie, Band 55, Heft 1, S. 9-39
ISSN: 1755-618X
AbstractUsing theory syllabi and departmental data collected for three academic years, this paper investigates the institutional practice of theory in sociology departments across Canada. In particular, it examines the position of theory within the sociological curriculum, and how this varies among universities. Taken together, our analyses indicate that theory remains deeply institutionalized at the core of sociological education and Canadian sociologists' self‐understanding; that theorists as a whole show some coherence in how they define themselves, but differ in various ways, especially along lines of region, intellectual background, and gender; that despite these differences, the classical versus contemporary heuristic largely cuts across these divides, as does the strongly ingrained position of a small group of European authors as classics of the discipline as a whole. Nevertheless, who is a classic remains an unsettled question, alternatives to the "classical versus contemporary" heuristic do exist, and theorists' syllabi reveal diverse "others" as potential candidates. Our findings show that the field of sociology is neither marked by universal agreement nor by absolute division when it comes to its theoretical underpinnings. To the extent that they reveal a unified field, the findings suggest that unity lies more in a distinctive form than in a distinctive content, which defines the space and structure of the field of sociology.
Leslie A. Schwindt-Bayer and Santiago Alles argue that the influx of women into Latin American legislatures has been substantial, but once in office, women have struggled to attain full access to political power. They present a statistical analysis that shows that the main explanations for variation in women's representation lie with gender quotas and party system fragmentation. They show that women in national legislatures have brought women's issues to the legislative arena, and they provide a new analysis showing that female legislators are more supportive of liberal gender equality, abortion, and divorce laws. However, they argue that women have not gained access to diverse committee leadership posts or served in top chamber leadership posts to the same extent as men. Finally, they show that the presence of women in legislatures has had important effects on citizen support for female political leaders, political engagement and participation, and supportiveness of representative democracy. © Oxford University Press 2018.
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In: China economic review, Band 46, S. 275-276
ISSN: 1043-951X