Contesting forms of capital: using Bourdieu to theorise why obstacles to peace education exist in Colombia
In: Journal of peace education, Band 17, Heft 3, S. 346-369
ISSN: 1740-021X
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In: Journal of peace education, Band 17, Heft 3, S. 346-369
ISSN: 1740-021X
In: Skinner , R 2017 , ' 'Every Bite Buys a Bullet' : sanctions, boycotts and solidarity in transnational anti-apartheid activism ' , Moving the Social: Journal of Social History and the History of Social Movements , vol. 57 , pp. 97-114 . https://doi.org/10.13154/mts.57.2017.97-114
This article examines the genesis and development of transnational anti-apartheid activism between the 1960s and the 1980s. Underpinning anti-apartheid was the fundamental principle of "solidarity", an emotional and ideological connection between the self and a distant oppressed other. It was this concept that served to mediate the transnational dimension of anti-apartheid as a form of humanitarianism. Calls for sanctions against South Africa represented the movement's most explicit engagement with political systems and structures, and thus the shifting power of humanitarian values in political discourse. Participation in boycotts represented a kind of activism from the ground up, in which individual economic decisions — the refusal to "buy apartheid" — became humanitarian acts. The notion of solidarity marked, moreover, a significant break with the paternalism of "imperial" humanitarian efforts, while calls for sanctions and disinvestment promoted a global norm of racial equality and a wider sense of humanitarian justice in international relations and global business ethics. Anti-apartheid connected a humanitarian ethos to individual and community action, and the consumer boycott became a primary form in which consciousness-raising and identity-forming functions of "new" social movements were enacted.
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In: SPP Research Paper No. 8-39
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In: Skinner , R A 2014 , ' Struggles on the page : British Antiapartheid and Radical Scholarship ' , Radical History Review , vol. 2014 , no. 119 , pp. 216-231 . https://doi.org/10.1215/01636545-2402120
This article combines an overview of the historiography of antiapartheid movements with a case study of radical scholarship on South Africa in the 1960s. It highlights the ways that antiapartheid activism effectively framed public understanding of the idea of apartheid and its application in South Africa. Using the British African solidarity movement as an example, it addresses the mutually constitutive relationship between the antiapartheid movement and radical analyses of South African politics and society. From the emergence of international responses to apartheid that began in the 1950s, activist research was at the leading edge of organized opposition to South African government policies and a transnational influence on radical politics in Britain.
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In: International affairs, Band 82, Heft 5, S. 1004-1005
ISSN: 0020-5850
In: General distribution 93,107
In: Air & Space Power Journal, Band 27, Heft 5
"Treaty between the United States and the King of Ethiopia to regulate the commercial relations between the two countries" : p. 223-227. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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In: Gallaudet Studies in Interpret Ser v.16
In: Studies in Interpretation volume 16
Cover; Here or There; Series Page; >Title Page; Copyright; Contents; Part 1. Overview of Interpreting via Video Link; Introduction; Interpreting via Video Link: Mapping of the Field; Part 2. Insights into Interpreting via Video Link; The Irrational Component in the Rational System: Interpreters Talk about Their Motivation to Work in Video Relay Services; Don't Leave Me Hanging on the Telephone: Telework, Professional Isolation, and the Work of Video Remote British Sign Language/ English Interpreters; "The Work and Skills": A Profile of First-Generation Video Remote Interpreters
In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/uiug.30112019035705
Cover title. ; "This report updates Wool and mohair: background for 1985 farm legislation, (AIB-466)"--P. iii. ; "November 1989"--P. iii. ; Includes bibliographical references (p. 32). ; Mode of access: Internet.
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In: [United States]. Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce. Trade information bulletin no. 49
INTRODUCTION. - Technology and the Future of Energy / Jamal S. Al-Suwaidi. - TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT AND THE GLOBAL ENERGY INDUSTRY. - 1. Changes in Global Energy Supply and Demand / Ken Koyama. - 2. Impact of Evolving Energy Technologies on Future World Oil Production / Ray Leonard. - 3. The Impact of Technological Innovation on the Oil and Gas Industry / Erdal Ozkan. - 4. Public Policy and Investment Trends in Energy Technologies / Robert G. Skinner. - CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES IN ENERGY-INTENSIVE SECTORS. - 5. Reducing Energy Consumption in Manufacturing: Opportunities and Impacts / Bin Song and Dwayne Wang. - 6. Technological Challenges and Opportunities in the Power Generation Sector / Essam A. Al-Ammar. - 7. Technological Challenges and Opportunities in the Transport Sector / Ibrahim Abdel Gelil. - TECHNOLOGICAL PROSPECTS FOR NUCLEAR AND RENEWABLE ENERGIES. - 8. Prospects for Renewable Energy Technology Advancements in the Electricity Sector / Nawal Al-Hosany, Steven Griffiths and Dolf Gielen. - 9. Nuclear Energy Technology: From Koreanization to Emiratization / Byung Koo Kim. - GREEN CONSTRUCTION AND SUSTAINABLE CITIES. - 10. Carbon Emissions of Buildings: Challenges and Solutions / Khaled A. Al-Sallal. - 11. Urbanization, Sustainable Cities and the Arab Gulf States / Mohsen N. Aboulnaga
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