Cross-border trainees and the personal scope of labour law: the puzzle of national, EU and private international law
In: European law review, Band 42, Heft 6, S. 848-866
ISSN: 0307-5400
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In: European law review, Band 42, Heft 6, S. 848-866
ISSN: 0307-5400
World Affairs Online
World Affairs Online
The migration of post-secondary students is an increasingly debated phenomenon as the number of students living outside of their home country has risen to more than three million in the past decade. Governments, regions and institutions have developed new structures and strategies to facilitate and benefit from this worldwide student movement. This research article uses Fairclough's (1993) notion of critical discourse analysis to explore the relationship between two distinct discourses on foreign students: national-level economic competitiveness and institutional-level student success. A comparative approach examines these discursive events in the four leading, Anglophone destination countries: Australia, Britain, Canada and the United States. The findings suggest that foreign students are objectified as tradable units in the market-driven discourse of economic development with student support literature providing a buffer that limits the critique of the economic discourse. At the same time, potential exists for current events to highlight the tension surrounding the two discourses and provide new opportunities for dialogue.
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The latter half of the eleventh century was tumultuous years for the Catholic Church. The beginning was ominous, when Cardinal Humbert, the papal legate sent from Rome to Constantinople, delivered papal excommunication to the Patriarch of the Eastern Church, Michael Caerularius in 1054. This was the terminal event of a long series of ecclesiastical disputes and differences between the Orthodox Church in the East and the Latin Church in the West, including issues of the procession of the Holy Spirit, Papal universal jurisdiction and the ranking of Constantinople in the Pentarchy. It was a development that continued to erode the power and authority of Rome. However, it was just over a decade later, in 1067, when Hildebrand of Sovana was elected to lead the Church in Rome as Pope Gregory VII, one of the great reformists of the Catholic Church, who was instrumental in fomenting a resurgence of the Roman Church, bestowing on it a semblance of its former glory. The 27 assertions that argued for papal supremacy in the Dictatus Papae, arguably tabulated by the Pope himself, indicated the blinkered single-mindedness of this leader of the Church in his attempt to resurrect the greatness of Rome to its position of primus inter pares. ; N/A
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In: Cappadocia journal of area studies: CJAS
ISSN: 2717-7254
The Maynard, J. L., & Haas, M. L. (Eds.). 2022. The Routledge Handbook of Ideology and International Relations. Taylor & Francis.
In: Social change, Band 44, Heft 3, S. 462-466
ISSN: 0976-3538
V. Nainar and Saumya Uma (Eds), Pursuing Elusive Justice Mass Crimes in India and Relevance of International Standards, Oxford University Press, 2013.
In: Journal of International Students, Band 9, Heft 4, S. 993-1008
SSRN
World Affairs Online
In: Journal of Asian and African studies: JAAS, Band 10, Heft 3-4, S. 240-241
ISSN: 1745-2538
In: American political science review, Band 34, Heft 4, S. 806-808
ISSN: 1537-5943
In: American political science review, Band 25, Heft 4, S. 1091-1092
ISSN: 1537-5943