The Global-Local Paradox: From Local to Global and Back Again
In: Urban affairs review, Band 33, Heft 1, S. 134-140
ISSN: 1552-8332
932183 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Urban affairs review, Band 33, Heft 1, S. 134-140
ISSN: 1552-8332
In: Renewal: politics, movements, ideas ; a journal of social democracy, Band 14, Heft 2, S. 19-27
ISSN: 0968-252X
Through an examination of key concepts and criminological approaches, the books illuminate the different ways in which crime is constructed, conceived and controlled. International case studies are used to demonstrate how 'crime' and 'justice' are historically and geographically located in terms of the global/local context, and how processes of criminalisation and punishment are mediated in contemporary societies. "Crime: Local and Global" covers the way local events (such as prostitution) have wider aspects than previously thought. Links with people traffickers, international organised crime and violence cannot be ignored any longer. Each crime or area of activity selected within this text has a global reach, and is made ever more possible due to the way globalisation has opened up markets, both legitimate and illegitimate. The book's approach and scope emphasises that we can no longer view 'crime' as something which occurs within certain jurisdictions, at certain times and in particular places. For example, the chapter on cybercrime highlights the 'illegal' acts that can be perpetrated by second lifers, anywhere in the world, but are they a crime?
Through an examination of key concepts and criminological approaches, the books illuminate the different ways in which crime is constructed, conceived and controlled. International case studies are used to demonstrate how 'crime' and 'justice' are historically and geographically located in terms of the global/local context, and how processes of criminalisation and punishment are mediated in contemporary societies. "Crime: Local and Global" covers the way local events (such as prostitution) have wider aspects than previously thought. Links with people traffickers, international organised crime and violence cannot be ignored any longer. Each crime or area of activity selected within this text has a global reach, and is made ever more possible due to the way globalisation has opened up markets, both legitimate and illegitimate. The book's approach and scope emphasises that we can no longer view 'crime' as something which occurs within certain jurisdictions, at certain times and in particular places. For example, the chapter on cybercrime highlights the 'illegal' acts that can be perpetrated by second lifers, anywhere in the world, but are they a crime?
The term indigenous, long used to distinguish between those who are "native" and their "others" in specific locales, has also become a term for a geocultural category, presupposing a world collectivity of "indigenous peoples" in contrast to their various
BASE
In: Em sociedade: revista do Departamento de Ciências Sociais da PUC Minas, Band 4, Heft 1, S. 146-172
ISSN: 2595-7716
Neste artigo, realizamos uma análise do processo de territorialização da comunidade quilombola dos Jorge, localizada no município de Peçanha, pertencente a bacia do rio Doce, no Leste do estado de Minas Gerais. Buscamos compreender como que, ao longo do tempo, este grupo familiar, em interação com o seu meio biofísico e social, produziu o seu espaço, o seu lugar. Empreendemos, num primeiro momento, um esforço de reflexão sobre a relação global-local na contemporaneidade e suas expressões na produção do espaço e configurações territoriais. Num segundo momento, tratamos dos aspectos históricos, econômicos e ambientais que atravessam o processo de formação da comunidade. Para essa descrição, recorremos aos dados produzidos, entre 2014 e 2020, coletados por meio de observação participante, técnicas de diagnóstico participativo e entrevistas. Por fim, a título conclusivo, versamos sobre os aspectos do processo de formação da comunidade que evidenciam a articulação entre global e local e as verticalidades e horizontalidades que permeiam a formação do território que constrói e habita.
In: French politics, culture and society, Band 38, Heft 2, S. 56-79
ISSN: 1558-5271
For many within the French military, the war over Algeria's independence that raged from 1954 to 1962 appeared global: not an isolated conflict, but one front in a broader subversive war waged by Communist revolutionaries. As historians have long noted, this perspective was inaccurate. For that reason, the social and cultural contexts that defined military practice during the early years of the conflict have not been fully explored. This article argues, however, that these global narratives mattered, and can help historians to trace both how global events shaped military thinking about Algeria and how the war helped forge more concrete transnational connections. As they honed their operational doctrines in Algeria, French military leaders looked abroad: not only to understand the war in Algeria, but to promote their own practices as a universal response to the social upheavals of the era.
What do the words global, transnational, national, and local mean when talking about beauty, which is simultaneously abstract and ephemeral, embodied and concrete? How do ideas and images of beauty circulate in a globalizing world, and how do people's bodily practices respond to them? Rather than simply examining how beauty is thought about and aspired to in international settings, this collection of original scholarly work and first-person accounts takes globalization processes and the transnational links these processes create as the jumping-off point for an examination of what it means to be, have, or aspire to a beautiful body.
In: The G8-G20 Relationship in Global Governance, Marina Vladimirovna Larionova, ed., Routledge, 2015
SSRN
Australia is currently the second largest exporter of raw sugar after Brazil, and one of the world's top five sugar exporters. This book tells the story of how the Australian cane sugar industry grew into a major global supplier of sugar, how it became a significant innovator in the technology associated with the growing and harvesting of sugar cane as well as the production and transport of sugar. It describes the spread of sugar cane growing along the north-eastern coast of Australia during the late nineteenth century, and how subsequent twentieth-century expansions were tightly regulated in
In: China news analysis: Zhongguo-xiaoxi-fenxi, Heft 1601, S. 4
ISSN: 0009-4404
In: Undoing Culture: Globalization, Postmodernism and Identity, S. 86-101