Examines relationships between state administration, the United Aborigines Mission, the Ngaanyatjarra people, and anthropologists, which resulted in an absence of government administration in the area.
Analyzes impediments to the peace process in the Near East: Hamas fundamentalism, Jewish settlements, and economic hurdles; calls for democratic structures in the Palestinian territories.
A town hall and square for Georgetown "The Intention of this thesis is to explore how ideas of democracy can be revealed in architecture. Issues concerning the manner in which a democracy or representative government represents itself, as opposed to that of the autocratic structured government are central to beginning thesis study. This thesis will demonstrate that form is, indeed, informed by content in this opposition."
Since the completion of the UNTAC (United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia)-sponsored elections in May 1993, there has been great concern over the future role of the Khmer Rouge (KR) in the Royal National Government of Cambodia (RNGC) in the short run, and the future of their political-military organization in the long run. The study analyses and discusses the future of the KR paying special attention to the internal (the degree of factionalism within the KR, its willingness to fight among other things) and external (the degree of factionalism within the RNGG, the amount of foreign aid etc.) factors influencing it. (DÜI-Sen)
The emergence of nonrealist theology -- which holds that God can be variously understood -- within the Church of England is examined, with reference to recent books on the issue & to prominent proponents, eg, Cambridge priest & academic Don Cupitt, who conceives God not as a being but as a moral focus. Cupitt's work resulted in the development of Sea of Faith, a religiously diverse network of local groups committed to exploring & promoting relgious faith as a human creation. The emergence of nonrealist theology is discussed in relation to the decline of religious orthodoxy & dogma, & the claim by mainstream & conservative theologians that nonrealist theology is tantamount to atheism is addressed. W. Howard