BOARDROOM PAY BOOM
In: Labour research, Band 84, Heft 8, S. 11-12
ISSN: 0023-7000
12880 Ergebnisse
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In: Labour research, Band 84, Heft 8, S. 11-12
ISSN: 0023-7000
In: U.S. news & world report, Band 66, S. 52-54
ISSN: 0041-5537
In: Challenge: the magazine of economic affairs, Band 5, Heft 7, S. 13-17
ISSN: 1558-1489
In: Index on censorship, Band 13, Heft 5, S. 9-9
ISSN: 1746-6067
The US Ambassador's Mission to Iran has sold 300,000 copies; the Shah's book is banned; a biography of Robespierre is popular but the bestseller is Orwell's Animal Farm. Interest in Marxism and religion is waning, but banned Iranian writers flourish in samizdat. The following article was written for the first issue of Kayhan, an émigré Persian language weekly first published in London on 11 June. Kayhan was originally founded as an independent daily in Tehran in 1941 and became the largest circulation newspaper in Iran. In September 1979 the Iranian revolutionary authorities took it over and now it is run by the Foundation of the Disinherited, an official organisation. Kayhan's former proprietor and editors left the country and are now responsible for the London Kayhan. The article was written by one of its correspondents in Tehran who prefers to remain anonymous.
In: Angelaki: journal of the theoretical humanities, Band 23, Heft 3, S. 144-157
ISSN: 1469-2899
In this think piece I argue that there is an interactive relationship between physical and symbolic landscapes, and that the interplay of the two forms a 'therapeutic landscape'. This reformulation of Gesler's (1992) concept of the therapeutic landscape helps to make visible the relationship between utilitarian systems of natural resource extraction and notions of deservingness for care. I show how in Alberta, Canada, there was a shift in the therapeutic landscape following the late 2014 crash in the global price of oil. Alberta is an 'oil economy' with an economic system that is strongly dependent on its oil and gas extractive industry; its public health care system is supported in part by royalties paid by private oil companies. When the global price of oil dropped, both health policy researchers and parents of children with rare and severe genetic diseases worried that costly treatments might be valued differently in this new terrain and that patients might be deemed undeserving of such expense. The therapeutic landscape concept applied in this way becomes a tool for understanding the linkages between economies of care and the political economy of place.
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