Introduction: United States Law and Policy on Transitional Justice: Principles, Politics, and Pragmatics
In: United States Law and Policy on Transitional Justice: Principles, Politics, and Pragmatics (Oxford University Press). 2016
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In: United States Law and Policy on Transitional Justice: Principles, Politics, and Pragmatics (Oxford University Press). 2016
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In: Routledge studies in the sociology of health and illness
Uses cutting edge and multidisciplinary approaches to analyse the politics of service provision and serves as a model for how similar research can be conducted in other countries and sectors - An in-depth, microlevel analysis that develops the high-profile South African discourse on the interaction between governance and policy - Systematically anchored in innovative thinking on how to achieve gains in politically complex settings.
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In: Journal of policy history: JPH, Band 10, Heft 1, S. 51-74
ISSN: 0898-0306
Argues that attempts to reform presidential executive power made other government and political institutions more bureaucratic. "Programmatic liberalism", the Nixon administration, and Congress.
In: British journal of political science, Band 25, S. 57-77
ISSN: 0007-1234
Examines the motivating forces behind the movements and how they are influenced by the political resources available; some focus on ongoing struggles for a united Kashmir and for autonomy of the Tamils in Sri Lanka and the Sikhs in India.
In: International organization, Band 45, Heft 4, S. 425-451
ISSN: 0020-8183
World Affairs Online
In: Asian survey: a bimonthly review of contemporary Asian affairs, Band 29, Heft 7, S. 716-724
ISSN: 0004-4687
World Affairs Online
Agricultural Land is a land that is intended or suitable for farming land to produce agricultural or livestock. The history of regulations on the limitation of ownership of agricultural land rights includes 2 periods, namely the limitation of ownership of land rightsduring the colonial period and the period after independence. The political and legal factors of the government greatly influence the operation of law in society, including in the implementation of land reform, especially the ownership of agricultural land rights,including restrictions on ownership of agricultural land rights. The politics of law applied in a government affects the implementation and enforcement of laws and regulations, changes in government that have occurred in Indonesia from the days of President Soekarno, President Soeharto, and Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono to President Joko Widodo affect the implementation of restrictions on ownership of agricultural land rights. The politics of land law are related to limiting ownership of rights to agriculture. It is hoped that the government will take sides by regulating the focus of ownership of agricultural land rights for the benefit of all Indonesian people, especially for farmers to own agricultural land. Ownership and control of agricultural land are not owned and controlled by certain groups or individuals.
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In: H. Eugene and Lillian Youngs Lehman Ser
Cover -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: A Reflexive Historiography -- I: CONTESTING CITIZENSHIP, 1887-1924 -- 1 "My Own Nation" (1899)-Queen Lili'uokalani -- 2 "Keep Our Treaties" (1906)-Chitto Harjo -- 3 "We Can Establish Our Rights" (1913)-Cherokee Freedmen -- 4 "That the Smaller Peoples May Be Safe" (1918)- Arthur C. Parker -- 5 "Another Kaiser in America" (1918)-Carlos Montezuma -- 6 "Our Hearts Are Almost Broken" (1919)-No Heart et al -- 7 "I Want to Be Free" (1920)-Porfirio Mirabel -- 8 "I Am Going to Geneva" (1923)-Deskaheh -- 9 "It Is Our Way of Life" (1924)-All-Pueblo Council -- II: RECLAIMING A FUTURE, 1934-1954 -- 10 "As One Indian to Another" (1934)-Henry Roe Cloud -- 11 "Fooled So Many Times" (1934)-George White Bull and Oliver Prue -- 12 "Let Us Try a New Deal" (1934)-Christine Galler -- 13 "If We Have the Land, We Have Everything" (1934)-Albert Sandoval, Fred Nelson, Frank Cadman, and Jim Shirley -- 14 "We Have Heard Your Talk" (1934)-Joe Chitto -- 15 "Eliminate This Discrimination" (1941)-Elizabeth and Roy Peratrovich -- 16 "I Am Here to Keep the Land" (1945)-Martin Cross -- 17 "We Are Still a Sovereign Nation" (1949)-Hopi Traditionalist Movement -- 18 "I Had No One to Help Me" (1953)-Jake Herman -- 19 "We Need a Boldness of Thinking" (1954)-D'Arcy McNickle -- III: DEMANDING CIVIL RIGHTS OF A DIFFERENT ORDER, 1954-1968 -- 20 "We Are Citizens" (1954)-National Congress of American Indians -- 21 "This Resolution 'Gives' Indians Nothing" (1954)-Helen Peterson and Alice Jemison -- 22 "We Are Lumbee Indians" (1955)-D. F. Lowry -- 23 "The Mississippi Choctaws Are Not Going Anywhere" (1960)-Phillip Martin -- 24 "A Human Right in a Free World" (1961)-Edward Dozier -- 25 "This Is Not Special Pleading" (1961)-American Indian Chicago Conference.
In: Thamyris / Intersecting: Place, Sex and Race, volume 30
This book interrogates the term "queer" by closely mapping what space the theorizing of same-sex sexualities and sexual politics in the non-West inhabits. From theoretical discussions around the epistemologies of such conceptualizations of space in the Global South, to specific ethnographies of same-sex culture, this collection hopes to forge a way of tracking the histories of race, class, caste, gender, and sexual orientation that form what is called the moment of globalization. The volume, co-edited by Ashley Tellis and Sruti Bala, asks whether the societies of the Global South simply borrow and graft an internationalist (read Euro-US) language of LGBT/queer rights and identity politics, whether it is imposed on them or whether there is a productive negotiation of that language
In: Latin American politics and society, Band 44, Heft 3, S. 141
ISSN: 1548-2456
Foreword -- Introduction: Foundations of Filming -- Camera as a Way to be Seen -- Camera as Exposer -- Camera as Shamer -- Camera as Mirror -- Camera as Shield -- Camera as Martyr -- Camera as Evidence -- Camera as Weapon -- Endnotes -- Sources -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgements -- Index
In: Columbia Tax Law Journal, Band 5, S. 40
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Today, every choice that is made, from where to shop to what music to listen to, has turned into a reflection of one's political views and identity. The main purpose of this research is to explore the relationship between an individual's political views and his or hers attitudes toward the security of personal information in the consumer realm. Two studies were conducted in the form of surveys. The first study aims to measure the consumer's trust and risk beliefs for a company of a certain size as well as their feelings toward the dimensions of control, collection, and awareness of privacy practices. The second study focuses on consumer attitudes and behaviors post-data breach, again taking into account the size of the firm, as well as their repatronage intentions and beliefs about improper access. Both studies were analyzed with the individual consumer's political views as a main effect. It was found that political views did not affect how consumers felt about control, collection and awareness beliefs. Risk beliefs were found to be a mediator between political views and intention to reveal information for liberal and extremely conservative consumers. No significant findings for the role of political orientation or firm size in the consumer beliefs and attitudes came from the second study.
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