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In: Wspc-ecnu Series On China Volume 6
Intro -- Contents -- About the Editors -- List of Contributors -- Chapter 1 An Exploration of the Spiritual "Original Homeland" of Chinese Ethics: A Review of the Conceptual History of "Emotion" -- Part I Doing Chinese Ethics A New Possibility? -- Part II Why the Thick Concept Is So Important? -- Part III Emotion A Thick Ethical Concept -- 1. The Intensional Evolution of the Concept of "Emotion -- 2. The Idea Cluster Behind the Concept of "Emotion": Sense, Sight, and Feeling -- Concluding Remarks -- Chapter 2 Contemporary Full-Length Novels: A Literary Symbol -- I. -- II. -- III. -- IV. -- Chapter 3 The Novel Monthly and Chinese Literature in the 1920s -- I -- II -- III -- IV -- Chapter 4 Cultural Warfare: The Context and Situation of Chinese Literary Criticism in the 20th Century -- I. How Did "Cultural Warfare" Originate -- II. "A Finish Fight": The Context for Chinese Literary Criticism in the 20th Century -- III. "Dagger" and "Javelin": Critical Weapons in the Years of "Turmoil -- Chapter 5 To Transform Knowledge into Wisdom: On the Logical Starting Point for Literary and Art Theories -- I -- II -- III -- IV -- V -- VI -- Chapter 6 On the Momentariness of Image Creation -- I -- II -- III -- Chapter 7 Lu Xun's Theories on New Fine Art -- Part I Lu Xun and the Art Revolution -- Part II Three Traditions of the Woodcut Campaign -- Part III Significance of the Notes in Peking -- Chapter 8 Hu Huanyong's Contributions to Chinese Population Geography: In Commemoration of the 80th Anniversary of Discovery of the "Hu Huanyong Line" -- I. Who Is Hu? -- II. Hu's Major Research Achievements, Academic Concepts and Influence -- III. Hu's Major Academic Papers and Monographs -- Bibliography -- Chapter 9 Money in the Social Sciences: The Individual, Society, the State and Beyond -- Functionalism: Money, the Individual and Society.
Key words: materiality, natural world, humanities, ethical ecocriticism, agencyIn the twentieth century the principle tendency has been to denigrate the value of non-human nature. In this sense, scientific studies can help recover the materiality of the natural world for research in the humanities, especially when dealing with ecocriticism. Our current image of the environment has been deprived of its living beings and turned into an empty space at the disposal of humans. Natural sciences can provide theoretical and methodological models which can advance ethical and political projects of ecocriticism and encourage research that would consider the materiality of the non-human world, thereby restoring entity to the natural world. Twenty-first century environmental movements need to view the material and natural world as subjects with agency and not take for granted that these exist "somewhere out there."Palabras clave: materia, naturaleza no humana, humanidades, ética ecocrítica, agencia En el siglo XX la tendencia fundamental hacia el medioambiente fue la de menospreciar el valor de la naturaleza no humana. En este sentido, los estudios científicos pueden ayudar a recuperar la materialidad del mundo natural para la investigación de las humanidades, especialmente en lo que concierne a la ecocrítica. El medioambiente actual ha sido privado de sus seres vivos y convertido en un espacio vacío a disposición del ser humano. Las ciencias naturales pueden aportar modelos teóricos y metodológicos que hagan avanzar los proyectos éticos y políticos de la ecocrítica, en definitiva, crear una investigación que considere la materialidad del mundo no humano: que devuelva entidad al mundo natural. Los movimientos medioambientalistas del siglo XXI deben contemplar el mundo material y natural como sujeto agente, pues no se puede dar por sentado que éstos existen "por ahí, en alguna parte."
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ISSN: 0972-1401
Studies in the humanities and the social sciences can be enhanced through the use of geographic information systems (GIS). However, this computer-aided method of analysis is worthless unless researchers can devote the time necessary to learn what it is, what it can do, and how to use it.Resulting from a six-year project entitled Spatial Information Science for the Humanities and Social Sciences (SIS for HSS), GIS-Based Studies in the Humanities and Social Sciences details the tools and processes for deploying GIS in economic and social analyses. Through the use of this book, re
In: Social studies: a periodical for teachers and administrators, Band 63, Heft 1, S. 10-14
ISSN: 2152-405X
International audience ; Urban rivers are highly disturbed ecosystems. Indeed, urban rivers have been dammed and sometimes buried. The aim was to reduce the risk of flooding and solve health problems due to water pollution. In the mid-20th century, many cities have turned banks into parking. Cities and rivers were therefore separated due to urban development. Since the 1960s and 1970s, the water policy was to build or upgrade the wastewater treatment plants and water treatment plants. In Europe and North America, however, the legislation has evolved over the last fifteen years for increased and overall protection of aquatic ecosystems. The hydromorphological river restoration is now a priority of the new water policy in Europe. This is why cities are experimenting with today's renaturation projects of urban rivers: both territorial marketing and sustainable development. This article defines the concept of renaturation. The paper also presents two case studies: Quebec in Canada and Lyon in France to evaluate the advantages and limitations of this concept.
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International audience ; Urban rivers are highly disturbed ecosystems. Indeed, urban rivers have been dammed and sometimes buried. The aim was to reduce the risk of flooding and solve health problems due to water pollution. In the mid-20th century, many cities have turned banks into parking. Cities and rivers were therefore separated due to urban development. Since the 1960s and 1970s, the water policy was to build or upgrade the wastewater treatment plants and water treatment plants. In Europe and North America, however, the legislation has evolved over the last fifteen years for increased and overall protection of aquatic ecosystems. The hydromorphological river restoration is now a priority of the new water policy in Europe. This is why cities are experimenting with today's renaturation projects of urban rivers: both territorial marketing and sustainable development. This article defines the concept of renaturation. The paper also presents two case studies: Quebec in Canada and Lyon in France to evaluate the advantages and limitations of this concept.
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International audience ; Urban rivers are highly disturbed ecosystems. Indeed, urban rivers have been dammed and sometimes buried. The aim was to reduce the risk of flooding and solve health problems due to water pollution. In the mid-20th century, many cities have turned banks into parking. Cities and rivers were therefore separated due to urban development. Since the 1960s and 1970s, the water policy was to build or upgrade the wastewater treatment plants and water treatment plants. In Europe and North America, however, the legislation has evolved over the last fifteen years for increased and overall protection of aquatic ecosystems. The hydromorphological river restoration is now a priority of the new water policy in Europe. This is why cities are experimenting with today's renaturation projects of urban rivers: both territorial marketing and sustainable development. This article defines the concept of renaturation. The paper also presents two case studies: Quebec in Canada and Lyon in France to evaluate the advantages and limitations of this concept.
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International audience ; Urban rivers are highly disturbed ecosystems. Indeed, urban rivers have been dammed and sometimes buried. The aim was to reduce the risk of flooding and solve health problems due to water pollution. In the mid-20th century, many cities have turned banks into parking. Cities and rivers were therefore separated due to urban development. Since the 1960s and 1970s, the water policy was to build or upgrade the wastewater treatment plants and water treatment plants. In Europe and North America, however, the legislation has evolved over the last fifteen years for increased and overall protection of aquatic ecosystems. The hydromorphological river restoration is now a priority of the new water policy in Europe. This is why cities are experimenting with today's renaturation projects of urban rivers: both territorial marketing and sustainable development. This article defines the concept of renaturation. The paper also presents two case studies: Quebec in Canada and Lyon in France to evaluate the advantages and limitations of this concept.
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International audience ; Urban rivers are highly disturbed ecosystems. Indeed, urban rivers have been dammed and sometimes buried. The aim was to reduce the risk of flooding and solve health problems due to water pollution. In the mid-20th century, many cities have turned banks into parking. Cities and rivers were therefore separated due to urban development. Since the 1960s and 1970s, the water policy was to build or upgrade the wastewater treatment plants and water treatment plants. In Europe and North America, however, the legislation has evolved over the last fifteen years for increased and overall protection of aquatic ecosystems. The hydromorphological river restoration is now a priority of the new water policy in Europe. This is why cities are experimenting with today's renaturation projects of urban rivers: both territorial marketing and sustainable development. This article defines the concept of renaturation. The paper also presents two case studies: Quebec in Canada and Lyon in France to evaluate the advantages and limitations of this concept.
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International audience ; This chapter aims to explore the epistemological production conditions of inclusive education, in order to identify the strategies that contribute to assemble a new intellectual, political, ethical, educational and cultural terrain in this area. Epistemologically, inclusive education expresses a post-disciplinary nature, its intellectual articulation is not fixed in any disciplinary and interdisciplinary framework, it articulates its intellectual activity through an order of production based on diasporism and dispersion, product of it, ratifies a construction based on the encounter, on the movement and on the confluence of a multiplicity of objects, theories, disciplines, discourse, territories, interdisciplines, influences, methods, objectives, ethical commitments and political projects. It thus configures a field characterized by heterotopicality. The construction of knowledge of inclusive education does not subscribe to any particular theoretical and methodological practice, rather, it faces the challenge of creating its object and method - two of its most critical and thorny points -, positioning its intellectual activity, in the interstices. of their confluent disciplines. By constituting an epistemology of movement and travel, it forges a knowledge of the present. The work analyzes key aspects, such as: inclusion as a structural phenomenon, the central axes of the epistemological compression of inclusive education, the cultural framework of the concept of inclusion, theoretical affiliations, the question about the object and the method-of character post-disciplinar-, the elements that support the deconstruction of their intellectual precariousness, the elements that allow describing inclusion as a device, network and metaphor. The work ends by analyzing the production of concepts. It concludes by identifying the need to crystallize a heterotopic grammar, based on the production of conceptual tools capable of addressing the complexity of the present time. Inclusive education is ...
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International audience ; innovation et ingénierie du Développement Soutenable (REEDS-OVSQ) rattaché à l'université de Versailles(France) qui participe à la conception et l'expérimentation de plusieurs outils de pilotage et d'évaluation de projets européens (GOUVERNe et VIRTUALIS). Menées en France, au Bénin, au Niger et en Côte d'Ivoire, les recherches de M. BROU portent sur la conception d'outils d'évaluation multicritère et participative des projets de gestion des ressources naturelles et développement territorial. Résumé Évaluer la performance des projets d'exploitation minière et forestière implique de prendre en compte d'une part, la pluralité d'acteurs se traduisant par une multiplicité de points de vue et de justifications qui coexistent ou s'affrontent; et d'autre part, des enjeux respectifs, intrinsèquement complexes du fait des interactions qui existent entre eux. Une telle démarche ne pouvant que se révéler complexe, il est nécessaire de rechercher une logique qui permettrait aux différentes parties prenantes de trouver un consensus (s'il existe) afin d'éviter qu'une décision unilatérale s'impose, que les parties concernées soient d'accord ou non. La matrice délibérative « KerDST » que le laboratoire REEDS utilise dans le cadre des projets européens est un outil technologique novateur de par ses diverses fonctionnalités adaptables à des contextes particuliers notamment aux réalités africaines. Dans une perspective délibérative, elle favorise la confrontation d'idées avec de nouveaux faits ou de nouvelles options, invalidant ou corroborant des croyances et des perspectives existantes, attirant l'attention sur de nouveaux arguments, clarifiant des controverses pour amener les parties prenantes à révéler leurs préférences et à partager leurs connaissances, le tout dans une situation d'interactions dans laquelle elles peuvent se parler et s'écouter. Il s'agit d'une véritable innovation en matière d'outils d'aide à la décision favorables à l'émergence des conditions sociales et environnementales dans les politiques de gestion des ressources naturelles. C'est pourquoi nous pensons que la matrice, de par sa capacité à structurer les enjeux des acteurs et favoriser l'apprentissage social, peut générer des scénarios de gestion qui prennent en compte la diversité de points de vue contribuant ainsi à atténuer la complexité que présente l'analyse du devenir des systèmes socio-économiques et écologiques par rapport aux processus sociétaux de décision et de choix. Notre communication exposera les potentialités de cet outil multimédia utilisé dans la prévention et/ou la résolution de conflits autour de la gestion des ressources naturelles. Les résultats des deux études de cas (projet minier à Arlith (Niger), projet forestier à Tiapoum (Côte d'Ivoire)) seront également rapportés au cours de cette communication pour illustrer les perspectives d'échanges délibératifs autour des questions du faisable et du désirable qui sont trop habillement traitées par des économistes sous l'ombre de l'optimalité parétienne de l'offre et de la demande. Introduction La nécessité de concilier rentabilité économique, performance environnementale et acceptabilité sociale dans la définition, la mise en oeuvre et l'évaluation des projets de développement implique de faire des choix dans un univers caractérisé par la complexité des systèmes et l'imperfection de l'information.
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