Protecting People from Their Own Religious Communities: Jane Doe in Church and State,
Blog: Reason.com
a new article of mine, is now available at the Journal of Law & Religion.
17158 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
Blog: Reason.com
a new article of mine, is now available at the Journal of Law & Religion.
Blog: Legal Theory Blog
Elizabeth Sepper (University of Texas at Austin - School of Law) & James David Nelson (University of Houston Law Center) have posted Religion Law and Political Economy (Iowa Law Review, Vol. 108, No. 5, 2023) on SSRN. Here is the...
Blog: Reason.com
Only 20% rely on armed private security personnel, and 5% on uniformed police officers.
Blog: Center for Political Studies (CPS) Blog
After the murders of George Floyd and Breanna Taylor by the police in 2020, the United States witnessed what was arguably the largest protest movement in that nation’s history. Millions of Americans marched in protest of racist police violence and in pursuit of systemic solutions to racial inequality. Scholars have rightfully documented this moment in […]
The post How Do White Churches Talk about Racism? first appeared on Center for Political Studies (CPS) Blog.
Blog: PolitiFact - Rulings and Stories
"Israel just bombed and destroyed" Saint Porphyrius Church in Gaza.
Blog: Religion and Global Society
In this coronation service, for the first time, some of the regalia will be presented by Peers who belong to different faith traditions, the King will receive a greeting delivered in unison by Representatives from five other faiths, and Jewish, Sunni and Shia Muslim, Sikh, Buddhist, Hindu, Jain, Bahá'í, and Zoroastrian representatives will play a … Continued
Blog: Global Voices
A church in Bethlehem has decided to commemorate the birth of Jesus Christ differently this year, symbolizing the suffering of children in Gaza amid Israel's ongoing indiscriminate war.
Blog: AIER | American Institute for Economic Research
"When externalities exist and interested parties can negotiate and trade, they can discover who puts the highest value on using or possessing a resource." ~ Christopher Lingle and Janna Lu
Blog: Crooked Timber
I have come to the conclusion that the most essential element of the Silicon Valley ideology is its collective faith in technological acceleration. More than the mix of libertarianism and tech determinism that Richard Barbrook and Andy Cameron described as the "Californian Ideology" in 1995, more than the breakdown of donations between Democratic and Republican […]
Blog: Global Voices
The iconography of June 29 protest, organized by Macedonian Orthodox Church and right-wing political parties, included religious and nationalist symbols, Russian flags and participation by pro-Kremlin politicians and associations.
Blog: TRAFO – Blog for Transregional Research
By Denys Brylov and Tetiana Kalenychenko. With the beginning of its independent history, Ukrainian society experienced a religious renaissance, which also began to define identity. Identities did not always remain purely religious, but could also have a cultural and traditional character, such as the self-definition of a Ukrainian as a Christian, despite the country's multi-religious and multicultural map. Since 2022, the problem of the transformation of religious identities is further exacerbated. Dramatic changes are taking place among the believers and clergy. This study explores precisely these transformations of religious identity taking place under the conditions of the Russian-Ukrainian war.
Blog: Cato at Liberty
By borrowing, legislators push the costs down the road for future legislators and taxpayers to deal with.
Blog: Brown Center Chalkboard
The right to a free public K-12 education in the United States is enshrined in state constitutions. As a result, states play the lead role in K-12 education policy. For example, states determine how local public schools are funded (in large part, by providing significant funding to local districts), how educators are licensed to teach,…
Blog: LSE IQ podcast
Contributor(s): Professor Christopher Coker | For the late Professor Christopher Coker the answer lay in the rise of a new political entity, the civilizational state. In an episode of LSE iQ which explored China's position in the world in the coming century, Professor Coker talked about this, the potential for war between the United States and China and what that might look like.
Christopher Coker, was Professor of International Relations at LSE for almost four decades, and co-Director of LSE IDEAS, LSE's foreign policy think tank. He was a scholar of war and warfare. This episode of LSE iQ is a lightly edited version of our 2019 interview recorded before the COVID pandemic and Russia's invasion of Ukraine. It is dedicated to his memory.
Contributors
Professor Christopher Coker
Research
The Rise of the Civilizational State by Christopher Coker
The Improbable War, China, the United States and the Logic of Great Power Conflict by Christopher Coker
Blog: LSE International History
While most Indian Citizenship histories reminisce the 'long fifties' (1947-1964) to have been an era of liberal triumph, the internment of Chinese Indians uncovers a gloomier past as Noel Mariam unfolds in this article. She argues that the case of Chinese-Indian internment in the post-war period helps trace semblances of how the liberal state mutates … Continued