With the development of technology and transportation, the communication between China and the west has increased in almost every field such as economy, culture, and politics. Obviously, marriage as the most important part of life is a hit issue of cross-cultural communication.This paper aims at exploring the differences between marriage concepts between Chinese and western cultures and giving some proposals on how to minimize the communication mistake in marriage and marriage purposes. It will be helpful in cross-cultural communication about marriage concepts.
This article examines the impact of the two world wars on welfare legislation in 16 western countries. We use Poisson regressions to test our hypothesis that war was a catalyst of welfare legislation, especially in countries that were heavily exposed to the dreadful effects of war. By welfare legislation, we mean the inaugural adoption and major reforms across four programmes (old age and disability benefits, sickness and maternity benefits, unemployment compensation and family allowances). Our findings suggest that both world wars are key factors for explaining the timing of comprehensive welfare reforms and outweigh the significance of other factors such as regime type or level of economic development.
Will immigrant minorities change the Western world? Two decades ago this question seemed irrelevant as it was expected that the West will change the world in its image. Today, the same question is perceived as rhetorical. The answer is obvious, and the dispute is merely over directions, extent and possible consequences of future changes. The center of this dispute is the multiculturalism – the concept, policy and praxis praising diversity of cultures and denying any of them a vested right to dominate not only in the world at large, but even in a particular country. The assessment of its perspectives presupposes a variety of research approaches in view of its complexity. In the present article only one of them is be used for the analysis focused on the employment of immigrant minorities from the world's South. The viability of such approach is based on two circumstances. Firstly, the employment indexes considered in ethnical context belong to the most important characteristics of ethno-social structure of a society. Secondly, the availability of broad statistical information about employment allows for resting upon empirical data, possibly avoiding a needless bias toward purely theoretical constructions.
In: Development and peace: a semi-annual journal devoted to economic political and social aspects of development and international relations, Band 8, Heft 2, S. 123-133
Introduction: The influence of external actors in the Western Balkans / Florian Bieber and Nikolaos Tzifakis -- Security co-operation in the Western Balkans : cracks and erosion of Euro-Atlantic integration? / Tobias Flessenkemper and Marko Kmezic -- The economic development of the Western Balkans : the importance of non-EU actors / Matteo Bonomi and Milica Uvalic -- Serbia : looking East, going West? / Florent Marciacq -- Bosnia and Herzegovina : abandoned by the West, embraced by the East? / Adnan Huskic -- Kosovo : between western and non-western states / Gëzim Visoka -- Macedonia : a fertile ground for external influences / Zoran Nechev and Ivan Nikolovski -- Montenegro : always at a crossroads / Jovana Marovic -- Albania : new geopolitics and shifting linkages / Enika Abazi -- Russia : playing a weak hand well / Dimitar Bechev -- China : a new geoeconomic approach to the Balkans / Anastas Vangeli -- Turkey : forced marriage or marriage of convenience with the Western Balkans? / Ahmet Erdi Öztürk and Samim Akgönül -- UAE : sultanism meets illiberal democracy / Will Bartlett and Tena Prelec.