Chapter 1: Introduction: Conceptualising language policy and higher education in new nationalism -- Chapter 2: Language and long nation building in Finnish higher education -- Chapter 3: The short and intense post-nationalist period in Finnish higher education -- Chapter 4: Language and new nationalism in higher education (in Finland and a bit elsewhere) -- Chapter 5: New nationalism and higher education.
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Breaks and continuities of two "great transformations" / Aino Saarinen, Kirsti Ekonen and Valentina Uspenskaia -- First-wave women's movement: result and factor of civil society formation in Russia / Irina Lukina -- The art of change: modernist women writers' feminist thinking / Kirsti Ekonen -- Integration or exploitation?: party political mobilization of women in early twentieth-century Russia / Vera Kulik -- Working for women's liberation in a radical fashion: family life in the emancipatory project of Aleksandra Kollontai / Valentina Uspenskaia -- Solving the "woman question": the case of zhenotdels in Tver province / Natalia Kozlova -- Perestroika and feminist critique / Elena Zdravomyslova -- Gender mainstreaming and the NGO-ization of Russian women's activism / Julie Hemment -- Russian public sphere from a gender perspective: the Arkhangelsk Region case / Natalia Kukarenko -- Karelian women's network: a women's movement? / Meri Kulmala -- Revisiting a transborder network project: combating gender violence in the Barents region / Aino Saarinen -- Sex trafficking, women's activism in Russia and the U.S. intervention / Janet Johnson
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AbstractIn current philosophy of mind, there is lively debate over whether emotions, moods, and other affects can extend to comprise elements beyond one's organismic boundaries. At the same time, there has been growing interest in the nature and significance of so-called existential feelings, which, as the term suggests, are feelings of one's overall being in the world. In this article, I bring these two strands of investigation together to ask: can the material underpinnings of existential feelings extend beyond one's skull and skin? To begin, I introduce and adopt a componential-systemic view of extended affectivity. In doing so, I specify the vehicle externalist criteria for extension employed in my analysis. I then define what existential feelings are and pinpoint several key issues in their potential extension. More specifically, I identify sensorimotor 'know-how' as a possibly extending component of existential feeling and posit it as the fulcrum of my argument. Finally, I move on to consider the extension of existential feeling via sensory substitution, especially through so-called tactile visual sensory substitution (TVSS) devices. Informed by both philosophical and empirical studies, I argue that, under certain conditions, (a) the agent's implicit sensorimotor processing and a TVSS device can become coupled into a new systemic whole, which in turn (b) reconfigures the material underpinnings of the agent's preintentional world-experience. This, I conclude, counts as a cogent case for extended existential feeling.
Despite the finance industry's growing interest towards and crucial role in pursuing sustainable development, scholars' interest in the connection of finance and sustainability, the Circular Economy's nature as a possible enabler of sustainable development, and the research presenting multiple financial barriers to Circular Economy Business, there has been significantly little interest and detailed research about how finance can affect the large-scale transition to a more Circular Economy. The main purpose of this study was to contribute to filling that gap in the literature and hereby provide researchers and practitioners answers through the following objective. The twofold objective of this study was to identify what financial factors drive and/or inhibit transitioning to and operating by CE principles and how, and what characteristics of CE business and CE companies drive and/or inhibit their attractiveness as an investment or a debtor and how. Towards addressing the research objective, an explorative and qualitative study of the underlying issues was carried out. As a choice of analysis methodology, an iterative thematic analysis utilizing systematic combining and an extremely diverse set of both primary and secondary data was conducted. The data set consisted of Focus Group Discussions, observation data, secondary interviews and meetings, practitioner research reports and media data, originally produced between 2013 and 2020. The sources of data included experts amongst both practitioners and researchers from various relevant stakeholder groups: e.g. academics, CE company executives, regulators, legislators, financiers, NPOs and different kinds of interest groups were represented in the data. As a result, a framework of the identified financial factors affecting both transitioning to and operating by CE principles and CE business's attractiveness as investment was constructed. Also, a total of 44 propositions were derived on how each factor drives and/or inhibits the said subjects, indicating that there currently are more financial inhibitors than drivers to CE. The factors and the propositions were categorized into Sources of financing, Criteria for financing and Subjects of financing, of which the Criteria for financing contained the most driving and/or inhibiting factors. The study provides also pragmatic guidance on what practitioners can do to contribute to CE becoming a better-established paradigm of operation. To address regulators and legislators, the role of the public sector in making the playing field level for CE businesses using financial incentives, public funding organizations, procurement, legislation, and taxation is highlighted. For company executives operating by or planning to operate by CE principles, the results imply that they should pay significant attention to the profitability and financial viability of their Circular Business Models and to recognizing and mitigating the risks typical to CE business, such as market, technology, cash flow, supply chain, regulatory and end-client credit risk. For financiers, it is implied that the currently used financial risk and value assessment models used are in the need of renewing due to their unfitness for assessing CE business and that CE contains a potential business opportunity to be exploited. For the agenda of future research, it is recommended that the specifics behind the prevailing financial models' unfitness to CE, the means to distribute investments, other resources and risks fairly within Circular supply chains and the relationship between Socially Responsible Investing and CE are investigated further.