Autonomisme, luttes d'émancipation en Corse et ailleurs: 1984 - 1989; articles, chroniques, notes et entretiens
In: L'émancipation nationale à L'Harmattan
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In: L'émancipation nationale à L'Harmattan
World Affairs Online
In: L'histoire vivante
In: Autonomismes-nationalités
In: St. Anthony's series
Introduction : the multiple dimensions of the politics of accommodation in multinational democracies / Jaime Lluch -- Varieties of territorial pluralism : prospects for the constitutional and political accommodation of Puerto Rico in the USA / Jaime Lluch -- (Mis)recognition in Catalunya and Quebec : the politics of judicial containment / François Rocher and Elisenda Casas Adam -- The limits of constitutionalism : politics, economics, and secessionism in Catalonia (2006-2013) / Hector Lopez Bofill -- The accommodation of island autonomies in multinational states / Eve Hepburn -- From autonomism to independentism : the growth of secessionism in Catalonia (2010-2013) / Jordi Argelaguet -- The multilevel politics of accommodation and the non-constitutional moment : lessons from Corsica / André Fazi -- Flexible accommodation : another case of British exceptionalism? / Stephen Tierney -- Italy : autonomism, decentralization, federalism, or what else? / Francesco Palermo and Alice Valdesalici -- Autonomous areas as a constitutional feature in China and Finland / Markku Suksi
In: Building leadership bridges
Foreword / Dr. Marco Janssen Introduction -- Part I. Overview of leading on the commons / Randal Joy Thompson Introduction -- Part II. Debt, obligation, and care on the commons / Devin P. Singh -- Part I. The paradigm shift -- Chapter 1. Leading regenerative systems: Evolving the whole instead of a part / Kathleen E. Allen -- Chapter 2. Leading so all can thrive: Commons leadership for mutualistic self-organization / Elizabeth A. Castillo -- Chapter 3. Redefining leadership through the commons: An overview of two processes of meaning-making and collective action in barcelona / Antonio Jimenez-Luque -- Chapter 4. Responsible, relational and intentional: A re-imagined construct of corporate-commons leadership / Kathleen A. Curran -- Chapter 5. What favelas can teach about leadership: The importance of shared-purpose and place-based leadership / Renato Souza, Thomaz Wood, Jr., and Brad Jackson -- Chapter 6. From governance to leadership: Ethical foundations for value-infused leadership of the commons / Catharyn Baird, Allison Dake, Jeannine Niacaris, and Nancy Sayer -- Chapter 7. Leading proleptically on the commons / Randal Joy Thompson -- Part II. Leadership on the commons lifecycle -- Chapter 8. Developing leadership on the commons: Animal rescue / Robin Bisha -- Chapter 9. Convening leadership on the commons: Initiating stakeholder networks to solve complex global issues / Patricia A. Clary -- Chapter 10. Collaborating and co-creating leadership in the virtual and not-so-virtual commons: Road warriors, communitas, and culture / Gayla S. Napier and David Blake Willis -- Chapter 11. Using interorganizational collaboration to create shared leadership through collective identity development / Patricia Greer -- Chapter 12. The role of leaders in catalyzing cooperative behavior in the governance of nonprofit sector shared resources: The case of early childhood education / Angela Titi Amayah, MD Haque, and Wendolly A. Escobar -- Part III. Leading specific types of commons -- Chapter 13. The peoples' voice cafe: Leading collectively and horizontally for more than 40 years / Susan J. Erenrich -- Chapter 14. Open data, distributed leadership and food security: The role of women smallholder farmers / Éliane Ubalijoro, Victor N. Sunday, Foteini Zampati, Uchechit Shirley Anaduaka, and Suchith Anand -- Chapter 15. Learning and leading together to transform the world: Jesuit higher education and ignatian leadership formation at the margins / Dung Q. Tran and Michael R. Carey -- Chapter 16. Traditional leadership on the commons: Main challenges for leaders of community organizations to govern rural water in ránquil, chile / Camila Alejandra Vargas Estay, Noelia Carrasco Henríquez, Victor Manuel Vargas Rojas, and Luis Gatica Mora -- Chapter 17. Leadership of the commons in bosnia and herzegovina: Protecting natural resources and reclaiming public space / Edin Ibrahimefendic -- Chapter 18. Hopping the hoops or building a communal culture as the most significant pillar of leadership of the commons / Katja Hleb, Miha Škerlavaj, and Domen Rozman -- Chapter 19. Job commons: The overlooked dimension of commons leadership and global and local governance / Jan Hurst.
In: Emerald insight
In: Building leadership bridges
Commons are self-organized, self-governed, autonomous networks and organizations that function outside the state and the private sector. They are emerging around the world as people recognize that the state and private sector have increasingly closed off access to basic resources and services. People want increased power to determine their political, economic, and social lives. Reimagining Leadership on the Commons includes leadership approaches derived from a complex, adaptive, open, whole systems perspective and a more relational, distributed, and collaborative paradigm that recognizes that rather than being individualist self-maximizers: people prefer to work together to share benefits and found a society based on ethical behavior, equality, and justice. This is essential reading for researchers of commons, leadership practitioners, and non-profits working towards a more ethical, equitable, and just world.
In: Rethinking political and international theory
1. The perspective of autonomy -- 2. Life put to work : the theory of Antio Negri and Paulo Virno -- 3. Exodus and disobedience : the political practice of the republic of the multitude -- 4. Critique : value, fetishism, the commodity and politics -- 5. The new enclosures. The theory of the midnight notes collective -- 6. Jubilee, the political practice of the commons -- 7. A critique of the midnight notes collective -- 8. In the beginning is the scream. The theory of John Holloway -- 9. One no, many yeses : the political practice of anti-power -- 10. A critique of Holloway -- 11. Conclusion.
In: Rethinking political and international theory
This volume explores and critiques one of the most dynamic terrains of political theory sometimes referred to as 'Autonomist Marxism' or post-Operaismo. Taking three divergent manifestations of Autonomist Marxism found in the works of John Holloway, Antonio Negri and Paul Virno, David Eden examines how each approach questions the nature of class and contemporary capitalism and how they extrapolate politics.
Commoning the political, politicising the common Community and the political in Nancy, Esposito, Agamben, Laclau and Mouffe -- From the commons another politics of egalitarian autonomy Common-pool resources, digital and anti-capitalist commons, from Ostrom to Marxist autonomism -- Common and communism: political theories for radical change From Hardt and Negri, and Dardot and Laval to Badiou and Zizek -- Taking on hegemony and the political -- Reclaiming post-Marxist hegemony for the commons -- Movements post-hegemony -- Common democracy: political representation and government as commons.
Acknowledgements 1 Introduction 2 National identity-building National identity; Discourse analysis and the study of national identity; Fomenting factors and actors in national identity-building processes 3 Scotland and Newfoundland in comparison Marriages of convenience, not of love: constitutional histories; In bed with elephants: socio-economics and politics; Scotch and the Rock: cultural heritage and identity 4 Scottish national identity and nationalism Tartanry and the cabbage bed: cultural nationalism in Scotland; Responding to the decline of Britain: political nationalism in Scotland, 1967-1979; The 1979 referendum: high expectations and the failure of political nationalism; Popular political nationalism, 1980-1997 5 Newfoundland national identity and nationalism Nations in the bosom: the development of Newfoundland ethnicity; 'Newfcult' and renaissance: cultural nationalism in modern Newfoundland; The dog that snarled: autonomism in Newfoundland, 1979-1989; Hibernation, 1989-2003 6 Images of self and other in Scottish newspapers The Scotsman, 1967-1979; The Scotsman, 1980-1990; Glasgow Herald, 1967-1979; Glasgow Herald, 1980-1990 7 Images of self and other in Newfoundland newspapers Daily News, 1967-1984; Evening Telegram, 1967-1979; Evening Telegram, 1979-1990 8 Conclusion Ethnic distinctness and national identity; Cultural nationalism and ethno-cultural arguments; Socio-economic decline, dependency and inequality; Stateless nations: central government neglect and a malfunctioning constitutional set-up; Alternatives to dependency, economic and political self-confidence, and social consensus; Pragmatic unionism, centralism and political nationalism; Autonomism in the early twenty-first century Bibliography Index
"What is at the heart of political resistance? Whilst traditional accounts often conceptualise it as a reaction to power, this volume (prioritising remarks by Michel Foucault) invites us to think of resistance as primary. The author proposes a strategic analysis that highlights how our efforts need to be redirected towards a horizon of creation and change. This text combines a range of political and philosophical scholarship and provides an innovative rethinking of Foucault's model of power relations that leads towards a new autonomism for the 21st century"--
What would a world without money look like? This book is a lively thought experiment that deepens our understanding of how money is the driver of political power, environmental destruction and social inequality today, arguing that it has to be abolished rather than repurposed to achieve a postcapitalist future. Grounded in historical debates about money, Anitra Nelson draws on a spectrum of political and economic thought and activism, including feminism, ecoanarchism, degrowth, permaculture, autonomism, Marxism and ecosocialism. Looking to Indigenous rights activism and the defence of commons, an international network of activists engaged in a fight for a money-free society emerges. Beyond Money shows that, by organising around post-money versions of the future, activists have a hope of creating a world that embodies their radical values and visions.
Intro -- CONTENTS -- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS -- I Introduction to the Issues -- 1 NEGATIVITY AND REVOLUTION: ADORNO AND POLITICAL ACTIVISM -- 2 WHY ADORNO? -- 3 PIED PIPERS AND POLYMATHS: ADORNO'S CRITIQUE OF PRAXISISM -- II Negative Dialectics versus Neo-Structuralism -- 4 ANTAGONISM AND DIFFERENCE: NEGATIVE DIALECTICS AND POST-STRUCTURALISM IN VIEW OF THE CRITIQUE OF MODERN CAPITALISM -- 5 ADORNO AND POST-VANGUARDISM -- 6 NEGATIVE AND POSITIVE AUTONOMISM. OR WHY ADORNO? PART 2 -- III Emancipation and the Critique of Totality -- 7 ADORNO: THE CONCEPTUAL PRISON OF THE SUBJECT, POLITICAL FETISHISM AND CLASS STRUGGLE -- 8 EMANCIPATORY PRAXIS AND CONCEPTUALITY IN ADORNO -- IV The Politics of Sexuality and Art -- 9 ADORNO, NON-IDENTITY, SEXUALITY -- 10 SOLIDARITY WITH THE FALL OF METAPHYSICS: NEGATIVITY AND HOPE -- 11 MIMESIS AND DISTANCE: ARTS AND THE SOCIAL IN ADORNO'S THOUGHT -- LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS -- NAME INDEX -- SUBJECT INDEX.
In: EBSCOhost eBook Collection
Planning agency, autonomous agency / Michael E. Bratman -- Autonomy without free will / Bernard Berofsky -- Autonomy and the paradox of self-creation : infinite regresses, finite selves, and the limits of authenticity / Robert Noggle -- Agnostic autonomism revisited / Alfred R. Mele -- Feminist intuitions and the normative substance of autonomy / Paul Benson -- Autonomy and personal integration / Laura Waddell Ekstrom -- Responsibility, applied ethics, and complex autonomy theories / Nomy Arpaly -- Autonomy and free agency / Marina A.L. Oshana -- The relationship between autonomous and morally responsible agency / Michael McKenna -- Alternative possibilities, personal autonomy, and moral responsibility / Ishtiyaque Haji -- Freedom within reason / Susan Wolf -- Procedural autonomy and liberal legitimacy / John Christman -- The concept of autonomy in bioethics : an unwarranted fall from grace / Thomas May -- Who deserves autonomy, and whose autonomy deserves respect? / Tom L. Beauchamp -- Autonomy, diminished life, and the threshold for use / R.G. Frey
In: Rethinking globalizations, 36
This book analyzes the World Social Forum (WSF) in a context of crisis and transition in the history of Western capitalist modernity. Based on ten years of fieldwork on three continents, this book treats social movements as knowledge producers. It pays attention to what movements are doing and saying on the terrain of the WSF over time and from place to place, and to how they theorize its significance. Framed by the Latin American modernity-coloniality perspective, the book critically engages with discourses of global civilsociety, autonomism, and transnational feminism toward a reading of the WSF through the lens of 'colonial difference'. Each chapter outlines a set of contestations and contributions with relevance beyond debates about the WSF. It will be of strong interest to students and scholars of social movement studies; international politics; post-colonial studies; gender studies; sociology; political theory and social work.