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Risk and Hierarchy Within International Society: Liberal Interventionism in the Post-Cold War Eraclapton_14@hotmail.com, William Clapton January 2010 (has links)
Several recent works have emphasised contemporary hierarchical trends within international society. These trends have been most readily demonstrated by the willingness of dominant states, such as the United States, to conduct interventions in support of the promotion of liberal values and political institutions. Yet while many scholars have identified new relations of hierarchy within international society, few have explored what they suggest regarding international societys normative constitution or what factors have given rise to these new hierarchies. The end of colonialism in the 1960s resulted in a fundamental reconstitution of international society. The result of decolonisation was that pluralism, the notion that all states have the equal freedom to constitute their internal socio-political and economic institutions as they see fit, was entrenched as the central constitutive principle of the post-colonial international society.
Contemporary hierarchical trends suggest a transition away from this pluralist constitution, with resultant changes in the processes of inclusion and exclusion and modes of interaction between different members of international society. This thesis aims to explore these processes of reconstitution within international society in the post-Cold War era and explain why Western societies have felt compelled to intervene in particular territories in order to promote liberal values. Utilising sociological theories of risk, particularly the work of Ulrich Beck, this thesis suggests that a new liberal social logic of risk underpins the emergence of new forms of hierarchy and contemporary constitutional transition within international society. New forms of temporally and spatially de-bounded security risks (such as terrorism), and Western attempts at managing these risks through intervention and the imposition of liberal values in so-called risky zones, has altered the constitution of international society in a way that gives rise to various hierarchical and anti-pluralist trends.
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Reverse ActualizationMcClain, William David Ross 01 May 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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Underlying Mechanisms That Affect Crayfish Agonistic Interactions and Resource AcquisitionMartin, Arthur Leo, III 12 June 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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Correlating convergence in product designBingham, David Clayton 12 April 2006 (has links)
Convergence is a topic that many point to as the driving force behind modern product development. The merger of similar devices into a single product form can create a number of advantages for both producers and consumers, but successful design must take more than just this into account. Convergence is the evolution of a product through a disruptive and uncertain environment of technology and user needs. While the digital revolution has certainly been the biggest recent disrupter to society and design, there are signs of convergence in both form and function that have occurred across many products, and product categories. Producers and consumers always clamor for devices that are useful and convenient, take advantage of the latest technologies, and yet remain intuitive, attractive, and easy to use. This paper will dissect the meaning of convergence in product design and provide a framework for understanding and dialog. Combined with an extensive survey and product mapping, this definition will then be used to delineate approaches and principles for the effective design of evolving products in today's changing environment. The findings of this paper will help designers make decisions when considering the trade-offs between aesthetics, functionality, and ease of use in technology based products.
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The System of Least Prompts to Promote Independence in Activities of Daily Living for Older AdultsSnyder, Carrie L. 25 July 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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