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THE SECTARIAN SAFE HAVENCRAGUN, RYAN T. 31 March 2004 (has links)
No description available.
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CIVIC AND EDUCATIONAL LEADERS' PERCEPTIONS OF THE EFFECTS OF GLOBALIZATION TRANSNATIONAL CORPORATIONS, AND NEO-LIBERAL EDUCATION IDEOLOGY ON AN URBAN MIDWESTERN TOWNCHRISTEN, KATHERINE CARR 23 May 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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Public Spaces, Homelessness, and Neo-Liberal Urbanism: A Study of 'Anti-Homeless' Strategies on Redeveloped Public SpacesZanotto, Juliana M. 15 October 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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Simulacrum of Reality: Network Narrative in BabelUcoluk, Ece 16 April 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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Radicals Online: Ted Kaczynski and the Anti-Tech CollectiveBrown, Mitchell J 01 August 2022 (has links)
After Ted Kaczynski’s manifesto, Industrial Society and its Future, was published it hasbegun a small, but growing movement of people who support his ideas. After beginning my research, I have seen a rise in the visibility of Kaczynski’s ideas online. This thesis focuses on the Anti-Tech Collective (ATC) who, as a radical online community has begun promoting his ideas. This thesis has used communication phenomenology as a method to see how the ATC views their relationship with Kaczynski and his writings. In further analysis I then used Freudian defense mechanisms, repurposed as account structure as a way for the ATC to maintain social acceptability while promoting a radical ideology. In this research, I identified ways that the ATC views Kaczynski and his ideas and where this fits in online radicalism. These methods can be employed in looking at any radical online community where its members desire to maintain some level of social acceptability.
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Painting in Paris: Vincent van Gogh, 1886-1888DiMarco, Christa Rose January 2015 (has links)
In Painting in Paris: Vincent Van Gogh, 1886-1888, Christa DiMarco explores the two-year period Van Gogh lived and worked in Paris. The paintings the artist made in The Netherlands, where he lived prior to Paris, and those he produced in Arles, where he moved afterward, usually receive scholarly attention. The imagery from the artist’s time in the capital is generally marginalized. DiMarco considers how and why the artist used a brighter palette and energetic brushwork while painting in Paris. Considering that his artistic practice spanned only a decade from 1880 to 1890, the artist’s time in the capital represents a significant period of growth in terms of his engagement with the art market, his exposure to avant-garde imagery, and his understanding of Symbolist theory in the visual arts. Van Gogh accomplished significant goals in Paris, though some of his well-developed imagery does not necessarily figure into discussions regarding the canonical paintings of the artist’s body of work. Attention to the Paris-period not only locates Van Gogh’s pictorial development within the context of the Impressionists and Neo-Impressionists, but also establishes the ways in which the artist diverged from the artistic aims of the Parisian avant-garde, such as Claude Monet and Camille Pissarro, as he developed his Symbolic approach. / Art History
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The Paintings of Jeff Koons: 1994 - 2008Zoller, Ian J. January 2010 (has links)
The Paintings of Jeff Koons: 1994 - 2008" is an in depth look at the painting of an artist who is still primarily known for his sculptural work of the 1980's. This thesis examines Koons' paintings in light of his previous work and looks at his studio practices, sources, connection to Photorealism, Surrealism, and Duchamp, etc. The thesis contends that a greater understanding and appreciation for Koons' paintings is necessary in order to grasp the importance of his entire oeuvre. / Art History
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South-South Cooperation and Neo-liberal hegemony in a Post-aid worldMorvaridi, Behrooz, Hughes, Caroline 24 March 2018 (has links)
Yes / South-South Cooperation SSC) has returned as a significant trope in the contemporary
rhetoric of the aid industry. We compare the way that the idea of SSC is being currently
constructed. In the 1960s and 1970s, SSC was discussed as constituting a challenge to the
ideological dominance of the global north, presented initially as a counter-hegemonic
challenge to neo-colonialism. Currently it is framed similarly as a challenge to neoliberalism.
However, the current iteration of SSC differs fundamentally from the first round in the early
1970s, largely because of differences in assumptions about who is co-operating with whom
and to what end, in the context of SSC. These differences are significant for the material
practice of SSC and the ideological function of SSC rhetoric.
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Neo-colonial Dynamics in Africa:A Comparative Study of China, Russia, and France : An Assessment of Economic, Political, Cultural, and Military Engagement as a Form of Neo-colonialismAmtenbrink, Annika January 2024 (has links)
Even after the colonial legacy in Africa terminated, the time of exploitation and dependency was not over yet, but rather continues under the term known as neo-colonialism. Neo- colonialism can be observed all over the world, especially in Africa, where neo-colonialism through economic dependency, cultural hegemony, political influence, and military engagement contributes to the perpetuation of poverty, inequality, and underdevelopment in the neo-colonized countries while benefiting the neocolonial powers and their elite allies. This paper examines these neo-colonial dynamics with three case studies of three distinct examples — China, France, and Russia — with different aims, strategies, and historical backgrounds concerning colonialism. Their dynamics in Africa will be analyzed using the theoretical concept of neo-colonialism, which was constructed out of existing literature, and examined with a comparative analysis using qualitative and quantitative data. This paper concludes that all three countries practice different sorts of neo-colonialism in Africa, emphasizing their engagement on varying features like economic, military, cultural, or political means. This comparative study contributes to the existing research on neo-colonial practices by extensively analyzing each case and delivering new insight by comparing these.
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The Chaos of Covergence: A Study of the Process of Decay, Change, and Transformation within the Telephone Policy Subsystem of the United StatesWard, Robert C. Jr. 06 January 1998 (has links)
This dissertation was developed as two distinct themes within one final study. The first theme is located within Chapter 2 and Chapter 3. These two chapters examine the nature of both policy analysis and organizational theory in terms of their development within the American versions of Public Administration and Political Science. I conclude that the distinctions that have been created between the two areas of research are false, and that within the basic structure of American political theory both policy development and administrative implementation are a single unified endeavor. I then propose that Anthony Giddens Theory of Structuration offers both policy analysis and organizational theory a meta-theory that would allow for both areas of research to be reconnected. Various policy and organizational analysis models are examined, and alterations in these models are suggested to comply with the basic concepts of Giddens Theory of Structuration. A final model of analysis is presented which incorporates elements from these various models, and allows for the examination of the overall operation of a policy subsystem in terms of both policy analysis and organizational theory.
The second theme is located within Chapters 4 through 10. The analytical model that was created in the first theme is applied it to a specific policy subsystem, namely the wire-based telecommunications industry of the United States. The relationship between the industry and government is examined from its original inception to the implementation of the Telecommunications Deregulation Act of 1996. Seven distinct periods of development are analyzed. Each period of analysis seeks to locate the basic underlying structural principles forming the foundations for decisions in both the private and public sectors, and the processes for adaptation and adjustment. The examination of the processes engaged in the various periods supports the conclusion reached in the original analytical model, namely that political and administrative interaction are in fact linked, forming a unified process. A single underlying structural principle is located that has formed the basis for the policy subsystems existence, namely the concept of Compound Federalism as originally envisioned by the Republic's Founding Fathers. / Ph. D.
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