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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
101

International Relocation of Steel Production: U.S.A. and Brasil

Foot, Simon P.H. 06 1900 (has links)
There has been a general shift in the location of steel production over the last 15 years away from developed countries towards developing countries. The shift is similar to those documented in their industries like cars and textiles, but the reasons for the shift are different partly because steel is not produced by multinational corporations. This thesis examines part of the shift in steel production. specifically its decline in the United States and its expansion in Brasil. An analysis of changing class relationships around steel production over the most recent cycle of accumulation is conducted for each country. The importance of indigenous class forces in determining the course of industrial development is emphasized. in contrast with most of the radical literature on industrial development which considers third world growth to be externally imposed. The thesis makes two major contributes to the literature. First a theory of international development which is consistent with realist-marxist principles is provided. This theory also integrates the economic and political branches of marxist theory through an analysis of competition, a subject relatively absent from most marxist analyses. Secondly, research at a concrete level is conducted which illustrates the strengths and usefulness of the realist-marxist theory. By analyzing an industry (steel) that in its institutional organization and physical structure is different from other industries that have been examined empirically, different kinds of social relationships are found to be important in determining the pattern of international development. An explanation of the shift in steel production is provided therefore which also demonstrates practically the realist argument that causes of Industrial development are both abstract and specific: specific to places, times and branches of production. Most of the existing radical literature on international development identifies only causes that are specific to certain cases. / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
102

Unsustainable Development : A Look at Sweden and U.S.A. Foreign Aid to Haiti

Axelson, Niklas January 2022 (has links)
Development on an international scale is important to fully grasp, as a globalized world means a combination of actors play a role. The discourse within international relations on development often discusses why, despite large and collective measures, very few nations see development through foreign aid. This thesis looks to understand how two actors—Sweden and the United States—effect the development of Haiti, a nation labeled by Euro-centric commentary as “the poorest nation in the west”. By conducting a Small N quantitative comparative research, understanding the foreign aid approaches by these two actors into Haiti is sought. Social constructivism, and the Lockean culture of analysis are applied to understand how the system of the world order affects these two actors’ foreign aid. The findings do not offer any conclusion as to how foreign aid affects development. However, it does apply insight into understanding why the actors behave the way they do, and how this is unsustainable in nature.
103

I Get My Kicks from Magazines : A study of the portrayal of women in U.S., German, and Swedish pop-culture magazines in the 1970s and 1980s

Sjöstrand Schatzl, Patrick January 2024 (has links)
While not being the first thing to come to mind when reminiscing or imagining the 1970s and 1980s; these decades would see great changes within feminism as well as pop-culture, which in turn would come to influence societal structures at large and lay the ground for processes still visible today. Another unexpected factoid is just how intertwined the changing phenomena where and how by looking closer at popular culture, as seen in magazines, we can make the shifts within second wave feminism more tangible. This way we learn how the image of female artist went from representing a lifestyle of freedom and changing up the status quo to being commercialized and highly sexualized in a marketable way. This is done by analysing the visual and verbal depictions found in some of the most read magazines, to understand what kind of discourse there was surrounding these new phenomena.  Furthermore, by looking at publications from multiple countries, here U.S.A., Sweden and Germany,  over the course of two decades one can assess that the changes in pop-culture as well as feminism where not an isolated one-and-and done deal, but a larger and continuous occurrence.
104

Becoming global : The troublesome integration proces

Osmundsen, Tonje January 2005 (has links)
<p>Becoming global – the troublesome integration process.</p><p>The thesis is based on research in Kongsberg Automotive and its foreign subsidiaries in Mexico, U.S.A, Poland and South Korea. It is a study of how these foreign units were established and how the head office in Norway was able to integrate these units in the organization.</p><p>The purpose of the study is to improve understanding of the challenges involved in internationalization processes. To what extent are cultural, political and social differences factors to consider when creating the international organization? In what way do actors and structures influence the process and the practices that emerge?</p><p>In an international organization cultural, political and social differences may create barriers towards understanding the other. This may be further complicated by different languages, time and geographical distances. The local manager abroad is central to the development of relations between the head office and the local unit and his perception of what is appropriate and his ability to make others agree is central to understanding the various practices and solutions that emerge in the local organization.</p><p>The main motivation and challenge of the central management is to control and coordinate the international organization. The study emphasizes the usefulness of different control mechanisms and how these attempts for control were perceived locally. Through time there was a stronger reliance on mechanisms for socialization and enculturation, and while these are directed towards creating a larger consensus in the organization, these should also be seen as means for decentralized control and self-monitoring.</p><p>The various organizational entities in Kongsberg Automotive represent different communities-of-practice and to understand the interaction between these communities as learning processes is central to the study. This perspective also confers an understanding of power as a productive element in the interaction.</p><p>The implications of this study for theory and future research are in embracing the complex nature of internationalization process. Relevant for understanding internationalization processes are both actors and structures intertwined. Institutional environments are central to an understanding of how different actors perceive practices and structures, and what they see as viable solutions. Neither the international organization nor the learning processes these undertake can be torn loose from the local cultural, political and social context.</p>
105

Becoming global : The troublesome integration proces

Osmundsen, Tonje January 2005 (has links)
Becoming global – the troublesome integration process. The thesis is based on research in Kongsberg Automotive and its foreign subsidiaries in Mexico, U.S.A, Poland and South Korea. It is a study of how these foreign units were established and how the head office in Norway was able to integrate these units in the organization. The purpose of the study is to improve understanding of the challenges involved in internationalization processes. To what extent are cultural, political and social differences factors to consider when creating the international organization? In what way do actors and structures influence the process and the practices that emerge? In an international organization cultural, political and social differences may create barriers towards understanding the other. This may be further complicated by different languages, time and geographical distances. The local manager abroad is central to the development of relations between the head office and the local unit and his perception of what is appropriate and his ability to make others agree is central to understanding the various practices and solutions that emerge in the local organization. The main motivation and challenge of the central management is to control and coordinate the international organization. The study emphasizes the usefulness of different control mechanisms and how these attempts for control were perceived locally. Through time there was a stronger reliance on mechanisms for socialization and enculturation, and while these are directed towards creating a larger consensus in the organization, these should also be seen as means for decentralized control and self-monitoring. The various organizational entities in Kongsberg Automotive represent different communities-of-practice and to understand the interaction between these communities as learning processes is central to the study. This perspective also confers an understanding of power as a productive element in the interaction. The implications of this study for theory and future research are in embracing the complex nature of internationalization process. Relevant for understanding internationalization processes are both actors and structures intertwined. Institutional environments are central to an understanding of how different actors perceive practices and structures, and what they see as viable solutions. Neither the international organization nor the learning processes these undertake can be torn loose from the local cultural, political and social context.
106

The fundamentalist modernist controversy : a stage in Presbyterian doctrinal development

Baskwell, Patrick Joseph 06 1900 (has links)
Were the years of the Fundamentalist/Modernist Controversy (1890-1936) in the Presbyterian Church in the USA years of doctrinal development? This dissertation argues that the answer to this question is both "yes" and ''no." This dissertation, in exploring this particular era of modem American church history, takes its structure from well-known Catholic theologian, John Courtney Murray, and his contribution to the discussion of doctrinal development as it applied to the years of the Arian Controversy culminating in the Council of Nicaea. Murray identified three factions in that struggle: the Futurists, the Archaists, and the Centrists. The Futurists, represented by Arius and his followers, sought to identify Christianity with the prevailing philosophies of the day, thereby reinterpreting and altering certain affirmations of the faith. The Archaists, as seen in the person of Eusebius of Caesarea, reacted strongly to the Arians' proposals by not admitting any doctrinal formulation not couched in the 'sacred words' of Scripture. The Centrists, representing more balanced judgment, as seen in St. Athanasius, prevailed in the end. He saw that doctrinal development, which is herein defined to mean further definition, clarification, and application of existing truths, does indeed take place but not at the expense of denying the historic affirmations of the faith. After investigating development, tradition (the results of doctrinal development over time) and historicism (the theory that doctrine develops out of the historical process itself), Murray's structure is then applied to the struggles in the Presbyterian Church in the early twentieth century. Beginning with Charles Briggs of Union Seminary in New York and his avocation of historical criticism as applied to the Scriptures, the Presbyterian Church in the USA was thrown progressively into turmoil regarding just what constituted the historic affirmations of the faith. Briggs and those who followed, the Liberals or Futurists, wanted to jettison or remold a sizeable portion of the historic Westminster Confession of Faith, the doctrinal heritage of Presbyterianism. Further events, such as the confessional revision of 1903 and the Cumberland reunion of 1906, helped to propel the entire church in a Futurist direction. Opposition from the beginning came primarily from Princeton Seminary. Princeton's professors sought to maintain the historic, confessional stance of the church. In this endeavor they were at times Archaists, Centrists, and even Futurists. The efforts of those who would preserve the traditional, confessional stance of Presbyterianism, however, were doomed to failure as the church moved steadily in a Futurist direction. After some brief insights into the more prominent Futurist personalities and the rise of Fundamentalist opposition, the remainder of the dissertation is taken up with the exploits of J. Gresham Machen and his expulsion from an increasingly Futurist church. Machen was viewed as a trouble maker for opposing this trend. Those of more moderate sentiments often sided with the Liberals/Futurists over against Machen. After much anguish and a lengthy trial, Machen was deposed from the office of minister in the Presbyterian Church in the USA. He immediately proceeded to found a new Presbyterian denomination. Into this new church came both Archaist and Centrist alike, who had previously formed an uneasy alliance in opposition to the Futurism in the mother church. The coalition, however, did not last, and after a short time fragmented into smaller constituencies. Although things did not change all at once in the Presbyterian Church in the USA, Liberalism/Futurism became the norm and remains so until this day. This dissertation argues that the confessional revision of 1903 and the work of J. Gresham Machen can be classified as doctrinal development and, thus, Centrist endeavors. All of the other events of significance that characterize the Fundamentalist/Modernist Controversy were either Archaist in character or Futurist endeavors more concerned with changing the historic affirmations of the faith than developing them. / Church History / M.Th. (Church history)
107

The Pakistan-US conundrum: Jihadists, the military and the people : the struggle for control

Samad, Yunas January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
108

Aspectos regulatórios e institucionais do desenvolvimento de gás não convencional: uma análise comparativa entre Brasil e Estados Unidos / Regulatory and institutional aspects of unconventional gas development: a comparative analysis between Brazil and the United States of America

Araújo, Renata Rodrigues de 29 July 2016 (has links)
Esta tese avaliou se o Brasil, sob a perspectiva regulatória, encontra-se preparado para iniciar localmente o desenvolvimento de gás de folhelho, principal fonte de gás não convencional. Para tal, adotou como metodologia uma análise comparativa entre a legislação do setor de gás natural dos EUA e do Brasil, com foco na regulamentação das operações de fraturamento hidráulico, buscando evidenciar e contextualizar os principais fatores de sucesso da experiência estadunidense. Na realização dessas investigações foram utilizados diversos conceitos da Política Ambiental que podem ser empregados na elaboração de normas e condutas voltadas para o gás não convencional. Pautada no resultado dessas análises, que apontou a necessidade de estudos ambientais, sociais e econômicos mais aprofundados, apresentou-se como principal recomendação uma proposta de Avaliação Ambiental Estratégica (AAE). Tal ferramenta pode orientar a decisão do governo em relação à exploração de hidrocarbonetos não convencionais no Brasil, bem como auxiliar o país na obtenção de uma licença social para operar e na criação das condições necessárias para explorar seus possíveis recursos de gás de folhelho de maneira segura e responsável. / This thesis assesses whether Brazil, from the regulatory point of view, is ready to start a local production of shale gas, the main source of unconventional gas. For this purpose, the study conducted a comparative analysis of the primary laws regulating of oil and gas exploration and production activities in the USA and Brazil, focusing on the hydraulic fracturing operations, in order to determine and contextualize the major factors of success for the American shale gas experience. Several approaches of Environmental Policy that can be used in the development of standards and rules for unconventional gas were used. The results indicated the need for additional environmental, social and economic studies. Therefore, a Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) proposal was the main recommendation. This tool may guide the government\'s decision about the unconventional resources production in Brazil, help the county to achieve a social license to operate and meet the conditions required to explore its potential shale gas resources.
109

Perspectives of Saskatchewan Dakota/Lakota Elders on the treaty process in Saskatchewan

Omani, Leo Joseph 19 April 2010
This ethnographic dissertation study contains a total of six chapters. Chapter One provides an introduction to the topic, Perspectives of Saskatchewan Dakota/Lakota Elders on the Treaty Process within Canada. It also discusses the following: the purpose of the study; the rationale & justification for an interdisciplinary approach; the research methodology; the definition of terms; the limitations of the study; assumptions; and the ethical protocols applicable to this study. Chapter Two provides a review of literature pertaining to the various theoretical and methodological considerations to be addressed within this study. These include the traditional Rankean approach to the study of history; that termed within Western academia as Oral History, combined with that termed as Oral Tradition; that termed as Dakota Oral Tradition; and that termed within Western academia as Outsider vs. Insider Research. Chapter Three provides a review of the history of the treaty negotiation processes that occurred both in the United States and Canada and concludes with an analysis of research findings to date. Chapter Four reviews previously written documentation pertaining to the Dakota/Lakota treaty negotiation process within Canada and concludes with an analysis of research findings to date. Chapter Five discusses in detail the data collection process employed for this study. In addition, the data generated from the interviews with the Saskatchewan Dakota/Lakota Elders regarding their perspectives on treaty are presented. Chapter Six provides a synthesis and analysis of research findings for the data collected from the Saskatchewan Dakota/Lakota Elders during the interview process. In addition, an epilogue is provided regarding the implications of the research for the treaty negotiation process of the Dakota/Lakota people within Canada. In this way the findings of the study are placed within the context of the Native-White treaty relationship currently evolving and being negotiated within the province of Saskatchewan. Recommendations are also presented to assist and enhance the contemporary political and legal position of the Dakota/Lakota First Nations within Saskatchewan in their efforts to either sign adhesion to the Numbered Treaties, or to adhere to an alternate treaty protocol agreement with the Canadian federal government, which would include provisions regarding land, as well as related treaty benefits and annuities.
110

Perspectives of Saskatchewan Dakota/Lakota Elders on the treaty process in Saskatchewan

Omani, Leo Joseph 19 April 2010 (has links)
This ethnographic dissertation study contains a total of six chapters. Chapter One provides an introduction to the topic, Perspectives of Saskatchewan Dakota/Lakota Elders on the Treaty Process within Canada. It also discusses the following: the purpose of the study; the rationale & justification for an interdisciplinary approach; the research methodology; the definition of terms; the limitations of the study; assumptions; and the ethical protocols applicable to this study. Chapter Two provides a review of literature pertaining to the various theoretical and methodological considerations to be addressed within this study. These include the traditional Rankean approach to the study of history; that termed within Western academia as Oral History, combined with that termed as Oral Tradition; that termed as Dakota Oral Tradition; and that termed within Western academia as Outsider vs. Insider Research. Chapter Three provides a review of the history of the treaty negotiation processes that occurred both in the United States and Canada and concludes with an analysis of research findings to date. Chapter Four reviews previously written documentation pertaining to the Dakota/Lakota treaty negotiation process within Canada and concludes with an analysis of research findings to date. Chapter Five discusses in detail the data collection process employed for this study. In addition, the data generated from the interviews with the Saskatchewan Dakota/Lakota Elders regarding their perspectives on treaty are presented. Chapter Six provides a synthesis and analysis of research findings for the data collected from the Saskatchewan Dakota/Lakota Elders during the interview process. In addition, an epilogue is provided regarding the implications of the research for the treaty negotiation process of the Dakota/Lakota people within Canada. In this way the findings of the study are placed within the context of the Native-White treaty relationship currently evolving and being negotiated within the province of Saskatchewan. Recommendations are also presented to assist and enhance the contemporary political and legal position of the Dakota/Lakota First Nations within Saskatchewan in their efforts to either sign adhesion to the Numbered Treaties, or to adhere to an alternate treaty protocol agreement with the Canadian federal government, which would include provisions regarding land, as well as related treaty benefits and annuities.

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