Listing 1 - 8 of 8 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Verzuiling, zuilvorming zijn vertrouwde hedendaagse begrippen. Bij nader toekijken betreft het echter niet eens zo actuele maatschappelijke processen. Reeds kort na de Belgische onafhankelijkheid in 1830 zien we de aanzet van wat men een katholieke zuil is gaan noemen. Godsdienstige groepen en kerken verkeren steeds in een spanning tussen een hang naar maatschappelijk isolement en bekeringsijver, tussen bescherming en verovering. Deze termen worden in de christelijke organisatiewereld dan ook ervaren als geladen, negatieve begrippen. In deze KADOC-bundel noemen sociologen en historici het verschijnsel nochtans onomwonden bij de naam. Zij zoeken nuchter naar de historische oorsprong en de verklaringsgronden van de katholieke zuilvorming. De focus wordt daarbij gericht op de beslissende momenten. Steunend op recente onderzoeksbevindingen nemen de auteurs de lezer mee naar andere plaatsen en tijden, naar kleine gemeenten in Vlaanderen, naar de buurlanden en naar vreemde godsdiensten. Zij nodigen vooral uit om te vergelijken en zo te begrijpen. Daaruit groeit een helder beeld met verrassende inzichten over de aanpassing van het katholicisme in Vlaanderen aan de moderne verzorgingsstraat.
Choose an application
Building a thorough and comprehensive understanding of the limits of the international rules-based liberal order across a variety of issue areas, this topical book highlights how the discourse and values inherent in these long-established political arrangements are now facing a backlash, and how Europe is responding towards it.
International organization. --- Polarization (Social sciences) --- Political aspects. --- Europe --- Politics and government
Choose an application
This text explores the deep contestations of the liberal script in the contemporary United States from a variety of perspectives, and shows that the rise of Donald Trump is a symptom and a catalyst, but not the cause, of the current crisis in US democracy.
Liberalism --- Polarization (Social sciences) --- Politics and Government. --- Politics & government. --- History --- United States --- Politics and government
Choose an application
With the 2020 election, political polarization in the U.S. entered a ludicrous end-stage. Partisanship, once a pseudo-rational system of biases, has devolved to a conflict between incompatible realities. In search of some pathway toward consensus, Evil Twins and the Ultimate Insight: Ayn Rand, Vladimir Nabokov, and the Polarized Politics of Reading looks to the works of two iconic Russian-American writers whose literary rivalry mirrors the rift between political parties in the U.S. The matchup has all the markings of an evil-twin narrative, pitting Rand, the muse of libertarian conservatism, against Nabokov, the trickster-genius of the Western canon. Their mid-century novels afford a rare opportunity to arbitrate, by proxy, American political grievances and resolve, in print, its electoral dysfunction. Evil Twins and the Ultimate Insight mounts this critical intervention into the Blue/Red blood feud and contemplates, in the cognitive challenges of Nabokov’s fiction, a remedy for its polarized politics.To guard against grandstanding, axe-grinding, deck-stacking, inaccuracy, or obfuscation, Stone’s book proceeds by indirection, exploring four scholarly books that all speak to the peculiar relationship between Rand and Nabokov: Gene Bell-Villada’s On Nabokov, Ayn Rand and the Libertarian Mind (2013), Adam Weiner’s How Bad Writing Destroyed the World: Ayn Rand and the Literary Origins of the Financial Crisis (2016), Michael Rodgers’s Nabokov and Nietzsche: Problems and Perspectives (2018), and Peter Roberts and Herner Saeverot’s Education and the Limits of Reason: Reading Dostoevsky, Tolstoy and Nabokov (2018). Each of these books is seriously flawed, but their numerous interlocking problems conspire to reveal, empirically, via negativa, how literature might tip the scales in America’s partisan deadlock. Ultimately, Stone argues that, when our books get tangled up in our politics, their promise—to help us see to the bottom of things and scooch closer to the asymptote of truth and reality—might be something more than a mirage.
Vladimir Nabokov --- Ayn Rand --- literary studies --- US politics --- authoritarianism --- literacy --- political polarization --- Polarization (Social sciences) --- Politics and literature --- Rand, Ayn --- Nabokov, Vladimir Vladimirovich, --- Criticism and interpretation. --- United States
Choose an application
Campaign funds. --- Polarization (Social sciences) --- Political science --- Social groups --- Social influence --- Assessments, Political --- Campaign contributions --- Campaign expenditures --- Campaign finance --- Election contributions --- Elections --- Political assessments --- Political campaigns --- Political parties --- Campaign funds --- Finance
Choose an application
The Political Economy of Populism explores the interplay between identity, the economy and inequality to explain the dynamics of populist votes since the beginning of the 20th century. The book discusses the political and economic implications of populist governance using data on populist incumbencies and linking it to historical data on the macro economy and democracy. Chapters draw from the most recent political science, economics and other social science literature, as well as historical data, to explain the long-term causes and consequences of populism. Populism emerges and gains traction when political entrepreneurs exploit underlying identity conflicts for political gains. As the distributional consequences of both economic distress and economic growth typically favor the elite over the poor and the lower middle class, economic shocks usually sharpen the underlying identity conflicts between the groups. The book provides evidence of significant differences in the ways fiscal and monetary policies are conducted by incumbent populists in Latin America, Europe and the OECD. The work concludes by suggesting avenues through which a 21st century social consensus can be built, so that our society can avoid repeating the mistakes that led to wars and failed economic experiments in the 20th century. The Political Economy of Populism marks a significant contribution to the study of populism and is suited to students and scholars across the social sciences, including economics, political science and sociology.
Populism --- Polarization (Social sciences) --- Economic aspects. --- Political aspects. --- Political science --- Social groups --- Social influence --- left-wing populism --- macro economy --- macroeconomics --- political economy --- political science --- populism --- populist cycles --- populist patterns --- right-wing populism --- economics --- sociology
Choose an application
"The book brings together an international team of experts, enabling a broad, multidisciplinary approach that examines hate speech, dislike, polarization, and enclave deliberation as cross axes that influence offline and digital conversations. The diverse case studies herein offer insights into international news media, television drama and social media in a range of contexts, suggesting an academic frame of reference for examining this emerging phenomenon within the field of communication studies. Offering thoughtful and much-needed analysis, this collection will be of great interest to scholars and students working in communication studies, media studies, journalism, sociology, political science, political communication, and cultural industries"--
E-books --- Language Arts & Disciplines / Journalism --- Political Science / Political Process / Media & Internet --- Political science --- Administration --- Civil government --- Commonwealth, The --- Government --- Political theory --- Political thought --- Politics --- Science, Political --- Social sciences --- State, The --- Communication --- Polarization (Social sciences) --- Social aspects. --- Social groups --- Social influence --- Communication and culture --- News media and journalism --- Political structure and processes
Choose an application
Building a thorough and comprehensive understanding of the limits of the international rules-based liberal order across a variety of issue areas, this topical book highlights how the discourse and values inherent in these long-established political arrangements are now facing a backlash, and how Europe is responding towards it.
International organization --- Polarization (Social sciences) --- Political science --- Social groups --- Social influence --- Federation, International --- Global governance --- Interdependence of nations --- International administration --- International federation --- Organization, International --- World federation --- World government --- World order --- World organization --- Congresses and conventions --- International relations --- Peace --- International agencies --- International cooperation --- Security, International --- World politics --- Europe --- Politics and government. --- Politics --- International relations. Foreign policy --- International law --- International organization. --- Political aspects. --- Politics and government
Listing 1 - 8 of 8 |
Sort by
|