75 results
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2. The Genetically Modified (GM) Food Labelling Controversy: Ideological and Epistemic Crossovers.
- Author
-
Klintman, Mikael
- Subjects
GENETICALLY modified foods ,FOOD labeling ,CONSUMER protection ,FOOD industry equipment - Abstract
In the debate surrounding genetically modified (GM) food, intense controversies pertain over whether, or how, GM food products ought to be labelled. This paper examines how the GM-supportive and GM-sceptical alliances use arguments regarding labelling so as to strengthen their respective positions. It is an examination of conflicting arguments across social coalitions, corporations and policy-makers, mainly in the USA, but with certain European comparisons. The empirical material consists of written statements by the different groups. The paper suggests that the ideological and epistemological tenets are radically transformed, or even 'crossed over', between GM proponents and opponents when the focus is moved from GM per se to labelling. Two types of crossovers are identified: (i) the crossover of ideologies, and (ii) the crossover of epistemologies. The paper concludes that, while implementing mandatory GM labelling may have several democratic advantages, it is more urgent that both alliances become more reflexive and communicative concerning inconsistent or eclectic crossovers — both ideological and epistemological. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The impact of wooden studs on the moisture risk of timber frame constructions.
- Author
-
Roels, Staf and Tijskens, Astrid
- Subjects
- *
WOODEN building , *VAPOR barriers , *WALL design & construction , *CONDENSATION , *MARKET share - Abstract
Since timber frame constructions can help to reduce CO2-emissions and lower the embodied energy of buildings, the market share of timber-based buildings is growing across Europe. Unfortunately, timber frame constructions are found to be susceptible to moisture damage, such as interstitial condensation, mould growth and wood rot. To avoid moisture damage, a correct design of the wall composition is crucial, with special emphasis on the ratio between vapour resistance of wind and vapour barrier. Given that experimental investigations are time-consuming and expensive, numerical tools are common to assess the hygrothermal behaviour of building components. And although timber frame constructions are inherently two- or even three-dimensional due to the embedded wooden elements, most often, 1D-simulations focussing on the basic configuration with insulation between wind and vapour barrier are conducted. This paper investigates to what extent neglecting the embedded wooden elements influences the risk assessment of the wall. Three different wall configurations have been considered and their hygrothermal response, as predicted by 1D- and 2D-numerical simulations, are compared. Variability of the exterior climate is included by using four distinct different climate regions. Contrary to common assumptions, buffering of moisture in wooden elements does not always lower the risk on moisture damage, but might even increase it. While the predicted risk on mould growth was found to be similar between 1D and 2D-simulations, the opposite was found for the risk on interstitial condensation. Mainly for cold climates and wall configurations with hardly any other hygric buffering capacity, levels of interstitial condensation were found to be significantly higher when taking the wooden elements into account in the numerical simulations. Hence, care should be taken when assessing the reliability of timber frame walls based on 1D-simulations only. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Biomedical Conventions and Regulatory Objectivity: A Few Introductory Remarks.
- Author
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Cambrosio, Alberto, Keating, Peter, Schlich, Thomas, and Weisz, George
- Subjects
CLINICAL medicine ,STUDY & teaching of medicine ,STANDARDIZATION ,MEDICAL conferences ,GOVERNMENT agencies - Abstract
This special issue of Social Studies of Science centers on the topic of regulation in medicine and, in particular, on the notion of regulatory objectivity, defined as a new form of objectivity in biomedicine that generates conventions and norms through concerted programs of action based on the use of a variety of systems for the collective production of evidence. The papers in the special issue suggest ways in which the notion of regulatory objectivity can be tested, extended, revised, or superseded by more appropriate notions. They insist on the need to examine more closely clinical-therapeutic (and not just clinical-research) activities, and to pay more attention to the activities of regulatory agencies such as the US Food and Drug Administration and to standard-setting organizations. They call attention to the professional and organizational activities surrounding the mobilization of conventions for regulating clinical practices. Finally, they provide material that can help us to think about how analytical notions such as regulatory objectivity may or may not inform interventionist research projects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Doing Distinctions: Boundary Work and Symbolic Capital in Radiology.
- Author
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Burri, Regula Valérie
- Subjects
MEDICAL radiology ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,TOMOGRAPHY ,IMAGING systems ,VISUALIZATION - Abstract
The transformations in radiology induced by new imaging technology can be understood as instances of 'doing distinctions' by both technology and human actors. This paper combines the analytical frameworks of Gieryn and Bourdieu to understand the reconfigurations engendered by the medical implementation of visualization apparatuses such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). It examines the reactions of radiologists to these transformations, which forced them to renegotiate visual expertise and to reconstitute their professional and disciplinary identity. The paper argues that imaging practices are practices of boundary work and distinction, aimed at regaining professional authority and accumulating symbolic capital within the professional field. Boundary work and distinction practices are thus means to improve both the prestige of the profession and the actors' individual status within the scientific or hospital community. The paper further argues that visualization machines and images are not exclusively used for diagnostic and research purposes but are also material and epistemic resources that are deployed in practices of boundary work and distinction. Technology and pictures serve as tools to demonstrate professional skills and power, to increase one's reputation, and to renegotiate identity. Drawing on interviews, documents and fieldwork in several radiology departments and MRI centres in Europe and the USA, the paper reconstructs processes of 'doing distinctions' related to the implementation of MRI and other imaging technologies in medicine. It explores the identity and accumulation strategies of radiologists and other medical specialists through an examination of their boundary work and distinction practices, which are focused on material, social and epistemic resources, and boundaries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The Politics of Talk: Coming to Terms with the ‘New’ Scientific Governance.
- Author
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Irwin, Alan
- Subjects
PUBLIC speaking ,DEBATE ,DEMOCRACY & science ,SCIENCE & society ,TRUST ,POLITICAL participation ,COMMUNITY relations ,POLITICAL science - Abstract
Talk of public dialogue and engagement has become fashionable internationally, and particularly within Europe. Building especially upon recent British experience, this paper argues that ‘public talk’ (that is, talk both by and about the public) represents an important site for science and technology studies analysis. The relationship between ‘new’ and ‘old’ approaches to scientific governance is considered. Drawing upon a series of official reports, and also the GM Nation? public debate over genetically modified food, the paper suggests that, rather than witnessing the emergence of a new governance paradigm, the current approach can more accurately be portrayed as an uneasy blend of ‘old’ and ‘new’ assumptions. Eschewing a straightforward normative account, the paper explores the social construction of public talk, the relationship between talk and trust, the search for the ‘innocent’ citizen, and the pursuit of social consensus. Current initiatives should not simply be criticized for their inadequacies, but should also be viewed as symptomatic of the state of science-society relations. In that way, stresses and strains within the politics of public talk assume wider analytical significance than the ‘mere talk’ epithet would suggest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. From Field to Fantasy: Classifying Nature, Constructing Europe.
- Author
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Waterton, Claire
- Subjects
NATURE study ,LIFE sciences ,ECOLOGY ,SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
This paper sets out some observations on the making, and use, of contemporary classifications of nature in the context of a simultaneous and on-going 'making' of Europe. It looks in particular at two classifications, one of British vegetation communities and the other of European 'biotopes' (a concept that closely relates to natural or semi-natural 'habitats') — respectively, the UK National Vegetation Classification (NVC) and the EU CORINE Biotopes Classification. It investigates aspects of the relationship between these two classifications which has come about through their use in a European conservation policy. The CORINE Biotopes classification, in particular, represents a new ordering of nature in a very active sense: it is a good example of a 'working archive', and is intimately tied into policy decisions at many levels in Europe. The paper addresses questions as to how contemporary classifications are being made and used, and whether certain tacit understandings and conceptual frameworks 'built in' to them reflect back upon the world at a later stage. It argues that these classifications do not always simply reflect the assumptions and understandings built into them: once in the policy domain, they are not as 'reversible' as that. Their categories quickly become unstable, mutating and interacting in sometimes unpredictable ways. The two classifications, through their relationship with policy, have a jointly evolving history. The continual renewal of meaning attached to classes within these classifications appears to reflect outwards rather than inwards — in chorus with the broader social and political context, rather than reflecting the condition of their making. In their evolving forms, they illustrate very well the complex nature of the dynamic between unity and diversity, centre and periphery, that lies at the heart of the European Union. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Key Publications in Library Marketing: a review.
- Author
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Koontz, Christie M., Gupta, Dinesh K., and Webber, Shena
- Subjects
LIBRARY administration ,MARKETING ,WEBSITES ,LIBRARY public services ,LIBRARIES - Abstract
Copyright of IFLA Journal is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Not just another portal, not just another digital library: A portrait of Europeana as an application program interface.
- Author
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Concordia, Cesare, Gradmann, Stefan, and Siebinga, Sjoerd
- Subjects
DIGITAL libraries ,APPLICATION program interfaces ,WEB portals ,CULTURAL property ,SEMANTIC Web ,METADATA ,CROSS-cultural communication ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations - Abstract
Copyright of IFLA Journal is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Changing visions of parliamentary libraries: From the Enlightenment to Facebook.
- Author
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Watt, Iain
- Subjects
LEGISLATIVE libraries ,ENLIGHTENMENT ,SOCIAL networks ,DECISION making ,HEURISTIC ,MYTHOLOGY - Abstract
Copyright of IFLA Journal is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Principles and practice in ethical review of animal experiments across Europe: summary of the report of a FELASA working group on ethical evaluation of animal experiments.
- Author
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Smith, J A, van den Broek, F A R, Martorell, J Cantó, Hackbarth, H, Ruksenas, O, and Zeller, W
- Subjects
ANIMAL experimentation ,ANIMAL welfare ,LABORATORY animals ,RESEARCH - Abstract
This paper summarizes a more detailed report produced by the Federation of European Laboratory Animal Science Associations (FELASA 2005), which describes and explores a set of principles for the conduct of ethical review of laboratory animal use. It presents a synopsis of results from a questionnaire that elicited information on how each of 20 countries represented in FELASA currently approaches such ethical review. This information suggests that, although local practices differ, there is an emerging consensus on the key elements that any ethical review process should involve. Drawing on the questionnaire findings, this summary also includes a brief discussion to support and amplify a series of recommendations, covering the objectives of ethical review; legal requirements; the scope of work reviewed and the 'level' at which review is approached; general principles for the organization of ethical review processes; the factors considered in the review; needs for ongoing review after initial authorization; participants in the review process; wider impacts of the review process; and strategies that can help to ensure quality and consistency of review outcomes. For further information and examples of current practice, as well as more detailed discussion to support the recommendations, readers are urged to refer to the complete report, available at http://www.lal.org.uk/pdffiles/FELASA_ethics_FULL_Report. pdf or via: http://www.felasa.eu/recommendations.htm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. European Emigration Records, 1820-1925.
- Author
-
Ryskamp, George R.
- Subjects
EMIGRATION & immigration ,SURVEYS ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,POPULATION geography - Abstract
Copyright of IFLA Journal is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The Half-Life of Empire in Outer Space.
- Author
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Redfield, Peter
- Subjects
POSTCOLONIALISM ,SPACE exploration ,TELECOMMUNICATION satellites ,GEOGRAPHY ,HISTORY - Abstract
This paper addresses an intersection between postcolonial studies and science studies, examining the greater colonial context of space exploration. In response to Chakrabarty's call to 'provincialize Europe', I ask what it might mean to 'provincialize' outer space, considering locality relative to extra-planetary distance, and the asymmetries of history next to the symmetrical methodology advocated by Latour. By way of a brief reading of fictional texts that played an important rôle in the technical imagination leading up to spaceflight, I sketch the colonizing impulse that underwrote space exploration through and beyond the age of empire. I then turn to the French/European launch site at Kourou, French Guiana, where a sparsely populated former colony became a preferred launching ground for communication satellites into equatorial orbits. Here the representation of outer space as a final frontier crosses the remains of older colonial projects, uneasily confronting the landscape of their human legacy. In opposition to the space centre's focus on adventure, political focus within French Guiana stresses development and strives to confront the space project with the local legacy of colonial failure. A conflict over the closing of a stretch of road provides a situated moment to illustrate these contrasting understandings of the place of outer space. In this conflict, I suggest, the very length and orientation of the space centre's network affect the locality of its representation, revealing after-effects of earlier formations of geography and history. Thus, in resituating outer space against the ground, it remains important to distinguish between local knowledges and techniques that are more or less expansive, and keep in sight the different spatial and temporal frames within which 'the local' takes shape. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Notes and Comments.
- Subjects
LABORATORY animals ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,ANIMAL culture ,LABORATORIES - Abstract
The article presents notes and comments related to laboratory animals in Europe. Information about several papers that will be presented at a symposium on animal welfare and comparative medicine in Denmark is presented. The increasing use of animals in clinical laboratories in Ireland is addressed. A report on the accreditation of the Central Laboratory Animal Institute at Utrecht University in the Netherlands is presented.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Determination of Liquid Water Transfer Properties of Porous Building Materials and Development of Numerical Assessment Methods: Introduction to the EC HAMSTAD Project.
- Author
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Adan, O., Brocken, H., Carmeliet, J., Hens, H., Roels, S., and Hagentoft, C.-E.
- Subjects
- *
DAMPNESS in buildings , *POROUS materials , *CONSTRUCTION materials , *MOISTURE , *METHODOLOGY - Abstract
Implications of moisture in building and construction are of interest to the international community because of their huge economical consequences, including effects on health, maintenance and repair, retrofitting and conservation, as well as on common welfare. The present day knowledge offers a potential to tackle such problems, both in the design process and during the service life of building. In 2001, the European Commission initiated the project "HAMSTAD" (Heat Air and Moisture Standards Development) to propose a better modelling methodology than the traditional Glaser method. HAMSTAD focused on the development of draft standardisation procedures on determination methods of moisture transfer properties and a draft methodology for certification of advanced moisture modelling codes. To stimulate competitiveness and progress, the project was carried out following an 'open methodology' instead of a system of deterministic and prescriptive (pre-) standards. This paper outlines the project and highlights the main outputs, serving as an introduction to the following more detailed research papers resulting from that work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Assessing Basic Research: The Case of The Isaac Newton Telescope.
- Author
-
Irvine, John and Martin, Ben R.
- Subjects
RADIO telescopes ,RADIO astronomy ,SCIENTISTS ,SPACE sciences ,TELESCOPES ,ASTRONOMY - Abstract
In a parallel paper, we have outlined a methodology for assessing the comparative scientific performance of large basic research facilities (and their associated user groups) working in the same specialty, and applied this method of `converging partial indicators' to an evaluation of the contributions to science made by a number of radio telescopes. In this paper, we employ this methodology to evaluate the scientific performance of various optical telescopes - in particular, the 2.5-metre Isaac Newton Telescope, operated as a central facility by the Royal Greenwich Observatory in South-East England. For several years, this was Britain's only major optical telescope, as well as being the largest such instrument in Europe. We compare its performance over the last decade with that of three American telescopes of similar size. This paper has three aims: first, to ascertain whether the method of converging partial indicators, originally applied to radio astronomy, provides a more general policy tool that can be extended to other specialties; second, to determine just how successful each optical telescope has been in producing new astronomical knowledge over the past decade; and, third, to discuss whether our results on the comparative scientific performance of the Isaac Newton Telescope may have any implications for British astronomy policy in general. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Barrier Effects: The Case of Air and Rail Flows.
- Author
-
Cattan, Nadine
- Subjects
CITIES & towns ,URBAN planning ,COMMUNICATION barriers ,SOCIAL integration ,INTERGROUP relations ,STREET railroads ,URBAN transportation ,URBAN policy ,CITY traffic - Abstract
Copyright of International Political Science Review is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. The Evolving European Language System: A Theory of Communication Potential and Language Competition.
- Author
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de Swaan, Abram
- Subjects
LANGUAGE policy ,ENGLISH language ,LANGUAGE & languages ,POLITICAL sociology ,COMMUNICATION policy ,LANGUAGE planning ,CULTURAL policy ,NATION-state - Abstract
Copyright of International Political Science Review is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Policies and plans.
- Subjects
COPYRIGHT ,CREATIVE ability ,INTERNET ,EDUCATION ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations - Abstract
The article discusses the "Copyright for Creativity," a call by a coalition of European groups for the adoption of a copyright law on the Internet. The declaration calls for a copyright that would foster digital creativity, access, education and innovation to cultural world and European competitiveness in a digital world. Some examples on how copyright can protect creative works and exceptions are provided. A call for a European copyright law to spur innovation, facilitate digital preservation and archiving, support education and research and harmonize exceptions across the European Union (EU) is contained in the declaration. An overview of the Green Paper "Copyright in the Knowledge Economy," published by the European Commission is provided.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Notes and comments.
- Subjects
LABORATORY animals ,PERIODICALS ,ONLINE information services ,ANIMAL welfare ,VETERINARY medicine - Abstract
The article presents information on the journal "Laboratory Animals." It also includes information on the recent developments in the area of animal science in Europe. The journal is going to start an online service for the submission of manuscript in November 2006. The journal has got 22nd rank out of 129 journals in Veterinary Sciences. A working document of the European Commission on a Community Action Plan on the Protection and Welfare of Animals 2006-10 has been published.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Taking as Giving: Bioscience, Exchange, and the Politics of Benefit-sharing.
- Author
-
Hayden, Cori
- Subjects
LIFE sciences ,SERVICES for patients ,ALTRUISM ,GENETIC research ,PATIENT participation ,POLICY sciences ,ETHICS - Abstract
A growing number of bioethicists, policy-makers, legal scholars, patient groups, and other critically involved parties in North America and Europe recently have started calling for a new ethical principle to gather participants into clinical and genetics research. While long-prevailing regimes of consent have held that people participate in the research process out of `altruism' (and hence do not merit more than nominal payment for their participation), the increasingly visible profits accruing to bioscience researchers, companies, and universities suggest that this research contract is producing a stark asymmetry. A move is afoot, therefore, to develop a principle of benefit-sharing through which to guarantee some form of returns to research subjects. This paper tracks some of the implications of the rise of this new ethic, tracing its travels from the world of bioprospecting to clinical and genetics research, and exploring how and why benefit-sharing matters to Latourian notions of science as politics. What might it mean, both for bioscience and for our ideas about politics and publics more generally, to think of research not just as a mode of ‘speaking for’, in Latourian terms, but as a mode of giving back? I argue that in shifting the problem from one of dialogue to one of distribution, benefit-sharing proposals are also implicated in the constitution of the biosciences' publics in new ways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Earthly Matters: On the Cold War and the Earth Sciences.
- Author
-
Dennis, Michael Aaron
- Subjects
EARTH sciences ,COLD War, 1945-1991 ,INTERNATIONAL relations, 1945-1989 ,MILITARY science ,ENVIRONMENTAL sciences - Abstract
Among the many effects of the Cold War was a profound reconfiguration of the disciplines, institutions and practices used to understand the Earth. With the advent of warfare on a planetary scale the earth sciences proved indispensable in shaping national strategies and identifying the unseen potential of technological innovation. Cartography, weather forecasting and geological surveys has long been staples of government patronage in the U.S. as well as in Europe. The Cold War added geophysics, oceanography, seismology and similar fields to the state's arsenal of understanding. Despite their rather obvious usefulness, the earth sciences have received little of the attention historians of science and technology lavish upon the physical sciences and engineering disciplines during the Cold War. As students of the atmosphere, the earth and the oceans, the practitioners of these particular field sciences have a much lower status than the physicists who dominate the weaponeer culture of Cold War. Ironically, these little-studied practitioners were perhaps as important as the famous weapons designers in achieving national ends.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Security and Peace in Post-Cold War Europe.
- Author
-
Hettne, Björn
- Subjects
SECURITY systems ,ECONOMIC development ,POLITICAL science ,PEACE - Abstract
This paper discusses security and development issues in Europe's recent history and immediate future. The issue is how the security system affects the pattern of economic development and. conversely, the long-run effects of development on security. To understand this relationship a longer historical perspective is needed. Too much attention has been given to the EC '1992 project' compared to the more unplanned 'integration' or political homogenization of greater Europe. Three distinct phases in terms of security orders are distinguished: the Hundred Years' Peace (1815-1914), the Cold War security system (1949-89) and an emerging system called the New European Security Order. We are at present entering a turbulent transition period in which several paths are open. A number of risk factors are identified and analysed. The way the security order is established and immediate security crises managed will influence the possibilities of developing a stable peace order, defined as a structure free from major contradictions and low conflict propensity. A European Peace Order, as distinct from a European Security Order, would presuppose a global peace order, the crucial feature of which will be regionalization on various levels of the world system in accordance with the model of 'benign mercantilism', including Europe itself, where subregionalism may emerge as a new form of balance of power politics as an alternative to Pax Germanica. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Editorial.
- Author
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Edge, David
- Subjects
BERLIN Wall, Berlin, Germany, 1961-1989 ,PERIODICALS ,COMMUNIST countries ,COMMUNISM - Abstract
The article focuses on how this special issue of the periodical was conceived, planned and executed. The fall of the Berlin Wall catalyzed a crisis for scientists and technologists in the former communist countries so serious as to be without precedent. On 28 to 31 August 1994, in Budapest, the European Association for the Study of Science and Technology (EASST) held a Conference under the overall title of "Science, Technology and Change: New Theories, Realities, Institutions." One major theme at this meeting was the presentation of a large number of papers, at several sessions, describing and analyzing the present state, and likely future prospects, of what has become the topic of this Special Issue: "The Research System in Post-Communist Central and Eastern Europe." Those present were impressed, shocked and moved: the idea now appearing between covers was born. All concerned realized that the enterprise was caught between conflicting priorities: to be done at all, it had to be done both quickly since the situation itself is changing rapidly and well, since its gravity must be matched by the seriousness of its presentation, and the thoroughness of its analysis.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Calendar of events.
- Subjects
LABORATORY animals ,SCIENCE publishing ,PERIODICAL publishing ,INDEXES ,PUBLICATIONS - Published
- 2011
26. Keeping a Low Profile – Austrian Historiography and the Fischer Controversy.
- Author
-
Kronenbitter, Guenther
- Subjects
HISTORY of historiography ,CAUSES of World War I ,HISTORIANS ,WORLD War I ,JULY Crisis, 1914 ,TWENTIETH century ,INTELLECTUAL life - Abstract
The article focuses on the Austrian reaction to Fischer’s Griff nach der Weltmacht in the media and in academia. Although Vienna was host to the International Congress of Historical Sciences in 1965, one of the most prominent events in the unfolding of the Fischer controversy, Austrian historians by and large ignored the questions raised by Fischer. That Germany, not the Habsburg monarchy took centre stage in the new consensus on the outbreak of the First World War, slowly emerging in German historiography, was rather convenient. Only Fritz Fellner, an outsider to Austria's conservative scholarly community, asked for further analysis of Austria-Hungary’s role in 1914. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Causes and contexts of tax morale: Rational considerations, community orientations, and communist rule.
- Author
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Trüdinger, Eva-Maria and Hildebrandt, Achim
- Subjects
POSTCOMMUNISM ,POLITICAL trust (in government) ,TRUST ,POLITICAL corruption ,POLITICAL culture ,PUBLIC opinion ,RESISTANCE to government - Abstract
In political theory, the subject of tax morale is closely linked to issues of citizenship and civic duties. Research on tax morale, however, is still rather underdeveloped in political science. In this article, we systematically compare a rational considerations approach with an approach focusing on the influence of community orientations on an individual’s tax morale. We expect that contexts varying with the existence and duration of communist rule have caused systematic differences in terms of the motivation for tax morale. Multilevel analyses based on data taken from the fourth wave of the World Values/European Values Survey (1999/2000) confirm our expectations that socialization under communist rule strengthens the relevance of community orientations in explaining an individual’s tax morale and reduces the impact of rational considerations. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The second hand library building: Sustainable thinking through recycling old buildings into new libraries.
- Author
-
Hauke, Petra and Werner, Klaus Ulrich
- Subjects
LIBRARY design & construction ,ADAPTIVE reuse of buildings ,SUSTAINABLE buildings ,PRESERVATION of architecture ,LIBRARY architecture ,LIBRARY planning - Abstract
Old buildings are being recycled into libraries all over the world. The process of rededication of a building with a former different usage into a library is quite obviously a matter of recycling. The transformation of an existing building with a prior non-library function into a library brings the challenge and the opportunity for sustainable thinking in library planning. As non-renewable resources are decreasing, reusing and recycling are going to become increasingly necessary in the future. The recycling of old buildings means reducing the ecological footprint of library buildings in a cost-effective and efficient way. Beside ‘green’ aspects like water conservation, energy conservation, recycled or sustainable building materials, indoor air quality, and solar power from photo-voltaic panels, the planning of an adaptive reuse is a very different task than the planning of a library in a totally new building. Some best practice case studies from Germany, and other countries in Europe are presented. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Contemporary History in Europe: From Mastering National Pasts to the Future of Writing the World.
- Author
-
Spohr Readman, Kristina
- Subjects
WORLD history ,EUROPEAN history ,TRANSNATIONALISM ,HISTORICAL research methods ,FRENCH history, 1789- ,GERMAN history, 1871- ,BRITISH history - Abstract
Debates surrounding the approach to and distinctiveness of contemporary history qua history that had been simmering ever since the professionalization of history in the late nineteenth century re-emerged with vigour after 1990. This article attempts to identify what characterizes and distinguishes (the history of) our present time, by comparing the evolution of what has been labelled ‘contemporary history’ in France, Germany and Britain over the last 90 years. In discussing some of the conceptual problems and methodological challenges of contemporary history, it will be revealed that many in Europe remain stuck in an older, ‘national’ (and transnational) fixation with the second world war and the nazis’ atrocities, although working in medias res today appears to point to the investigation of events and phenomena that are ‘global’. The article will seek to make a fresh suggestion of how to delimit ‘contemporariness’ from the older ‘past’ and end with some comments on the significance of the role of contemporary history within the broader historical discipline and society at large. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. European Intellectual History as Contemporary History.
- Author
-
Müller, Jan-Werner
- Subjects
INTELLECTUAL history ,COMMUNISM ,NATIONAL socialism ,SOCIALISM ,INTELLECTUAL life - Abstract
The first part of this essay examines the peculiar role European intellectual history played in coming to terms with the twentieth century as an ‘Age of Extremes’ and the different weight it was given for that task at different times and in different national contexts up to the 1970s. The second part looks at the contemporary history of politically focused intellectual history — and the possible impact of the latter on the writing of contemporary history in general: it will be asked how the three great innovative movements in the history of political thought which emerged in the last fifty years have related to the practice of contemporary history: the German school of conceptual history, the ‘Cambridge School’, and the ‘linguistic turn’. The third part focuses on recent trends to understand processes of liberalization — as opposed to the older search for causes of political extremism. It is also in the third part that the so far rather Euro-centric perspective is left behind, as attempts to create an intellectual history of the more or less new enemies of the West are examined. Finally, the author pleads for a contemporary intellectual history that seeks novel ways of understanding the twentieth century and the ‘newest history’ since 1989 by combining tools from conceptual history and the Cambridge School. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Libraries Driving Access To Knowledge: Action for Europe. Reports On the Ifla Presidential Meeting, April 2011.
- Author
-
Verheul, Ingeborg, Bradley, Fiona, and Hamilton, Stuart
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,ACCESS to knowledge movement - Abstract
The article discusses the highlights of the two-day International Federation of Library Associations (IFLA) Presidential Meeting 2011 which was held in the Koninklijke Bibliotheek at the National Library of the Netherlands in The Hague. The conference, with the theme "Libraries Driving Access to Knowledge: Action for Europe," was jointly organized by the Netherlands Library Forum and the IFLA. Some of the significant outcomes of the conference include the release of the IFLA Statement on Open Access.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The autonomy of globalizing states: bridging the gap between democratic theory and international political economy.
- Author
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Agné, Hans
- Subjects
ECONOMIC globalization ,POLITICAL autonomy ,POLITICAL economic analysis ,EUROPEAN politics & government -- 1945- ,DEMOCRACY ,NORMATIVE economics ,21ST century international relations - Abstract
Copyright of International Political Science Review is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Transitional justice in the world, 1970-2007: Insights from a new dataset.
- Author
-
Olsen, Tricia D, Payne, Leigh A, and Reiter, Andrew G
- Subjects
TRANSITIONAL justice ,CIVIL war ,DEMOCRATIZATION ,NEW democracies ,AMNESTY ,WAR crime trials ,TRUTH commissions ,WAR crimes - Abstract
This article presents a new dataset of transitional justice mechanisms utilized worldwide from 1970--2007. These data complement the growing body of quantitative and comparative analyses of transitional justice. This article summarizes three important contributions made by the dataset. First, it includes five transitional justice mechanisms (trials, truth commissions, amnesties, reparations, and lustration policies), allowing scholars to avoid many of the methodological errors committed by performing single-mechanism studies. Second, it provides an expanded sample, both temporally and geographically, to facilitate greater comparative and policy impact. Third, the dataset enables scholars to analyze transitional justice across a variety of political contexts, including democratic transitions and civil wars. These data illuminate a new set of general trends and patterns in the implementation of transitional justice worldwide. The findings show that countries adopt amnesties more often than other mechanisms. They predominantly grant them in the context of civil war and to opponents of the state, rather than state agents. Courts rarely prosecute those currently in power for human rights violations. In civil war settings, rebels, rather than state actors, face trials. In post-authoritarian settings, courts try former authoritarian actors, but do not address crimes committed by the opposition to authoritarian rule. The dataset also reveals regional patterns of mechanism usage. Trials, lustration policies, and reparations occur most often in Europe. Non-European countries more frequently adopt truth commissions and amnesties than do their European counterparts, with a particularly high number of amnesties granted in Latin America. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. System migration from Horizon to Symphony at King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals.
- Author
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Khurshid, Zahiruddin and Al-Baridi, Saleh A.
- Subjects
LIBRARY automation ,LIBRARIES ,KING Fahd University of Petroleum & Minerals (Saudi Arabia) - Abstract
Highlights difficulties and problems in library automation systems migration faced by libraries in the Middle East due to the lack of direct support from their ILS's parent companies. Local vendors lack the required expertise and resources to provide the level of support enjoyed by North American and European user libraries of such systems. In this context, the article presents the experiences of the King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals (KFUPM) Library in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, in system migration from the SirsiDynix integrated library system, Horizon, to the same company's newer system, Symphony, which readers may find somewhat different from those of western libraries in terms of planning, execution and time span of the project. A brief 30-year history of library automation at KFUPM is also provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. FELASA recommendations for the education and training of laboratory animal technicians: Category A.
- Author
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Weiss, J., Bukelskiene, V., Ferrari, L., Van der Meulen, M., Moreno, M., Mulkens, F., Sigg, H., and Yates, N.
- Subjects
LABORATORY animal technicians ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,SUMMATIVE tests ,CURRICULUM ,TRAINING - Abstract
The future laboratory animal technician in Europe will be provided with three different levels of education. All candidates have to start with an introductory course to reach level A0. At this level (A0) they will be able to assist in the laboratory animal facility by undertaking limited specific duties under supervision. Most A0 assistants will continue their education and training for at least one year while in full-time employment. This process will include continual assessment with the option of a final examination to become qualified at level A1. A1 represents a comprehensively educated laboratory animal technician with theoretical background knowledge and practical skills. Some of the A1 laboratory animal technicians may continue specific education for at least another year of full-time employment. They will develop knowledge and expertise as well as supervisory and basic managerial skills in order to obtain level A2. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. State Preferences and Institutional Feedback: CAP and European Integration.
- Author
-
Min-hyung Kim
- Subjects
SOCIAL integration ,SOCIAL processes ,ACCULTURATION ,DIPLOMACY ,NEGOTIATION ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Through the examination of the interplay between the deepening process of European integration and the domestic politics of EU member states, this article seeks to show how the former affects the latter and ultimately leads to the reshaping of EU members' preferences over time. The two cases examined here (agricultural policy preference shifts in France and Germany during the MacSharry reform negotiations) illustrate that European integration over time generates institutional feedback in which European policies become not just outputs but also major inputs of the political process of EU member states. The critical factor in this preference change is the domestic policy coalition shift, which Is provoked by positive expectations regarding the national benefits to be gained from deeper integration
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Austrofascism: Revisiting the 'Authoritarian State' 40 Years On.
- Author
-
Thorpe, Julie
- Subjects
AUSTRIAN history, 1918-1938 ,HISTORIOGRAPHY ,FASCISM ,AUTHORITARIANISM ,PANGERMANISM ,POPULATION policy - Abstract
This article argues that the history of the Austrian state from 1933 to 1938 needs to be placed outside the constraints of Austrian historiography and located within transnational histories of European fascism. It challenges the consensus view in Austrian historiography that the state was authoritarian, rather than fascist, and argues that the connection between Austrian pan-German identity and the state's fascistizing policies in the media, education and population politics can shed light on the trajectory of Austrofascism in the 1930s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. APPLICATION ANALYSIS AND PORTING IN THE PRACE PROJECT.
- Author
-
Michielse, Peter
- Subjects
HIGH performance computing ,BENCHMARKING (Management) ,APPLICATION software ,PROJECT management - Abstract
The article focuses on the benchmark suite that Partnership for Advanced Computing in Europe (PRACE) should develop for its current project and the forcoming projects. PRACE aims to set a European High Processing Computing ecosystem to facilitate scientific research, system management and extensive application support. As some applications are more suited to certain architectures than others, the final benchmark suite, should reflect this.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. 'This is What Growth Does': British Views of the European Economies in the Prosperous 'Golden Age' of 1951-73.
- Author
-
O'Hara, Glen
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,PUBLIC opinion ,REGRESSION (Civilization) ,TRANSNATIONALISM ,EUROPEANIZATION ,ECONOMIC conditions in Europe, 1945- ,TWENTIETH century ,INTELLECTUAL life - Abstract
This article attempts to deconstruct and analyse British views of the European economies during the post-war years of fast growth, low unemployment and subdued inflation. Though there had been a great deal of academic attention paid to Britons' self-perceptions, less research has been conducted as to how they saw the most relevant 'other': the societies and economies on either side of the English Channel. Two case-studies are utilized here to suggest both how Britons saw themselves by reference to their near-neighbours, and to study how policy ideas moved around the international world of advice, interpretation and global governance that was emerging after the Second World War. The French and Soviet examples, so scrutinized and apparently fascinating at the time, are the main focus of the article, though other sources of inspiration - German, Scandinavian, Italian - are also suggested. The article concludes with a brief sketch of the main reasons other Europeans' apparent 'success' came to seem so important. These include a national sense of 'declinism'; the importance of international bodies such as the United Nations; and the intertwined relationship between domestic and foreign policy during the Cold War. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Rule Rather than Exception: Brüning's Fear of Devaluation in Comparative Perspective.
- Author
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Straumann, Tobias
- Subjects
MONETARY policy ,DEPRESSIONS (Economics) ,DEVALUATION of currency ,WEIMAR Republic, 1918-1933 ,ECONOMIC conditions in Europe, 1918-1945 ,GERMAN economy, 1918-1945 ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
For decades, historians have debated why Germany's Chancellor Heinrich Brüning resorted to policies worsening the economic crisis in the early 1930s. Some scholars, first and foremost Knut Borchardt, have argued that for various reasons the Chancellor had no choice but to depress the economy. In particular, Borchardt has pointed out that Brüning was reluctant to devalue the currency because he feared a return of hyperinflation. Borchardt's critics, by contrast, have rejected this argument on the grounds that Brüning's fear of devaluation was not shared by all German policy-makers and the public in general. This article tries to make a contribution to this debate by assessing Brüning's fear of devaluation from a comparative perspective. Narrative evidence from Britain, the Netherlands, the Scandinavian countries and Switzerland strongly suggests that Borchardt's argument is well grounded. Across Europe, politicians and central bankers, as well as business and union leaders, were convinced that devaluation would lead to inflation and do more harm than good. The evidence also shows that, because of this widespread fear of inflation, not a single European country deliberately devalued its currency in the 1930s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Introduction: Relief in the Aftermath of War.
- Author
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Reinisch, Jessica
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL relief ,DISASTER relief - Abstract
An introduction for the July 2007 special issue of the "Journal of Contemporary History," which focuses on emergency relief operations in Europe, is presented.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Suez 1956: A European Intervention?
- Author
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Dietl, Ralph
- Subjects
CULTURAL pluralism ,WAR & society ,CRISES ,COLD War, 1945-1991 ,WAR - Abstract
This article does not analyse events in the Middle East. It is concerned with the structural background of the Suez Crisis. The Cold War bargain of 1949-50, and thus the Western bloc architecture, was challenged in 1956 and 1962-63. The Suez Crisis and the SKYBOLT Affair are classic examples of intra-bloc conflict. This article focuses on inter-allied conflict during the Suez Crisis. The crisis year 1956 witnessed a European challenge to the bipolar order of the Cold War. It is the hypothesis of this article that the mystique of the Suez Crisis unravels, if the events are interpreted as a clash of conflicting world views. The article attempts to enhance our understanding of the crisis by exploring the impact of the formation of a European core on the transatlantic pluralistic security community. The article will thus re-evaluate the architectural debate within the Western partial system. It is the aim to shed new light on the almost unexplored European foreign-policy co-operation within the Western European Union (WEU) in the crisis year 1956. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The State and the Development of Social Trust.
- Author
-
Herreros, Francisco and Criado, Henar
- Subjects
SOCIAL capital ,SOCIAL surveys ,ETHNIC groups ,PUBLIC opinion ,POWER (Social sciences) ,SOCIAL impact assessment ,SOCIAL structure - Abstract
Copyright of International Political Science Review is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. European Aid: Human Rights Versus Bureaucratic Inertia?
- Author
-
Carey, Sabine C.
- Subjects
EUROPEAN economic assistance ,INTERNATIONAL economic assistance ,DEVELOPING countries ,HUMAN rights ,POLITICAL crimes & offenses ,FRENCH economic assistance ,GERMAN economic assistance ,POLITICAL persecution ,ECONOMICS ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Most studies on foreign aid and human rights have ignored the role of bureaucratic inertia in the allocation process. By not controlling for which developing countries have received aid in the past and how much aid they have received, continuity of aid flows remains unaccounted for. Additionally, previous studies have not allowed for a possible non-linear relationship between human rights and aid. This study investigates aid commitments from the European Commission, Germany, France, and the UK, paying attention to non-linear effects of human rights on aid commitments and the role of bureaucratic inertia. Using data from 1978 to 2003, the study investigates how past aid commitments, the level of human rights violations, and substantial changes in the respect for human rights influence the decision of European donors on whom to give aid to, how to choose a new recipient country that did not receive aid previously, and how much aid to give to countries that made it past the gatekeeping stage. Controlling for various donor interests and recipient needs, the results show that, despite donors' emphasis on human rights in official documents, the human rights situation in developing countries does not consistently shape European aid commitments. Only Germany commits less aid to more repressive countries. However, recent substantial improvements of the human rights records are rewarded by both Germany and France when deciding whom to give aid to. Bureaucratic inertia seems to be a major obstacle to the consistent implementation of human rights consideration in European aid allocation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Trade-Offs in Public Finance: Comparing the Well-Being of Big Spenders and Lean Spenders.
- Author
-
Wilensky, Harold L.
- Subjects
PUBLIC finance ,WELL-being ,DEVELOPED countries ,DEVELOPING countries ,SOCIAL policy ,POLITICAL economic analysis - Abstract
Drawing on research analyzing similarities and differences among 19 rich democracies, this article compares the economic performance of big spenders and lean spenders at a similar economic level from 1950 to the late 1990s. Going beyond aggregate public spending, it shows the contrasting effects of particular types of spending and taxing and particular social policies. I highlight the extraordinary continuity of the contrasting institutions and policy directions of these countries. I find that there is not one road to good economic performance, but several. I specify five types of political economy, each with its own costs and gains in people's well-being, both economic and noneconomic. A final summary compares extremes: the confrontational "low road" pursued by the USA and the "high road" pursued by the strongest consensual democracies of Continental Europe, where social partners have negotiated real reforms in expensive social policies while preserving social cohesion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Fascist or Revolutionaries? Left and Right Politics of the Rural Poor.
- Author
-
Anderson, Leslie E.
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGY education ,NEW democracies ,RURAL population ,DEMOCRACY ,SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
This article compares rural support for authoritarian populism in the new democracies in western Europe and Latin America. Literature on mass-based peasant revolutions sees the rural poor as revolutionaries, but an earlier, Marxist view saw them as counter-revolutionary. What can we expect of rural people in new democracies? The article examines four cases of rural support for authoritarian populism and contrasts them with patterns of peasant leftism. Two factors explain the difference: (1) background factors (economic and social relations, the nature of land tenure) and (2) foreground factors (political leadership, organizational style, and rhetoric). The article considers these conclusions for the contemporary international context and draws implications for democratization today. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The Internment of Civilians by Belligerent States during the First World War and the Response of the International Committee of the Red Cross.
- Author
-
Stibbe, Matthew
- Subjects
DETENTION of persons ,PRISONERS of war ,HUMANITARIAN assistance - Abstract
The article focuses on the problem of civilian internment by belligerent states during the first world war with particular reference to the situation in Europe and how the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and other agencies address the problem. The ICRC aimed to provide humanitarian assistance to war victims and natural disasters throughout the world. Civilian internment represented a humanitarian crisis on a huge and unforeseen scale.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Introduction.
- Author
-
Betts, Paul and Crowley, David
- Subjects
POSTWAR reconstruction ,EUROPEAN politics & government -- 1945- ,HOME (The concept) ,HOUSING - Abstract
Focuses on the manifold meanings of home and home life for postwar Europeans. Social and political conditions of Europe on postwar; Social policy after the war regarding material decimation; housing shortages, social dislocation and refugee crises; Features of post-1945 cultural life, oral history and memoir literature of the country.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Europe in Search of Legitimacy: Strategies of Legitimation Assessed.
- Author
-
Eriksen, Erik Oddvar and Fossum, John Erik
- Subjects
LEGITIMACY of governments ,POLITICAL science ,EUROPEAN integration ,EUROPEAN politics & government - Abstract
In this article, we assess three explicit strategies (based on three logics of political integration) as possible solutions to the European Union's legitimacy problems. The first strategy amounts to a scaling down of the ambitions of the polity-makers in the European Union (EU). The second strategy emphasizes the need to deepen the collective self-understanding of Europeans. These two modes of legitimation figure strongly in the debate on aspects of the EU, but both have become problematic. The third strategy concentrates on the need to readjust and heighten the ambitions of the polity-makers so as to make the EU into a federal multicultural union founded on basic rights and democratic decision-making procedures. Taking stock of the ongoing constitution-making process, the authors ask how robust such an alternative is and how salient it is, as opposed to the other two strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. From Villain to Partner: British Labour Party Leaders, France and International Policy during the Phoney War, 1939-40.
- Author
-
Imlay, Talbot
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL relations ,BRITISH foreign relations ,FRENCH foreign relations ,INTERNATIONAL security ,GERMAN occupation of France, 1940-1945 ,20TH century British history - Abstract
Discusses the transformation of French policy of the Labour Party of Great Britain during the Phoney War. Labour leaders' advocacy of the establishment of a permanent Anglo-French alliance by 1940; Postwar organization of European security; Doubt about the usefulness of terms such as 'realistic' or 'idealistic.'
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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