2024-03-29T07:48:25Z
https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/cgi/oai2
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:18448
2024-02-09T14:35:20Z
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Ju_3587.pdf
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Typological universals of relative clauses with reference to Korea as a foreign language
Typological universals of relative clauses with reference to Korea as a foreign language (Text)
Typological universals of relative clauses with reference to Korea as a foreign language (Other)
Typological universals of relative clauses with reference to Korea as a foreign language (UNSPECIFIED)
Typological universals of relative clauses with reference to Korea as a foreign language (UNSPECIFIED)
Typological universals of relative clauses with reference to Korea as a foreign language (UNSPECIFIED)
Typological universals of relative clauses with reference to Korea as a foreign language (UNSPECIFIED)
This thesis examines the applicability of typological universals of relative clauses, such as the Noun Phrase Accessibility Hierarchy (NPAH; Keenan and Comrie, 1977), to Korean as a foreign language. The NPAH is an implicational hierarchy explaining the cross-linguistic accessibility of different noun functions to relativization. The focus of the experimental investigations is thus on how syntactic and semantic aspects of Korean noun-modifying clauses intersect with the typological universals of relative clauses and whether we can verify the effect of the NPAH on Korean as a foreign language. A series of computer-assisted comprehension and production experiments demonstrated that, first, Korean language learners’ performance was significantly affected by multiple factors aside from the NPAH, such as types of relative clauses (RCs), learners’ first language (L1) background, and animacy of the head noun. Second, animacy was foregrounded as a salient semantic cue in both processing and producing relative clauses; however, the contribution of RC types and L1 was greater than animacy, implying syntactic primacy over semantic primacy in relativizing different noun functions in Korean. In addition, the effects of the multiple factors are dissimilar in different L1 groups. The results indicate that the Accessibility Hierarchy (AH) of relativized grammatical functions was not found in Korean as a foreign language. The current study therefore proposes that the implicational hypothesis of accessibility to relative clauses is not universal. The significance of the experimental findings on language-specific characteristics is also discussed with respect to the filler-gap dependency and the argument dependency.
2013-09
Typological universals of relative clauses with reference to Korea as a foreign language
Department of East Asian Languages & Cultures
SOAS Research Theses
SOAS Doctoral School
SOAS University of London
Department of Japan and Korea, SOAS University of London
Ju
You-kyung
You-kyung Ju
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-4539-6999
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:24141
2024-02-09T14:55:36Z
7374617475733D707562
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74797065733D61727469636C65
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hirmer-looking-for-the-indian-womans-identity-discrepancies-power-imbalances-across-theory-popular-culture.pdf
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HTML Summary of #24141
Looking for the Indian woman’s identity: Discrepancies and power imbalances across theory and popular culture
Looking for the Indian woman’s identity: Discrepancies and power imbalances across theory and popular culture (Text)
Looking for the Indian woman’s identity: Discrepancies and power imbalances across theory and popular culture (Other)
Looking for the Indian woman’s identity: Discrepancies and power imbalances across theory and popular culture (Other)
Looking for the Indian woman’s identity: Discrepancies and power imbalances across theory and popular culture (Other)
Looking for the Indian woman’s identity: Discrepancies and power imbalances across theory and popular culture (Other)
2015-2016
9
2016-02-03
Looking for the Indian woman’s identity: Discrepancies and power imbalances across theory and popular culture
SOAS Doctoral School
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
SOAS University of London
Hirmer
Monika
Monika Hirmer
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-5776-1615
25176226
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:24219
2021-11-22T09:44:44Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D4A:35323030
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
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HTML Summary of #24219
The 2016 candlelight protest in a hybrid media system
2
19
2017
The 2016 candlelight protest in a hybrid media system
Centre of Korean Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Korean Data Analysis Society
Park
Hyo Chan
Hyo Chan Park
Kluver
Randy
Randy Kluver
Park
Han Woo
Han Woo Park
Lee
Yenn
Yenn Lee
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0708-2948
12292354
Journal of the Korean Data Analysis Society
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:24672
2024-02-09T14:57:29Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
7375626A656374733D6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C73:6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C735F736F6173
74797065733D6564697465645F626F6F6B
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SOAS-journal-postgraduate-research-2015-2016-vol-9.pdf
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HTML Summary of #24672
Identities: Power and Politics
Identities: Power and Politics (Text)
Identities: Power and Politics (Other)
Identities: Power and Politics (Other)
Identities: Power and Politics (Other)
Identities: Power and Politics (Other)
2016-10
Identities: Power and Politics
SOAS Doctoral School
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
SOAS University of London
Hirmer
Monika
Monika Hirmer
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-5776-1615
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:24876
2024-02-09T14:58:16Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353330
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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Green-Central-Banking.pdf
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HTML Summary of #24876
Green Central Banking in Emerging Market an Developing Country Economies
Green Central Banking in Emerging Market an Developing Country Economies (Text)
Green Central Banking in Emerging Market an Developing Country Economies (Other)
Green Central Banking in Emerging Market an Developing Country Economies (Other)
Green Central Banking in Emerging Market an Developing Country Economies (Other)
Green Central Banking in Emerging Market an Developing Country Economies (Other)
2017-10-27
Green Central Banking in Emerging Market an Developing Country Economies
Department of Economics
SOAS Doctoral School
New Economics Foundation
Ryan-Collins
Josh
Josh Ryan-Collins
Dikau
Simon
Simon Dikau
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:25078
2023-09-28T10:14:43Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353930:38363030
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
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aziz-phulkari-baghs-article-TAASA-2017.pdf
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HTML Summary of #25078
Phulkari Baghs of the Punjab: Another Perspective
Phulkari Baghs of the Punjab: Another Perspective (Text)
Phulkari Baghs of the Punjab: Another Perspective (Other)
Phulkari Baghs of the Punjab: Another Perspective (Other)
Phulkari Baghs of the Punjab: Another Perspective (Other)
Phulkari Baghs of the Punjab: Another Perspective (Other)
3
26
2017-09-03
Phulkari Baghs of the Punjab: Another Perspective
Department of the History of Art & Archaeology
SOAS Doctoral School
Asian Arts Society of Australia
Aziz
Arjmand
Arjmand Aziz
10376674
Journal of the Asian Arts Society of Australia (TAASA)
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:25204
2021-10-24T09:18:58Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363430:38363530
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
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HTML Summary of #25204
Language Landscape: A digital platform for mapping languages
Language Landscape (LL) is a non-profit organization set up by a group of postgraduate linguistics students in 2011. It comprises of an interactive online map (languagelandscape.org), which is the main focus of this article, and educational outreach projects. The LL Mapping model relies not on representing languages per se, but rather on using instances of language use as data points. This method can be particularly useful for mapping language variation and multilingualism, especially in urban contexts. Through digitization, LL reaches a wide audience of educators, primary and secondary school students, university students, academic researchers, minority and endangered language communities and finally, social media users.
1-2
4
2014-10-01
Language Landscape: A digital platform for mapping languages
Department of Linguistics
SOAS Doctoral School
Intellect
Dohle
Ebany
Ebany Dohle
Hemmings
Charlotte
Charlotte Hemmings
Grzech
Karolina
Karolina Grzech
20428022
Book 2.0
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:25205
2024-02-09T14:59:12Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363430:38363530
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
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AM02-Grzech.pdf
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HTML Summary of #25205
¿Es necesario elegir entre la estandarización de las lenguas minoritarias y la vitalidad de sus variedades? Estudio de caso del kichwa de Alto Napo [Is it necessary to choose between minority language standardisation and the vitality of its varieties? Alto Napo Kichwa case study]
¿Es necesario elegir entre la estandarización de las lenguas minoritarias y la vitalidad de sus variedades? Estudio de caso del kichwa de Alto Napo [Is it necessary to choose between minority language standardisation and the vitality of its varieties? Alto Napo Kichwa case study] (Text)
¿Es necesario elegir entre la estandarización de las lenguas minoritarias y la vitalidad de sus variedades? Estudio de caso del kichwa de Alto Napo [Is it necessary to choose between minority language standardisation and the vitality of its varieties? Alto Napo Kichwa case study] (Other)
¿Es necesario elegir entre la estandarización de las lenguas minoritarias y la vitalidad de sus variedades? Estudio de caso del kichwa de Alto Napo [Is it necessary to choose between minority language standardisation and the vitality of its varieties? Alto Napo Kichwa case study] (Other)
¿Es necesario elegir entre la estandarización de las lenguas minoritarias y la vitalidad de sus variedades? Estudio de caso del kichwa de Alto Napo [Is it necessary to choose between minority language standardisation and the vitality of its varieties? Alto Napo Kichwa case study] (Other)
¿Es necesario elegir entre la estandarización de las lenguas minoritarias y la vitalidad de sus variedades? Estudio de caso del kichwa de Alto Napo [Is it necessary to choose between minority language standardisation and the vitality of its varieties? Alto Napo Kichwa case study] (Other)
El tema central de este artículo es la estandarización del quichua (kichwa) ecuatoriano y la influencia que tiene este proceso en las variedades minoritarias de la lengua habladas en el país. Se analiza, en particular, el caso del “kichwa de Tena”, también denominado “kichwa de Alto Napo” (código ISO 639-3: quw), una variante amazónica del quichua, hablada en la provincia del Napo, en la Amazonía ecuatoriana. A partir de los datos y observaciones recogidas durante un año de trabajo de campo, se describe el efecto de la normativización del kichwa ecuatoriano sobre una de sus variedades no estándares: el kichwa de Tena. El artículo expone los mecanismos que contribuyen al hecho de que la unificación del kichwa cause una creciente atrición de las variantes locales, en vez de fomentarlas. La interrupción de la transmisión intergeneracional del kichwa de Tena se debe no solo a la creciente dominación del español, a la urbanización y a otros procesos de cambio sociopolítico, sino también a la estandarización del propio kichwa. La disparidad en el uso de las variantes del kichwa en las escuelas e instituciones estatales, por un lado, y en la vida diaria de la comunidad, por el otro, acelera el abandono de la lengua. Asimismo, las políticas lingüísticas que implementan las autoridades locales y estatales no responden a las necesidades de la población local y contribuyen a la creciente marginalización de los dialectos locales.
XXI
2017
¿Es necesario elegir entre la estandarización de las lenguas minoritarias y la vitalidad de sus variedades? Estudio de caso del kichwa de Alto Napo [Is it necessary to choose between minority language standardisation and the vitality of its varieties? Alto Napo Kichwa case study]
Department of Linguistics
SOAS Doctoral School
Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
Grzech
Karolina
Karolina Grzech
07185758
Onomázein: Revista de lingüística filología y traducción
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:25207
2024-02-09T14:59:12Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363430
7375626A656374733D53:38363430:38363530
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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karolina-grzech-parlay-proceedings-2015.pdf
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HTML Summary of #25207
The non-evidential meaning of the Tena Kichwa ‘Direct Evidential'
The non-evidential meaning of the Tena Kichwa ‘Direct Evidential' (Text)
The non-evidential meaning of the Tena Kichwa ‘Direct Evidential' (Other)
The non-evidential meaning of the Tena Kichwa ‘Direct Evidential' (Other)
The non-evidential meaning of the Tena Kichwa ‘Direct Evidential' (Other)
The non-evidential meaning of the Tena Kichwa ‘Direct Evidential' (Other)
2016
The non-evidential meaning of the Tena Kichwa ‘Direct Evidential'
School of Languages, Cultures & Linguistics
Department of Linguistics
SOAS Doctoral School
York Papers in Linguistics: Special Issue PARLAY Proceedings
Grzech
Karolina
Karolina Grzech
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:25209
2024-02-09T14:59:13Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363430:38363530
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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grzech-soas-linguistics-working-papers.pdf
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The marker =ga and topicality in Tena Kichwa
The marker =ga and topicality in Tena Kichwa (Text)
The marker =ga and topicality in Tena Kichwa (Other)
The marker =ga and topicality in Tena Kichwa (Other)
The marker =ga and topicality in Tena Kichwa (Other)
The marker =ga and topicality in Tena Kichwa (Other)
2016
The marker =ga and topicality in Tena Kichwa
Department of Linguistics
SOAS Doctoral School
SOAS Working Papers in Linguistics; Vol. 18
Grzech
Karolina
Karolina Grzech
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:25210
2024-02-09T14:59:13Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363430:38363530
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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grzech-linguistics-working-papers-2013.pdf
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Planning language, planning identity: A case study of Ecuadorians in London
Planning language, planning identity: A case study of Ecuadorians in London (Text)
Planning language, planning identity: A case study of Ecuadorians in London (Other)
Planning language, planning identity: A case study of Ecuadorians in London (Other)
Planning language, planning identity: A case study of Ecuadorians in London (Other)
Planning language, planning identity: A case study of Ecuadorians in London (Other)
2013
Planning language, planning identity: A case study of Ecuadorians in London
Department of Linguistics
SOAS Doctoral School
SOAS
Grzech
Karolina
Karolina Grzech
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:25211
2024-02-09T14:59:14Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363430:38363530
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
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document.pdf
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HTML Summary of #25211
Autoridad epistémica y atenuación en Tena Kichwa: Análisis de enclítico =cha basado en el corpus [Epistemic authority and attenuation in Tena Kichwa: Corpus-based analysis of the enclitic =cha
Autoridad epistémica y atenuación en Tena Kichwa: Análisis de enclítico =cha basado en el corpus [Epistemic authority and attenuation in Tena Kichwa: Corpus-based analysis of the enclitic =cha (Text)
Autoridad epistémica y atenuación en Tena Kichwa: Análisis de enclítico =cha basado en el corpus [Epistemic authority and attenuation in Tena Kichwa: Corpus-based analysis of the enclitic =cha (Other)
Autoridad epistémica y atenuación en Tena Kichwa: Análisis de enclítico =cha basado en el corpus [Epistemic authority and attenuation in Tena Kichwa: Corpus-based analysis of the enclitic =cha (Other)
Autoridad epistémica y atenuación en Tena Kichwa: Análisis de enclítico =cha basado en el corpus [Epistemic authority and attenuation in Tena Kichwa: Corpus-based analysis of the enclitic =cha (Other)
Autoridad epistémica y atenuación en Tena Kichwa: Análisis de enclítico =cha basado en el corpus [Epistemic authority and attenuation in Tena Kichwa: Corpus-based analysis of the enclitic =cha (Other)
Este artículo se enfoca en la relación entre atenuación y falta de autoridad epistémica. Los datos analizados en el artículo provienen de tena kichwa, una lengua quechua en peligro de extinción, hablada en la Amazonia Ecuatoriana. La lengua posee un paradigma de marcadores que son cognados de los marcadores evidenciales en otras lenguas quechuas, pero que en tena kichwa se relacionan con la autoridad epistémica: ‘el derecho del hablante a saber o sostener algo’ (Stivers et al. 2011). El artículo describe la semántica de los dos marcadores de autoridad epistémica en tena kichwa: =mi y =cha. Se concentra sobre todo en los efectos de atenuación que se pueden lograr a través del uso de =cha. Propone que el marcador, que codifica ‘la falta de autoridad epistémica del hablante’, puede tener un sutil efecto atenuativo, ya que ‘distancia al hablante de la elocución’ y ‘reduce la fuerza comunicativa de la oración (Briz y Albelda 2013). Destaca que este efecto atenuador no consiste en reducir el compromiso del hablante con la veracidad de la aseveración. Por lo mismo, el análisis atenuativo de =cha en tena kichwa abre preguntas teóricas interesantes en cuanto a lo que se puede considerar una estrategia de atenuación en el discurso.
2
7
2017-12
Autoridad epistémica y atenuación en Tena Kichwa: Análisis de enclítico =cha basado en el corpus [Epistemic authority and attenuation in Tena Kichwa: Corpus-based analysis of the enclitic =cha
Department of Linguistics
SOAS Doctoral School
Universitat de València
Grzech
Karolina
Karolina Grzech
21747245
Normas
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:25396
2024-03-18T02:54:52Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
o-donnell-islamophobic-conspiracism-and-neoliberal-subjectivity-the-inassimilable-society.pdf
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Islamophobic conspiracism and neoliberal subjectivity: the inassimilable society
Islamophobic conspiracism and neoliberal subjectivity: the inassimilable society (Text)
Islamophobic conspiracism and neoliberal subjectivity: the inassimilable society (Other)
Islamophobic conspiracism and neoliberal subjectivity: the inassimilable society (Other)
Islamophobic conspiracism and neoliberal subjectivity: the inassimilable society (Other)
Islamophobic conspiracism and neoliberal subjectivity: the inassimilable society (Other)
O’Donnell analyses the confluence of Islamophobia and anti-government conspiracy theory in the works of the far-right think tank, the Center for Security Policy (CSP). He argues that, rather than only being a contemporary form of the religious and racialized demonologies that code ‘Islam’ as being the constitutive outside of ‘the ‘West—irrational, religious and authoritarian versus rational, secular and democratic—Islamophobic conspiracism should also be examined in the context of anxieties over the erosion of personal and state sovereignty under neoliberalization. Mobilizing an Islamophobic demonology that constructs ‘Muslims’ as inassimilable to ‘American’ subjectivity, the CSP's Islamophobic conspiracism projects this construction of absolute alterity on to American social and state systems. In doing so, O’Donnell contends, Islamophobic conspiracism takes neoliberalization's estrangement of the state and its citizens to its logical conclusion, transfiguring the societal processes that impact on the freedom of the individual—notably the state and civil society—into something inassimilable to that individual's claims to self-ownership and self-mastery.
1
52
2018
Islamophobic conspiracism and neoliberal subjectivity: the inassimilable society
SOAS Doctoral School
Taylor and Francis
O'Donnell
S. Jonathon
S. Jonathon O'Donnell
0031322X
Patterns of Prejudice
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:25441
2023-09-28T10:15:55Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363830
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
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6838-Article Text-15783-1-10-20171208.pdf
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What Does It Mean to Be Young for Syrian Men Living as Refugees in Cairo?
What Does It Mean to Be Young for Syrian Men Living as Refugees in Cairo? (Text)
What Does It Mean to Be Young for Syrian Men Living as Refugees in Cairo? (UNSPECIFIED)
What Does It Mean to Be Young for Syrian Men Living as Refugees in Cairo? (UNSPECIFIED)
What Does It Mean to Be Young for Syrian Men Living as Refugees in Cairo? (UNSPECIFIED)
What Does It Mean to Be Young for Syrian Men Living as Refugees in Cairo? (UNSPECIFIED)
This article deals with Syrian young men who fled to Egypt after the uprising in 2011. Their life was affected by the challenges stemming from displacement, such as their confrontation with new responsibilities, unknown vulnerabilities and emotions, liminality and precarity. They suffered from forced displacement in a gender- and age-specific way.
9
2017-12-08
What Does It Mean to Be Young for Syrian Men Living as Refugees in Cairo?
Centre for Gender Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
META
Suerbaum
Magdalena
Magdalena Suerbaum
2196629X
Middle East Topic and Argument (META)
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:25537
2021-10-19T10:54:25Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
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HTML Summary of #25537
Adapting to new realities: an analysis of institutional work in three cases of Dutch infrastructure planning
The social and institutional context of infrastructure planning has shifted tremendously over recent decades. From top–down implementation, infrastructure planners are now forced to incorporate the demands and wishes of citizens and other external stakeholders. This paper adopts the analytical perspective of institutional work to analyse how a number of Dutch infrastructure planning organisations try to remain in control over these changes in their institutional context. Building on social systems thinking, this paper distinguishes three environments in which this control can play out: the internal environment over which an organisation has complete control, an external environment over which an organisation has little control and a transactional environment where the organisation, through its interactions with other actors, can influence institutional development. The paper concludes that while most forms of institutional work applied by the infrastructure planning organisations under study aim to change the organisations’ interactions with stakeholders, the forms of institutional work are predominantly located within the internal environment of planning organisations.
1
62
2019
Adapting to new realities: an analysis of institutional work in three cases of Dutch infrastructure planning
Department of Development Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Taylor and Francis
Giezen
Mendel
Mendel Giezen
Schalkwijk
Bart
Bart Schalkwijk
Büscher
Chris
Chris Büscher
Bergsma
Emmy
Emmy Bergsma
09640568
Journal of Environmental Planning and Management
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:25538
2023-02-25T10:20:02Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
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text/html
HTML Summary of #25538
Towards Transdisciplinarity: a Water Research Programme in Transition
2
45
2017-10-13
Towards Transdisciplinarity: a Water Research Programme in Transition
Department of Development Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Oxford University Press
Hessels
Laurens K
Laurens K Hessels
Brouwer
Stijn
Stijn Brouwer
Büscher
Chris
Chris Büscher
03023427
Science and Public Policy
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:25716
2024-02-09T15:00:46Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38373030
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
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gonzalez-wakao-ayako-and-the-post-war-japanese-studio-system-2014.pdf
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HTML Summary of #25716
Wakao Ayako and the post-war Japanese studio system: celebrity and performer
Wakao Ayako and the post-war Japanese studio system: celebrity and performer (Text)
Wakao Ayako and the post-war Japanese studio system: celebrity and performer (Other)
Wakao Ayako and the post-war Japanese studio system: celebrity and performer (Other)
Wakao Ayako and the post-war Japanese studio system: celebrity and performer (Other)
Wakao Ayako and the post-war Japanese studio system: celebrity and performer (Other)
1
6
2014-07-25
Wakao Ayako and the post-war Japanese studio system: celebrity and performer
Centre for Global Media and Communications
SOAS Doctoral School
Taylor and Francis
González
Irene
Irene González
17564905
Journal of Japanese and Korean Cinema
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:25767
2024-02-09T15:00:57Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
tsegay-SPIDA-social-protection-in-SSA.pdf
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HTML Summary of #25767
Critical reflections on safety net policies and practices with respect to social protection among pastoral peoples in Sub-Saharan Africa
Critical reflections on safety net policies and practices with respect to social protection among pastoral peoples in Sub-Saharan Africa (Text)
Critical reflections on safety net policies and practices with respect to social protection among pastoral peoples in Sub-Saharan Africa (Other)
Critical reflections on safety net policies and practices with respect to social protection among pastoral peoples in Sub-Saharan Africa (Other)
Critical reflections on safety net policies and practices with respect to social protection among pastoral peoples in Sub-Saharan Africa (Other)
Critical reflections on safety net policies and practices with respect to social protection among pastoral peoples in Sub-Saharan Africa (Other)
2017
Critical reflections on safety net policies and practices with respect to social protection among pastoral peoples in Sub-Saharan Africa
Department of Development Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
SPIDA Working Paper Series - ADU/PENHA/DPU-UCL SPIDA/WPS/103/2017
Tsegay
Bereket
Bereket Tsegay
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:25823
2021-02-20T21:55:02Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #25823
Weakening or Facilitating: Mediation Mechanism and the Promotion of the Rule of Law in China.
2015-11
Weakening or Facilitating: Mediation Mechanism and the Promotion of the Rule of Law in China.
SOAS Doctoral School
Xiamen University Press
Linlan
Huang
Huang Linlan
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-3428-0162
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:25865
2024-02-09T15:01:15Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353130
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
turner-making-refugees-work-the-politics-of-integrating-syrian-refugees-into-the-labor-market-in-jordan.pdf
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HTML Summary of #25865
Making Refugees Work? The Politics of Integrating Syrian Refugees into the Labor Market in Jordan
Making Refugees Work? The Politics of Integrating Syrian Refugees into the Labor Market in Jordan (Text)
Making Refugees Work? The Politics of Integrating Syrian Refugees into the Labor Market in Jordan (Other)
Making Refugees Work? The Politics of Integrating Syrian Refugees into the Labor Market in Jordan (Other)
Making Refugees Work? The Politics of Integrating Syrian Refugees into the Labor Market in Jordan (Other)
Making Refugees Work? The Politics of Integrating Syrian Refugees into the Labor Market in Jordan (Other)
1
28
2019
Making Refugees Work? The Politics of Integrating Syrian Refugees into the Labor Market in Jordan
Department of Politics & International Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Taylor and Francis
Turner
Lewis
Lewis Turner
Lenner
Katharina
Katharina Lenner
19436149
Middle East Critique
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:26189
2020-09-15T07:47:08Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353530
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #26189
Digital ecology of free speech: Authenticity, identity, and self-censorship
Through a thematic mapping of the current literature and a gap analysis of the field, the chapter sheds light on the discrepancies between emerging digital practices and established theories of free speech. In the contemporary digital age, censorship and surveillance are exercised more and more by private actors such as social media platform operators, while self-expression increasingly takes the form of content forwarding, coded language, and non-human identities. We observe that the current literature shares a “pathological” approach; that is, undesirable content ought to be removed, avoided, and institutionally intervened upon. This approach, however, poses a new set of difficult questions such as who decides what is intolerably extreme and what is acceptably moderate; who designs and implements the filtering of extreme content; and how can the public ensure the accountability of the filtering mechanism.
2020-08-07
Digital ecology of free speech: Authenticity, identity, and self-censorship
School of History, Religions & Philosophies
SOAS Doctoral School
Oxford University Press
Yates
Simeon
Simeon Yates
Rice
Ronald E.
Ronald E. Rice
Scott-Baumann
Alison
Alison Scott-Baumann
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-4983-5394
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:26190
2022-12-07T08:08:12Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D4A:35323030
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #26190
Towards the operationalization of controversial news: A study of online news articles and reader comments during the 2017 presidential election in South Korea
In this brief research note, we propose a set of concepts and methods for identifying and operationalizing controversial news items. Based on an analysis of online readers’ comments posted in response to political news articles in the lead-up to the most recent South Korean presidential election (May 9, 2017), we develop what we term as “controversy indicator.” We calculate a controversy score using the total number of reader comments and the proportion of “upvotes” (indicating approval) and “downvotes” (indicating disapproval) a given news article elicits. Our findings demonstrate the potential usefulness of the controversy indicator in understanding the contemporary news environment, which is becoming increasingly divisive and polluted with disinformation.
53
2018-08-17
Towards the operationalization of controversial news: A study of online news articles and reader comments during the 2017 presidential election in South Korea
Centre of Korean Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Springer Nature
Park
Han Woo
Han Woo Park
Park
Hyejin
Hyejin Park
Lee
Yenn
Yenn Lee
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0708-2948
Kim
Chan Woo
Chan Woo Kim
00335177
Quality and Quantity
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:26249
2024-02-09T15:02:20Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353830
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
chase-et-al-building-back-better-taking-stock.pdf
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HTML Summary of #26249
Building back better? Taking stock of the post-earthquake mental health and psychosocial response in Nepal
Building back better? Taking stock of the post-earthquake mental health and psychosocial response in Nepal (Text)
Building back better? Taking stock of the post-earthquake mental health and psychosocial response in Nepal (Other)
Building back better? Taking stock of the post-earthquake mental health and psychosocial response in Nepal (Other)
Building back better? Taking stock of the post-earthquake mental health and psychosocial response in Nepal (Other)
Building back better? Taking stock of the post-earthquake mental health and psychosocial response in Nepal (Other)
BACKGROUND:
The World Health Organization’s ‘building back better’ approach advocates capitalizing on the resources and political will elicited by disasters to strengthen national mental health systems. This study explores the contributions of the response to the 2015 earthquake in Nepal to sustainable mental health system reform.
// METHODS:
We systematically reviewed grey literature on the mental health and psychosocial response to the earthquake obtained through online information-sharing platforms and response coordinators (168 documents) to extract data on response stakeholders and activities. More detailed data on activity outcomes were solicited from organizations identified as most active in the response. To triangulate and extend findings, we held a focus group discussion with key governmental and non-governmental stakeholders in mental health system development in Nepal (n = 10). Discussion content was recorded, transcribed, and subjected to thematic analysis.
// RESULTS:
While detailed documentation of response activities was limited, available data combined with stakeholders’ accounts suggest that the post-earthquake response accelerated progress towards national mental health system building in the areas of governance, financing, human resources, information and research, service delivery, and medications. Key achievements in the post-earthquake context include training of primary health care service providers in affected districts using mhGAP and training of new psychosocial workers; appointment of mental health focal points in the government and World Health Organization Country Office; the addition of new psychotropic drugs to the government’s free drugs list; development of a community mental health care package and training curricula for different cadres of health workers; and the revision of mental health plans, policy, and financing mechanisms. Concerns remain that government ownership and financing will be insufficient to sustain services in affected districts and scale them up to non-affected districts.
// CONCLUSIONS:
Building back better has been achieved to varying extents in different districts and at different levels of the mental health system. Non-governmental organizations and the World Health Organization Country Office must continue to support the government to ensure that recent advances maximally contribute to realising the vision of a national mental health care system in Nepal.
44
12
2018-08-01
Building back better? Taking stock of the post-earthquake mental health and psychosocial response in Nepal
Department of Anthropology & Sociology
SOAS Doctoral School
BMC part of Springer Nature
Marahatta
Kedar
Kedar Marahatta
Samuel
Reuben
Reuben Samuel
Shrestha
Sujan
Sujan Shrestha
Dotel
Bhogendra Raj
Bhogendra Raj Dotel
Sidgel
Kripa
Kripa Sidgel
Gautam
Kamal
Kamal Gautam
Chase
Liana E.
Liana E. Chase
Luitel
Nagendra P.
Nagendra P. Luitel
17524458
International Journal of Mental Health Systems
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:26309
2024-02-09T15:02:28Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
7375626A656374733D6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C73:6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C735F736F6173
74797065733D61727469636C65
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
7_180809_Editorial_II_F0.pdf
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HTML Summary of #26309
Editorial II: The Praxis of Decolonisation
Editorial II: The Praxis of Decolonisation (Text)
Editorial II: The Praxis of Decolonisation (Other)
Editorial II: The Praxis of Decolonisation (Other)
Editorial II: The Praxis of Decolonisation (Other)
Editorial II: The Praxis of Decolonisation (Other)
2017-2018
11
2017-08-17
Editorial II: The Praxis of Decolonisation
SOAS Doctoral School
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
SOAS University of London
Lim
Iris
Iris Lim
Istratii
Romina
Romina Istratii
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-8083-634X
25176226
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:26311
2024-02-09T15:02:30Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
7375626A656374733D6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C73:6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C735F736F6173
74797065733D61727469636C65
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
9_180809_Hirmer_The_Art_Of_Telangana_Women_And_The_Crafting_of_The_Decolonial_Subject_F0.pdf
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The art of Telangana women and the crafting of the decolonial subject: From dialectics of ‘othering’ to expressions of radical alterity
The art of Telangana women and the crafting of the decolonial subject: From dialectics of ‘othering’ to expressions of radical alterity (Text)
The art of Telangana women and the crafting of the decolonial subject: From dialectics of ‘othering’ to expressions of radical alterity (Other)
The art of Telangana women and the crafting of the decolonial subject: From dialectics of ‘othering’ to expressions of radical alterity (Other)
The art of Telangana women and the crafting of the decolonial subject: From dialectics of ‘othering’ to expressions of radical alterity (Other)
The art of Telangana women and the crafting of the decolonial subject: From dialectics of ‘othering’ to expressions of radical alterity (Other)
2017-2018
11
2018-09-15
The art of Telangana women and the crafting of the decolonial subject: From dialectics of ‘othering’ to expressions of radical alterity
SOAS Doctoral School
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
SOAS University of London
Hirmer
Monika
Monika Hirmer
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-5776-1615
25176226
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:26326
2024-02-09T15:02:31Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353130
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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WP76_craven.pdf
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Thinking About Governance Through Diasporas: Decentering the State and Challenging the External/Internal Binary
Thinking About Governance Through Diasporas: Decentering the State and Challenging the External/Internal Binary (Text)
Thinking About Governance Through Diasporas: Decentering the State and Challenging the External/Internal Binary (Other)
Thinking About Governance Through Diasporas: Decentering the State and Challenging the External/Internal Binary (Other)
Thinking About Governance Through Diasporas: Decentering the State and Challenging the External/Internal Binary (Other)
Thinking About Governance Through Diasporas: Decentering the State and Challenging the External/Internal Binary (Other)
2018-08
Thinking About Governance Through Diasporas: Decentering the State and Challenging the External/Internal Binary
Department of Politics & International Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
SFB-Governance Working Paper Series; No. 76
Craven
Catherine Ruth
Catherine Ruth Craven
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-4380-3527
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:26532
2018-10-22T12:58:07Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #26532
‘Gone Native?’: Reflections of a Feminist Tightrope Walker’s Research on ‘Land Grabbing’ and the Dilemmas of ‘Fieldworking’ While Parenting
‘Gone Native?’: Reflections of a Feminist Tightrope Walker’s Research on ‘Land Grabbing’ and the Dilemmas of ‘Fieldworking’ While Parenting (Text)
‘Gone Native?’: Reflections of a Feminist Tightrope Walker’s Research on ‘Land Grabbing’ and the Dilemmas of ‘Fieldworking’ While Parenting (Other)
‘Gone Native?’: Reflections of a Feminist Tightrope Walker’s Research on ‘Land Grabbing’ and the Dilemmas of ‘Fieldworking’ While Parenting (Other)
‘Gone Native?’: Reflections of a Feminist Tightrope Walker’s Research on ‘Land Grabbing’ and the Dilemmas of ‘Fieldworking’ While Parenting (Other)
‘Gone Native?’: Reflections of a Feminist Tightrope Walker’s Research on ‘Land Grabbing’ and the Dilemmas of ‘Fieldworking’ While Parenting (Other)
2018-09-01
‘Gone Native?’: Reflections of a Feminist Tightrope Walker’s Research on ‘Land Grabbing’ and the Dilemmas of ‘Fieldworking’ While Parenting
Department of Development Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Palgrave Macmillan
Kelly
Max
Max Kelly
Jackson
Ruth
Ruth Jackson
Dieng
Rama Salla
Rama Salla Dieng
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:26533
2022-10-15T20:36:20Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #26533
"Land Grabbing" and the Politics of Evidence: The case of Senegal
4
46
2017-03-01
"Land Grabbing" and the Politics of Evidence: The case of Senegal
Department of Development Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Africa Institute of South Africa (AISA)
Dieng
Rama Salla
Rama Salla Dieng
1995641X
Africa Insight
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:26534
2018-10-17T10:00:49Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D626F6F6B5F726576696577
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #26534
Book Review: Ndèye Sokhna Guèye (Ed.) (2015), Mouvements sociaux des femmes au Sénégal
Ndèye Sokhna Guèye (Ed.) (2015), Mouvements sociaux des femmes au Sénégal [Women’s social movements in Senegal]. Dakar: CODESRIA. ISBN 978-2-86978-634-9, pp. 188.
1
5
2016-04-01
Book Review: Ndèye Sokhna Guèye (Ed.) (2015), Mouvements sociaux des femmes au Sénégal
Department of Development Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Sage
Dieng
Rama Salla
Rama Salla Dieng
22779760
Agrarian South: Journal of Political Economy
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:26541
2024-03-13T02:59:18Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
Williams Will REDD+ Safeguards Mitigate Corruption.pdf
text/html
HTML Summary of #26541
Will REDD+ safeguards mitigate corruption? Qualitative evidence from Southeast Asia
Will REDD+ safeguards mitigate corruption? Qualitative evidence from Southeast Asia (Text)
Will REDD+ safeguards mitigate corruption? Qualitative evidence from Southeast Asia (Other)
Will REDD+ safeguards mitigate corruption? Qualitative evidence from Southeast Asia (Other)
Will REDD+ safeguards mitigate corruption? Qualitative evidence from Southeast Asia (Other)
Will REDD+ safeguards mitigate corruption? Qualitative evidence from Southeast Asia (Other)
High levels of faith and finance are being invested in REDD+ as a promising global climate change mitigation policy. Since its inception in 2007, corruption has been viewed as a potential impediment to the achievement of REDD+ goals, partly motivating ‘safeguards’ rolled out as part of national REDD+ readiness activities. We compare corruption mitigation measures adopted as part of REDD+ safeguards, drawing on qualitative case evidence from three Southeast Asian countries that have recently piloted the scheme: Indonesia, the Philippines, and Vietnam. We find that while REDD+ safeguards adopt a conventional principal-agent approach to tackling corruption in the schemes, our case evidence confirms our theoretical expectation that REDD+ corruption risks are perceived to arise not only from principal-agent type problems: they are also linked to embedded pro-corruption social norms. This implies that REDD+ safeguards are likely to be at best partially effective against corruption, and at worst will not mitigate corruption at all.
10
55
2018-09-02
Will REDD+ safeguards mitigate corruption? Qualitative evidence from Southeast Asia
Department of Development Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Taylor and Francis
Williams
Aled
Aled Williams
Dupuy
Kendra
Kendra Dupuy
00220388
Journal of Development Studies
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:26542
2018-10-17T09:44:09Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:26543
2022-12-15T09:09:35Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D6564697465645F626F6F6B
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #26543
Corruption, Natural Resources and Development: From Resource Curse to Political Ecology
This book provides a fresh and extensive discussion of corruption issues in natural resources sectors. Reflecting on recent debates in corruption research and revisiting resource curse challenges in light of political ecology approaches, this volume provides a series of nuanced and policy-relevant case studies analyzing patterns of corruption around natural resources and options to reach anti-corruption goals. The potential for new variations of the resource curse in the forest and urban land sectors and the effectiveness of anti-corruption policies in resource sectors are considered in depth. Corruption in oil, gas, mining, fisheries, biofuel, wildlife, forestry and urban land are all covered, and potential solutions discussed.
2017-02-01
Corruption, Natural Resources and Development: From Resource Curse to Political Ecology
Department of Development Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Edward Elgar
Le Billon
Philippe
Philippe Le Billon
Williams
Aled
Aled Williams
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:29846
2018-10-22T09:04:58Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D6F74686572
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #29846
"No Reason To Fear Her Karma": Gender Variance in Japanese History and Culture
From Buddhist folklore to Kabuki theatre to contemporary transgender lives, Japanese history and culture have been home to multiple forms of gender variance and cross-gender identities. Lyman Gamberton (SOAS, University of London) provides an introduction to the complexities of gender in the Japanese past, while arguing that historic and cultural forms of gender-variant practice should not automatically be linked to Japanese transgender identities today.
2018-04-26
"No Reason To Fear Her Karma": Gender Variance in Japanese History and Culture
SOAS Doctoral School
Lyman
Gamberton
Gamberton Lyman
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:29947
2024-02-09T15:03:43Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353530:38353730
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
7375626A656374733D6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C73:6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C735F736F6173
74797065733D6564697465645F626F6F6B
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
SJPR.pdf
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HTML Summary of #29947
Exploring Fluid Times: Knowledge, Minds and Bodies. SOAS.
Exploring Fluid Times: Knowledge, Minds and Bodies. SOAS. (Text)
Exploring Fluid Times: Knowledge, Minds and Bodies. SOAS. (Other)
Exploring Fluid Times: Knowledge, Minds and Bodies. SOAS. (Other)
Exploring Fluid Times: Knowledge, Minds and Bodies. SOAS. (Other)
Exploring Fluid Times: Knowledge, Minds and Bodies. SOAS. (Other)
2017-11-10
Exploring Fluid Times: Knowledge, Minds and Bodies. SOAS.
Department of Religions & Philosophies
SOAS Doctoral School
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
SOAS University of London
Istratii
Romina
Romina Istratii
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-8083-634X
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:29950
2024-02-09T15:03:44Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353230
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D636F6E666572656E63655F6974656D
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
Poster Presentation Linlan Huang SOAS.jpg
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Poster Presentation Linlan Huang SOAS.pdf
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HTML Summary of #29950
The decision-making process of Chinese local stakeholders to facilitate Sino-japanese low carbon technology transfer: possibilities for decision-scaling
The decision-making process of Chinese local stakeholders to facilitate Sino-japanese low carbon technology transfer: possibilities for decision-scaling (Image)
The decision-making process of Chinese local stakeholders to facilitate Sino-japanese low carbon technology transfer: possibilities for decision-scaling (Other)
The decision-making process of Chinese local stakeholders to facilitate Sino-japanese low carbon technology transfer: possibilities for decision-scaling (Other)
The decision-making process of Chinese local stakeholders to facilitate Sino-japanese low carbon technology transfer: possibilities for decision-scaling (Other)
The decision-making process of Chinese local stakeholders to facilitate Sino-japanese low carbon technology transfer: possibilities for decision-scaling (Other)
The decision-making process of Chinese local stakeholders to facilitate Sino-japanese low carbon technology transfer: possibilities for decision-scaling (Text)
The decision-making process of Chinese local stakeholders to facilitate Sino-japanese low carbon technology transfer: possibilities for decision-scaling (Other)
The decision-making process of Chinese local stakeholders to facilitate Sino-japanese low carbon technology transfer: possibilities for decision-scaling (Other)
The decision-making process of Chinese local stakeholders to facilitate Sino-japanese low carbon technology transfer: possibilities for decision-scaling (Other)
The decision-making process of Chinese local stakeholders to facilitate Sino-japanese low carbon technology transfer: possibilities for decision-scaling (Other)
2018-11-13
The decision-making process of Chinese local stakeholders to facilitate Sino-japanese low carbon technology transfer: possibilities for decision-scaling
School of Finance & Management
SOAS Doctoral School
DMDU Annual Meeting 2018
Culver City, Los Angeles, USA
Huang
Linlan
Linlan Huang
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-3428-0162
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:29951
2024-02-09T15:03:44Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D6564697465645F626F6F6B
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
00_181128_SJPR_Full_Online_V4 (1).pdf
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HTML Summary of #29951
Decolonisation in Praxis
Decolonisation in Praxis (Text)
Decolonisation in Praxis (Other)
Decolonisation in Praxis (Other)
Decolonisation in Praxis (Other)
Decolonisation in Praxis (Other)
2018-11-01
Decolonisation in Praxis
SOAS Doctoral School
SOAS University of London
Lim
Iris
Iris Lim
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:29954
2020-08-11T09:00:31Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D4A:35323030
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
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South Korea
2018-11-01
South Korea
Centre of Korean Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Freedom House
White
Jessica
Jessica White
Shahbaz
Adrian
Adrian Shahbaz
Truong
Mai
Mai Truong
Lee
Yenn
Yenn Lee
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0708-2948
Funk
Allie
Allie Funk
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:30229
2023-06-06T10:27:14Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D4A:35323030
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D626C6F67
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HTML Summary of #30229
Online Consequences of being Offline: A Gendered Tale from South Korea
2019-01-21
Online Consequences of being Offline: A Gendered Tale from South Korea
Centre of Korean Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Lee
Yenn
Yenn Lee
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0708-2948
Medium
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:30248
2021-02-20T21:55:04Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353230
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363930
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
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HTML Summary of #30248
Weakening or Facilitating: Mediation Mechanism and the Promotion of the Rule of Law in China
2015-11
Weakening or Facilitating: Mediation Mechanism and the Promotion of the Rule of Law in China
School of Finance & Management
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy
SOAS Doctoral School
Xiamen University Press
Huang
Linlan
Linlan Huang
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-3428-0162
Tan
Shigui
Shigui Tan
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:30375
2022-01-13T09:14:42Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353930:38363030
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
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HTML Summary of #30375
China in Japan: Steeped tea in 18th- and 19th- century Japan
China in Japan: Steeped tea in 18th- and 19th- century Japan (Text)
China in Japan: Steeped tea in 18th- and 19th- century Japan (UNSPECIFIED)
China in Japan: Steeped tea in 18th- and 19th- century Japan (UNSPECIFIED)
China in Japan: Steeped tea in 18th- and 19th- century Japan (UNSPECIFIED)
China in Japan: Steeped tea in 18th- and 19th- century Japan (UNSPECIFIED)
2018-03-30
China in Japan: Steeped tea in 18th- and 19th- century Japan
Department of the History of Art & Archaeology
SOAS Doctoral School
The English Ceramic Circle
Fukunaga
Ai
Ai Fukunaga
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9575-837X
Hagglund
Patrick
Patrick Hagglund
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:30385
2024-01-28T03:00:07Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
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Degli The Aesthetics of ritual.pdf
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The aesthetics of ritual--contested identities and conflicting performances in the Iraqi Shi’a diaspora: Ritual, performance and identity change
The aesthetics of ritual--contested identities and conflicting performances in the Iraqi Shi’a diaspora: Ritual, performance and identity change (Text)
The aesthetics of ritual--contested identities and conflicting performances in the Iraqi Shi’a diaspora: Ritual, performance and identity change (UNSPECIFIED)
The aesthetics of ritual--contested identities and conflicting performances in the Iraqi Shi’a diaspora: Ritual, performance and identity change (UNSPECIFIED)
The aesthetics of ritual--contested identities and conflicting performances in the Iraqi Shi’a diaspora: Ritual, performance and identity change (UNSPECIFIED)
The aesthetics of ritual--contested identities and conflicting performances in the Iraqi Shi’a diaspora: Ritual, performance and identity change (UNSPECIFIED)
What are the processes through which identity change takes place at the individual and collective level? How might a focus on embodied religious performance and ritual contribute to understandings of such identity change? Through an ethnographic analysis of the Muharram rituals of Iraqi Shi’is in London, I take religious rites as a starting point from which to theorise a performative theory of identity change to highlight the role of ritual and performance in shaping changing notions of identity at both the individual and collective level. Such a project necessarily engages both with processes of identity change and with the paradox of identity/difference, particularly the ways in which articulations of subjective identity are ontologically dependent on an external ‘other’. Ultimately, I argue that paying close critical attention to the performative and (re)iterative processes of micro-level identificatory practices allows a more nuanced understanding of the mechanisms through which identity change comes to take effect, both at the level of individual subjectivity and that of collective social belonging.
1
38
2017-06-08
The aesthetics of ritual--contested identities and conflicting performances in the Iraqi Shi’a diaspora: Ritual, performance and identity change
SOAS Doctoral School
Sage
Degli Esposti
Emanuelle
Emanuelle Degli Esposti
02633957
Politics
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:30513
2024-02-09T15:05:37Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
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Moctar_Urban Informality and the Boundaries.pdf
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Urban Informality and the Boundaries of Belonging: Notes on Ethnicity, Nationality and Class in Nouakchott, Mauritania
Urban Informality and the Boundaries of Belonging: Notes on Ethnicity, Nationality and Class in Nouakchott, Mauritania (Text)
Urban Informality and the Boundaries of Belonging: Notes on Ethnicity, Nationality and Class in Nouakchott, Mauritania (UNSPECIFIED)
Urban Informality and the Boundaries of Belonging: Notes on Ethnicity, Nationality and Class in Nouakchott, Mauritania (UNSPECIFIED)
Urban Informality and the Boundaries of Belonging: Notes on Ethnicity, Nationality and Class in Nouakchott, Mauritania (UNSPECIFIED)
Urban Informality and the Boundaries of Belonging: Notes on Ethnicity, Nationality and Class in Nouakchott, Mauritania (UNSPECIFIED)
This article presents ethnographic commentary on the dynamics between different ethnic and national communities in Nouakchott’s informal sector. It first gives some background for this analysis by briefly reviewing the history of ethnic and national identity construction in Mauritania, focusing on how these different logics of inclusion and exclusion have informed policy and practice from the colonial era up to the present day. Ethnographic field data is then contextualised through a discussion of the role played by ›the informal‹ in Mauritania’s political economy. The analysis reveals that informality in the context of Nouakchott should simply be understood as urban social relations in practice. This analytical lens is then deployed to evaluate how the axes of nationality, ethnicity, and class play out in this setting. Nationality supersedes ethnicity as a mode of inclusion and exclusion in the informal economy. Ultimately, however, these lines of differentiation are dissolved by the overall structural position of those in the informal sector.
2
4
2019-02-19
Urban Informality and the Boundaries of Belonging: Notes on Ethnicity, Nationality and Class in Nouakchott, Mauritania
Department of Development Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Transcript Verlag
Ould Moctar
Hassan
Hassan Ould Moctar
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-8731-3496
23648732
Movements: Journal for Critical Migration and Border Regime Studies
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:30941
2022-12-17T13:47:52Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353230
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363930
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D636F6E666572656E63655F6974656D
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International Joint Ventures to Develop Policies Promoting Sino-Japanese Clean Coal Technologies Cooperation: A Multi-staged Analysis
2019-04-25
International Joint Ventures to Develop Policies Promoting Sino-Japanese Clean Coal Technologies Cooperation: A Multi-staged Analysis
School of Finance & Management
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy
SOAS Doctoral School
The 46th Academy of International Business UK and Ireland Chapter Conference
University of Sussex, Brighton, UK
Huang
Linlan
Linlan Huang
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-3428-0162
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:31151
2024-02-09T15:06:49Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
Fukunaga2019_Scholars Utopia.pdf
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HTML Summary of #31151
Scholars’ Utopia: Rethinking the display for sencha in the late Edo period
Scholars’ Utopia: Rethinking the display for sencha in the late Edo period (Text)
Scholars’ Utopia: Rethinking the display for sencha in the late Edo period (UNSPECIFIED)
Scholars’ Utopia: Rethinking the display for sencha in the late Edo period (UNSPECIFIED)
Scholars’ Utopia: Rethinking the display for sencha in the late Edo period (UNSPECIFIED)
Scholars’ Utopia: Rethinking the display for sencha in the late Edo period (UNSPECIFIED)
107
2019-05
Scholars’ Utopia: Rethinking the display for sencha in the late Edo period
SOAS Doctoral School
Society for Japanese Arts
Fukunaga
Ai
Ai Fukunaga
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9575-837X
01682997
Andon
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:31153
2024-02-09T15:06:49Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353230
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363930
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D636F6E666572656E63655F6974656D
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panel-6-international-law
wednesday
index.html
thursday
indexcodes.txt
text/html
HTML Summary of #31153
Protecting Audiences from Product Placements in Audiovisual Contents: A Comparative Study between EU, UK and US Law
Protecting Audiences from Product Placements in Audiovisual Contents: A Comparative Study between EU, UK and US Law (Text)
Protecting Audiences from Product Placements in Audiovisual Contents: A Comparative Study between EU, UK and US Law (Text)
Protecting Audiences from Product Placements in Audiovisual Contents: A Comparative Study between EU, UK and US Law (Text)
Protecting Audiences from Product Placements in Audiovisual Contents: A Comparative Study between EU, UK and US Law (Text)
Protecting Audiences from Product Placements in Audiovisual Contents: A Comparative Study between EU, UK and US Law (UNSPECIFIED)
2019-06-05
Protecting Audiences from Product Placements in Audiovisual Contents: A Comparative Study between EU, UK and US Law
School of Finance & Management
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy
SOAS Doctoral School
Queen Mary University of London Postgraduate Legal Research Conference “Silver Linings”
London, UK
Huang
Linlan
Linlan Huang
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-3428-0162
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:31192
2024-02-09T15:06:59Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353230
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363930
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D636F6E666572656E63655F6974656D
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DMDU_2018_Annual_Meeting_Booklet.pdf
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HTML Summary of #31192
Chinese Policy-making Process to Promote Low Carbon Technologies: A Potential Case for Applying Dynamic Adaptive Policy Pathways
Chinese Policy-making Process to Promote Low Carbon Technologies: A Potential Case for Applying Dynamic Adaptive Policy Pathways (Text)
Chinese Policy-making Process to Promote Low Carbon Technologies: A Potential Case for Applying Dynamic Adaptive Policy Pathways (UNSPECIFIED)
Chinese Policy-making Process to Promote Low Carbon Technologies: A Potential Case for Applying Dynamic Adaptive Policy Pathways (UNSPECIFIED)
Chinese Policy-making Process to Promote Low Carbon Technologies: A Potential Case for Applying Dynamic Adaptive Policy Pathways (UNSPECIFIED)
Chinese Policy-making Process to Promote Low Carbon Technologies: A Potential Case for Applying Dynamic Adaptive Policy Pathways (UNSPECIFIED)
China has been quite actively engaging in reducing its carbon
emissions. In 2016, China set the goal to cut its CO2 emissions per
unit of GDP by 60-65% from 2005 level by 2030, aiming to increase
non-fossil fuel sources in primary energy consumption to about 20%
by the same date. To deal with the striking air pollution problem in
megacities such as Beijing, Shanghai, China is shifting on renewables, leading the world’s investments in renewable sectors, such as
wind, solar and marine, guided by its 13th Five-Year Plan.
Innovation is at the heart of the new plan. The core strategy is to
lift up research and development in the country, through integrated
solutions that can create new growth opportunities while addressing
the ecological constraints and increasing costs of growth. In this talk,
we will address how Chinese local governments address the ecological and environmental constraints and how they coordinate with local
stakeholders.
Based on interviews and focus groups with key experts and stakeholders, we are interested in the application of the dynamic adaptive
policy pathways and consider if this approach matches the process of
existing decision-making or may help support decision-making under
uncertain regional changes in future.
2018-11-13
Chinese Policy-making Process to Promote Low Carbon Technologies: A Potential Case for Applying Dynamic Adaptive Policy Pathways
School of Finance & Management
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy
SOAS Doctoral School
6th Annual Meeting Society for Decision Making Under Deep Uncertainty
Culver City, Los Angeles, USA
Huang
Linlan
Linlan Huang
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-3428-0162
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:31288
2020-06-15T21:41:09Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D4A:35323030
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D626C6F67
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A commentary on the UK's Online Harms White Paper
2019-06
A commentary on the UK's Online Harms White Paper
Centre of Korean Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Lee
Yenn
Yenn Lee
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0708-2948
Press Arbitration = Ŏllon chungjae.
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:31466
2024-02-09T15:08:13Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353230
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363930
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D636F6E666572656E63655F6974656D
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Abstract for ECLS 2019 Linlan Huang.pdf
Durham Law School _ 2019 ECLS Annual Conference Call for Papers - Durham University.pdf
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HTML Summary of #31466
The Revival of Confucianism and Rule of Law in China: A Complex Interplay under the Narrative of ‘Chinese Dream’
The Revival of Confucianism and Rule of Law in China: A Complex Interplay under the Narrative of ‘Chinese Dream’ (Text)
The Revival of Confucianism and Rule of Law in China: A Complex Interplay under the Narrative of ‘Chinese Dream’ (Text)
The Revival of Confucianism and Rule of Law in China: A Complex Interplay under the Narrative of ‘Chinese Dream’ (UNSPECIFIED)
The Revival of Confucianism and Rule of Law in China: A Complex Interplay under the Narrative of ‘Chinese Dream’ (UNSPECIFIED)
The Revival of Confucianism and Rule of Law in China: A Complex Interplay under the Narrative of ‘Chinese Dream’ (UNSPECIFIED)
The Revival of Confucianism and Rule of Law in China: A Complex Interplay under the Narrative of ‘Chinese Dream’ (UNSPECIFIED)
The Revival of Confucianism and Rule of Law in China: A Complex Interplay under the Narrative of ‘Chinese Dream’ (UNSPECIFIED)
The Revival of Confucianism and Rule of Law in China: A Complex Interplay under the Narrative of ‘Chinese Dream’ (UNSPECIFIED)
The Revival of Confucianism and Rule of Law in China: A Complex Interplay under the Narrative of ‘Chinese Dream’ (UNSPECIFIED)
The Revival of Confucianism and Rule of Law in China: A Complex Interplay under the Narrative of ‘Chinese Dream’ (UNSPECIFIED)
2019-07-27
The Revival of Confucianism and Rule of Law in China: A Complex Interplay under the Narrative of ‘Chinese Dream’
School of Finance & Management
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy
SOAS Doctoral School
The 14th Annual Conference of the European China Law Studies Association
Durham, UK
Huang
Linlan
Linlan Huang
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-3428-0162
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:31467
2024-02-09T15:08:13Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353230
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363930
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D636F6E666572656E63655F6974656D
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
ERSS2019_0693.pdf
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international-conference-on-energy-research-and-social-science
program
exhibitors-and-sponsors
location
text/html
HTML Summary of #31467
International Joint Ventures to Shape Policies Promoting Technology Cooperation on Ultrasupercritical Coal Plants in China: a Multi-staged Analysis of Lobbying
International Joint Ventures to Shape Policies Promoting Technology Cooperation on Ultrasupercritical Coal Plants in China: a Multi-staged Analysis of Lobbying (Text)
International Joint Ventures to Shape Policies Promoting Technology Cooperation on Ultrasupercritical Coal Plants in China: a Multi-staged Analysis of Lobbying (UNSPECIFIED)
International Joint Ventures to Shape Policies Promoting Technology Cooperation on Ultrasupercritical Coal Plants in China: a Multi-staged Analysis of Lobbying (UNSPECIFIED)
International Joint Ventures to Shape Policies Promoting Technology Cooperation on Ultrasupercritical Coal Plants in China: a Multi-staged Analysis of Lobbying (UNSPECIFIED)
International Joint Ventures to Shape Policies Promoting Technology Cooperation on Ultrasupercritical Coal Plants in China: a Multi-staged Analysis of Lobbying (UNSPECIFIED)
International Joint Ventures to Shape Policies Promoting Technology Cooperation on Ultrasupercritical Coal Plants in China: a Multi-staged Analysis of Lobbying (Text)
International Joint Ventures to Shape Policies Promoting Technology Cooperation on Ultrasupercritical Coal Plants in China: a Multi-staged Analysis of Lobbying (Text)
International Joint Ventures to Shape Policies Promoting Technology Cooperation on Ultrasupercritical Coal Plants in China: a Multi-staged Analysis of Lobbying (Text)
International Joint Ventures to Shape Policies Promoting Technology Cooperation on Ultrasupercritical Coal Plants in China: a Multi-staged Analysis of Lobbying (Text)
2019-05-29
International Joint Ventures to Shape Policies Promoting Technology Cooperation on Ultrasupercritical Coal Plants in China: a Multi-staged Analysis of Lobbying
School of Finance & Management
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy
SOAS Doctoral School
The 2nd International Conference on Energy Research and Social Science
Tempe, Arizona, USA
Huang
Linlan
Linlan Huang
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-3428-0162
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:31491
2024-02-09T15:08:19Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D636F6E666572656E63655F6974656D
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Introductory speech_Romina Istratii.pdf
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Introductory Speech
Introductory Speech (Text)
Introductory Speech (UNSPECIFIED)
Introductory Speech (UNSPECIFIED)
Introductory Speech (UNSPECIFIED)
Introductory Speech (UNSPECIFIED)
This is the introductory speech given by Romina Istratii at the Decolonisation in Praxis Conference that was held at SOAS University of London on 7 June 2018. The Conference was a student-led initiative funded by SOAS that brought together students, faculty and staff to discuss the salient issue of decolonising knowledge-making and sharing in British universities. The proceedings of the conference were partially published in volume 11 of The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Studies, which can be found here: https://www.soas.ac.uk/research/rsa/journalofgraduateresearch/edition-11/
2018-06-07
Introductory Speech
SOAS Doctoral School
Decolonisation in Praxis
SOAS University of London
Istratii
Romina
Romina Istratii
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-8083-634X
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:31501
2020-02-21T13:22:01Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
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HTML Summary of #31501
Manuscript as Relic: The Svāminārāyaṇa Śikṣāpattrī Manuscript in the Bodleian Library, Oxford
Manuscript as Relic: The Svāminārāyaṇa Śikṣāpattrī Manuscript in the Bodleian Library, Oxford (Text)
Manuscript as Relic: The Svāminārāyaṇa Śikṣāpattrī Manuscript in the Bodleian Library, Oxford (UNSPECIFIED)
Manuscript as Relic: The Svāminārāyaṇa Śikṣāpattrī Manuscript in the Bodleian Library, Oxford (UNSPECIFIED)
Manuscript as Relic: The Svāminārāyaṇa Śikṣāpattrī Manuscript in the Bodleian Library, Oxford (UNSPECIFIED)
Manuscript as Relic: The Svāminārāyaṇa Śikṣāpattrī Manuscript in the Bodleian Library, Oxford (UNSPECIFIED)
2
29
2016-10-01
Manuscript as Relic: The Svāminārāyaṇa Śikṣāpattrī Manuscript in the Bodleian Library, Oxford
SOAS Doctoral School
Bodleian Library, University of Oxford
Chag
Avni
Avni Chag
00679488
The Bodleian Library Record
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:31658
2024-02-09T15:09:00Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353230
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363930
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D636F6E666572656E63655F6974656D
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contribution1118.pdf
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Developing IJVs Absorptive Capacity for Promoting Low Carbon Technology Transfer The Role of Intermediaries and External Channels
Developing IJVs Absorptive Capacity for Promoting Low Carbon Technology Transfer The Role of Intermediaries and External Channels (Text)
Developing IJVs Absorptive Capacity for Promoting Low Carbon Technology Transfer The Role of Intermediaries and External Channels (UNSPECIFIED)
Developing IJVs Absorptive Capacity for Promoting Low Carbon Technology Transfer The Role of Intermediaries and External Channels (UNSPECIFIED)
Developing IJVs Absorptive Capacity for Promoting Low Carbon Technology Transfer The Role of Intermediaries and External Channels (UNSPECIFIED)
Developing IJVs Absorptive Capacity for Promoting Low Carbon Technology Transfer The Role of Intermediaries and External Channels (UNSPECIFIED)
One of the perquisites of a successful technology transfer is that the firm should have sufficient absorptive capacity. Such capacity is not a take-for-granted product but go through a sophisticated development process. While most studies highlight the absorptive capacity and network in the process, the role of intermediaries is often underlined. In this study, we adopt the process-perspective on examine how international joint ventures conduct external knowledge search via intermediaries in the absorptive capacity development process in IJVs technology transfer. Based on three in-depth qualitative cases in low carbon industry, this study unfolds that successful innovators should not be isolated from intermediaries in the recent model of the innovation system. Instead, they interact with a variety of intermediaries at different stages of technology/knowledge transfer to secure the best-available resources and knowledge supporting absorptive capacity-building and innovation, which finally becomes a part of their market competitiveness.
2019-09-01
Developing IJVs Absorptive Capacity for Promoting Low Carbon Technology Transfer The Role of Intermediaries and External Channels
School of Finance & Management
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy
SOAS Doctoral School
The British Academy of Management 2019 Conference
Aston University, Birmingham, UK
Zou
Huan
Huan Zou
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-3952-8481
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:31851
2020-08-11T09:00:54Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D4A:35323030
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #31851
South Korea
2019-11-05
South Korea
Centre of Korean Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Freedom House
Shahbaz
Adrian
Adrian Shahbaz
Linzer
Isabel
Isabel Linzer
Slipowitz
Amy
Amy Slipowitz
Buyon
Noah
Noah Buyon
Lee
Yenn
Yenn Lee
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0708-2948
Funk
Allie
Allie Funk
Truong
Mai
Mai Truong
Freedom House
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:31871
2024-02-09T15:09:45Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
LaskaridisC_bicentenary Ricardo's Proposals_AAM.pdf
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A Bicentenary Review of Ricardo’s Proposals for an Economical and Secure Currency
A Bicentenary Review of Ricardo’s Proposals for an Economical and Secure Currency (Text)
A Bicentenary Review of Ricardo’s Proposals for an Economical and Secure Currency (UNSPECIFIED)
A Bicentenary Review of Ricardo’s Proposals for an Economical and Secure Currency (UNSPECIFIED)
A Bicentenary Review of Ricardo’s Proposals for an Economical and Secure Currency (UNSPECIFIED)
A Bicentenary Review of Ricardo’s Proposals for an Economical and Secure Currency (UNSPECIFIED)
A Bicentenary Review of Ricardo’s Proposals for an Economical and Secure Currency (UNSPECIFIED)
This year commemorates the bicentenary of one of David Ricardo’s lesser known publications, an 1816 pamphlet: Proposals for an Economical and Secure Currency. This paper explores the meaning and significance of this work and presents a variety of interpretations that have emerged about Ricardo’s monetary theory. The commonly held view is that monetary concerns were only of marginal importance to Ricardo. The paper discusses the context, content and response to Proposals in order to evaluate this commonly held view. Furthermore, the scheme Ricardo lays out in Proposals is intimately connected with international exchanges. The implications of rival interpretations of Ricardo’s monetary theory on how the balance of payments and gold movements are understood are explored.
1
65
2017-01-17
A Bicentenary Review of Ricardo’s Proposals for an Economical and Secure Currency
SOAS Doctoral School
Taylor and Francis
Laskaridis
Christina
Christina Laskaridis
10370196
History of Economics Review
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:31883
2020-06-12T10:29:11Z
7374617475733D756E707562
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Selling the spectacle of destruction - The films of Rintaro, and Japanese animation’s transnational transformation from ‘cult’ to ‘commercial’
Selling the spectacle of destruction - The films of Rintaro, and Japanese animation’s transnational transformation from ‘cult’ to ‘commercial’ (Text)
Selling the spectacle of destruction - The films of Rintaro, and Japanese animation’s transnational transformation from ‘cult’ to ‘commercial’ (UNSPECIFIED)
As one of the most acclaimed directors working in Japanese animation, Rintaro (aka. Shigeyuki Hayashi) has not only fronted a body of cinematic work that stretches from the late 70s through to the 00s, but provides a useful lens through which to examine the evolutionary history of anime as a Japanese creative output across the latter half of the 20th century. His work is often characterised as being cinematically epic, profiling life and death struggles against darkly fantastical backdrops. It also captures a crucial era in which the West was opening its doors to Japanese animation following the landmark screening of Akira (1988) at the London ICA in 1991. Simultaneously, the boom in the home video market - seeing both the maturation of the VHS format as well as the beginnings of the DVD as its successor - played a vital role, facilitating the development of an exciting new ‘cult’ environment where a niche medium like anime could bypass the cinema and be marketed directly to fans. It is here that the notion between cinematic spectacle and marketable medium meets - and which this paper will attempt to analyse; charting the course of Rintaro’s cinematic output as both aesthetic and transnational objects, created in Japan, yet consumed in the West.
2019-06-18
Selling the spectacle of destruction - The films of Rintaro, and Japanese animation’s transnational transformation from ‘cult’ to ‘commercial’
SOAS Doctoral School
London Screen Studies Group Conference
Birkbeck, University of London
Green
Laurence
Laurence Green
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-4316-0429
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:32079
2024-02-09T15:10:33Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D626C6F67
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Kerami_Afghanistan_failure_US-Taliban_peace_talks.pdf
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Afghanistan: failure of US-Taliban peace talks looms over elections
Afghanistan: failure of US-Taliban peace talks looms over elections (Text)
Afghanistan: failure of US-Taliban peace talks looms over elections (UNSPECIFIED)
Afghanistan: failure of US-Taliban peace talks looms over elections (UNSPECIFIED)
Afghanistan: failure of US-Taliban peace talks looms over elections (UNSPECIFIED)
Afghanistan: failure of US-Taliban peace talks looms over elections (UNSPECIFIED)
2019-09-25
Afghanistan: failure of US-Taliban peace talks looms over elections
SOAS Doctoral School
Kerami
Kaweh
Kaweh Kerami
Afghanistan: failure of US-Taliban peace talks looms over elections
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:33083
2024-02-09T15:13:43Z
7374617475733D707562
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74797065733D61727469636C65
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SOAS Journal Of PG Research - Rambling Guitarist.pdf
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The Rambling Guitarist – Gender, Genre And Archetypes In Nikkatsu Action’s Mukokuseki Eiga
The Rambling Guitarist – Gender, Genre And Archetypes In Nikkatsu Action’s Mukokuseki Eiga (Text)
The Rambling Guitarist – Gender, Genre And Archetypes In Nikkatsu Action’s Mukokuseki Eiga (UNSPECIFIED)
The Rambling Guitarist – Gender, Genre And Archetypes In Nikkatsu Action’s Mukokuseki Eiga (UNSPECIFIED)
The Rambling Guitarist – Gender, Genre And Archetypes In Nikkatsu Action’s Mukokuseki Eiga (UNSPECIFIED)
The Rambling Guitarist – Gender, Genre And Archetypes In Nikkatsu Action’s Mukokuseki Eiga (UNSPECIFIED)
The Rambling Guitarist – Gender, Genre And Archetypes In Nikkatsu Action’s Mukokuseki Eiga (UNSPECIFIED)
For Japan's oldest film studio Nikkatsu, the late-'50s and early-'60s represented a rapidly evolving, cosmopolitan playground in which Eastern and Western influences could be collided together in an explosive mix that ultimately resulted in movies that felt quite apart from either. These were the mukokuseki eiga (borderless or of no nationality), typified by Nikkatsu's nine-part wataridori (wanderer) series produced from 1959-1962. The first film in the series, The Rambling Guitarist ( Gitaa o motta wataridori), stands as a prime candidate through which to better understand the precise appeal of these films as well as the way their settings and characters captured a new, worldly aesthetic. Through a close analysis of The Rambling Guitarist, and more specifically, the way it presents and challenges various gender archetypes, this essay will look to present a snapshot of what Nikkatsu Action represented, straddling the borderline between two camps; East and West, old and new, tradition and modernity.
2018-2019
12
2020-06-09
The Rambling Guitarist – Gender, Genre And Archetypes In Nikkatsu Action’s Mukokuseki Eiga
School of Arts
SOAS Doctoral School
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
SOAS University of London
Green
Laurence
Laurence Green
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-4316-0429
25176226
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:33094
2024-02-09T15:13:46Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D6F74686572
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Research guide May 2020 version B.pdf
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Conducting Research Despite Travel Restrictions
Conducting Research Despite Travel Restrictions (Text)
Conducting Research Despite Travel Restrictions (UNSPECIFIED)
Conducting Research Despite Travel Restrictions (UNSPECIFIED)
Conducting Research Despite Travel Restrictions (UNSPECIFIED)
Conducting Research Despite Travel Restrictions (UNSPECIFIED)
Conducting Research Despite Travel Restrictions (UNSPECIFIED)
At the time of writing, May 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted all aspects of life around the world, and academic research is no exception. It is also widely predicted that even after the present pandemic calms down, international travel restrictions are likely to remain in place in some shape or form for the foreseeable future. Researchers are seeking ways to move their projects forward despite the unprecedented challenges of lockdowns and social distancing measures. This brief guide, adapted from the module Technology-Enhanced Research, aims to provide researchers at SOAS with some practical pointers in navigating such challenges.
2020-06-04
Conducting Research Despite Travel Restrictions
SOAS Doctoral School
SOAS University of London
Lee
Yenn
Yenn Lee
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0708-2948
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:33204
2024-02-09T15:14:17Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353530:38353730
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D626F6F6B5F726576696577
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book review heehs 09072020 upload final.pdf
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Review of Spirituality without God: A Global History of Thought and Practice, by Peter Heehs
Review of Spirituality without God: A Global History of Thought and Practice, by Peter Heehs (Text)
Review of Spirituality without God: A Global History of Thought and Practice, by Peter Heehs (UNSPECIFIED)
Review of Spirituality without God: A Global History of Thought and Practice, by Peter Heehs (UNSPECIFIED)
Review of Spirituality without God: A Global History of Thought and Practice, by Peter Heehs (UNSPECIFIED)
Review of Spirituality without God: A Global History of Thought and Practice, by Peter Heehs (UNSPECIFIED)
Review of Spirituality without God: A Global History of Thought and Practice, by Peter Heehs (UNSPECIFIED)
136
2020-05
Review of Spirituality without God: A Global History of Thought and Practice, by Peter Heehs
Department of Religions & Philosophies
SOAS Doctoral School
British Association for the Study of Religions (BASR)
Augspurger
Jens
Jens Augspurger
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-5064-550X
Bulletin of the British Association for the Study of Religions (BASR)
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:33220
2024-02-09T15:14:22Z
7374617475733D756E707562
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7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D636F6E666572656E63655F6974656D
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SeNSS Virtual Conference.pdf
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Building strong and healthy research partnerships during the PhD experience: A decolonial approach
Building strong and healthy research partnerships during the PhD experience: A decolonial approach (Text)
Building strong and healthy research partnerships during the PhD experience: A decolonial approach (UNSPECIFIED)
Building strong and healthy research partnerships during the PhD experience: A decolonial approach (UNSPECIFIED)
Building strong and healthy research partnerships during the PhD experience: A decolonial approach (UNSPECIFIED)
Building strong and healthy research partnerships during the PhD experience: A decolonial approach (UNSPECIFIED)
Building strong and healthy research partnerships during the PhD experience: A decolonial approach (UNSPECIFIED)
2020-07-15
Building strong and healthy research partnerships during the PhD experience: A decolonial approach
Research and Enterprise Office
Department of Development Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
SeNSS Virtual Conference - Pathway sessions (Development Studies)
Istratii
Romina
Romina Istratii
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-8083-634X
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:33345
2024-02-09T15:14:41Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353530
7375626A656374733D53:38353530:38353730
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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file148310.pdf
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Islam and Muslims on UK University Campuses: perceptions and challenges
Islam and Muslims on UK University Campuses: perceptions and challenges (Text)
Islam and Muslims on UK University Campuses: perceptions and challenges (UNSPECIFIED)
Islam and Muslims on UK University Campuses: perceptions and challenges (UNSPECIFIED)
Islam and Muslims on UK University Campuses: perceptions and challenges (UNSPECIFIED)
Islam and Muslims on UK University Campuses: perceptions and challenges (UNSPECIFIED)
Islam and Muslims on UK University Campuses: perceptions and challenges (UNSPECIFIED)
2020-07-14
Islam and Muslims on UK University Campuses: perceptions and challenges
School of History, Religions & Philosophies
Department of Religions & Philosophies
SOAS Doctoral School
Durham University, SOAS, Coventry University, Lancaster University
Naguib
Shuruq
Shuruq Naguib
Guest
Mathew
Mathew Guest
Cheruvallil-Contractor
Sariya
Sariya Cheruvallil-Contractor
Al Baghal
Tarek
Tarek Al Baghal
Lee
Yenn
Yenn Lee
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0708-2948
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:34158
2024-02-09T15:15:34Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D50:38303830
7375626A656374733D50:38303930
7375626A656374733D50:38313430
7375626A656374733D53:38353030
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
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Lokhandwala 2020_Covid 19 MENA.pdf
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The Fallout of Covid-19 on Environmental Law in the Middle East and North Africa
The Fallout of Covid-19 on Environmental Law in the Middle East and North Africa (Text)
The Fallout of Covid-19 on Environmental Law in the Middle East and North Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
The Fallout of Covid-19 on Environmental Law in the Middle East and North Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
The Fallout of Covid-19 on Environmental Law in the Middle East and North Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
The Fallout of Covid-19 on Environmental Law in the Middle East and North Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
The Fallout of Covid-19 on Environmental Law in the Middle East and North Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
This paper analyses the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on the Middle Eastern and North African (MENA) region against the backdrop of two themes: climate action and human rights. In the climate context, the renewable energy sector will certainly suffer in the immediate aftermath of Covid 19. At the same time, globally, renewables have shown more resilience than fossil fuels during this crisis, which may lead to increased investments in the long-term. Nevertheless, pre-Covid commitments and estimated future gains (if any) in renewables were not enough for combating climate change. The trajectory of regional climate action was slow and inadequate to begin with, and it is likely to suffer even further, owing to economic slowdown and relief measures that will pull resources away from climate action. In the human rights context, the Covid 19 crisis has led to increased authoritarianism and has added a new layer to existing human rights and humanitarian issues. As political stability is a prerequisite for the growth and execution of environmental law, public discontent against governments will only delay and detract the environmental agenda. Overall, these two legs of analysis show how the pandemic has led to a retraction of environmental law. Coming out of the crisis, there are many lessons to be learnt. Interdisciplinary approaches that draw a human-ecological-health nexus may offer solutions in the Middle East as in the world. The Berlin Principles 2019 are a positive step in this direction which could pave the way for more ecosystemic and holistic environmental legal development.
2020-10-26
The Fallout of Covid-19 on Environmental Law in the Middle East and North Africa
Centre for Human Rights Law
Centre of Islamic and Middle Eastern Law
Law, Environment and Development Centre
School of Law
SOAS Doctoral School
Opinio Juris in Comparatione
Lokhandwala
Zainab
Zainab Lokhandwala
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-2506-3425
22815147
Opinio Juris in Comparatione
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:34168
2024-02-09T15:15:38Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D746865736973
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Pope PhD Thesis.pdf
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Brokering an Urban Frontier: Milícias, Violence, and Rio de Janeiro’s West Zone
Brokering an Urban Frontier: Milícias, Violence, and Rio de Janeiro’s West Zone (Text)
Brokering an Urban Frontier: Milícias, Violence, and Rio de Janeiro’s West Zone (UNSPECIFIED)
Brokering an Urban Frontier: Milícias, Violence, and Rio de Janeiro’s West Zone (UNSPECIFIED)
Brokering an Urban Frontier: Milícias, Violence, and Rio de Janeiro’s West Zone (UNSPECIFIED)
Brokering an Urban Frontier: Milícias, Violence, and Rio de Janeiro’s West Zone (UNSPECIFIED)
Brokering an Urban Frontier: Milícias, Violence, and Rio de Janeiro’s West Zone (UNSPECIFIED)
This thesis examines the emergence and sustainment of milícias (militias) in the 1990s in the West Zone ‘margins’ of the city of Rio de Janeiro. It considers the rise of milícias as they coincide with urbanisation, economic liberalisation, democratisation, decentralisation and the rise of violent drug trafficking organisations. This thesis sets out to answer the following overarching research question: ‘How and why did milícias emerge in Rio de Janeiro’s West Zone since the 1990s and how and why were they sustained? What is their relationship to the management of (dis)order?’ The analytical approach developed to answer this question draws on an historically situated political settlements framework to understand milícias as power relations within coalition formations and as facilitators of rent extraction and distribution. The framework introduces urban and political geography literatures on frontiers to advance a thesis that milícias in Rio de Janeiro are coercive brokers that mediate urban frontier zones. This study draws on ethnographic fieldnotes from direct and participant observation, in-depth interviews and oral histories, and extensive archival research of parliamentary documents. It argues that milícias emerged to provide temporary ‘solutions’ to address the violent inequalities, structural insecurities, and the threats and insecurities posed by drug trafficking organisations in the urban frontiers. They emerged through ‘bottom-up’ processes but were also seen as convenient to political and economic elites in the central state who were unable (or unwilling) to provide formal security in the West Zone. However, this thesis makes the case that there was a trade-off for the central state as paramilitaries, as accrued power in the urban frontier, they also attempted to reshape state institutions. Because of their roots in local communities, this thesis also recognises the dependency of milícias on legitimacy, ideas, beliefs and norms, and the power imbued in community relations. This study contributes to the literatures on milícias by accounting for their role as co-producers of (dis)order in the urban margins, the literature on political settlements by intertwining questions of violence and conflict with spatiality, and finally the Latin American literatures on local political order and governance by advancing a conceptualisation of armed groups straddling state and society and challenging conventional state/-non-state binaries.
2020-04-16
Brokering an Urban Frontier: Milícias, Violence, and Rio de Janeiro’s West Zone
Department of Development Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Development Studies, SOAS, University of London
SOAS, University of London
Pope
Nicholas
Nicholas Pope
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0019-5931
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:34200
2020-11-16T08:33:00Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D4A:35323030
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
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HTML Summary of #34200
South Korea
2020-10-14
South Korea
Centre of Korean Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Freedom House
Funk
Allie
Allie Funk
Shahbaz
Adrian
Adrian Shahbaz
Lee
Yenn
Yenn Lee
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0708-2948
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:34201
2023-06-06T10:13:39Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D4A:35323030
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D626C6F67
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Molka and Online Violations of Women in South Korea
2019-03-22
Molka and Online Violations of Women in South Korea
Centre of Korean Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Lee
Yenn
Yenn Lee
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0708-2948
Global Digital Futures
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:34565
2024-02-09T15:17:04Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D766964656F
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Bl S Asia Seminar - Law & Tibetan Empire - Cem 2018-redux.m4v
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Law and the Tibetan Empire
Law and the Tibetan Empire (Video)
A primary figure of interest in Tibetan ‘medieval’ law has been the Tibetan Emperor Songtsen Gampo (7th century CE). Several Tibetan historical texts of the post-imperial period in the 10th-14 centuries provide references to Songtsen Gampo’s Buddhist influences in the development of Tibetan law. One such text is the mid-14th-century Rgyal rabs gsal ba’i me long, also known as The Mirror Illuminating the Royal Genealogies (Sorensen, 1994), composed by a Tibetan cleric, Lama Dampa Sonam Gyelsten.
The British Library has a manuscript example [OR.5351] of this work, date of creation as yet not determined, which was collected by Dr. Waddell and bought from him in May 1898, several years before the Younghusband Expedition, a British invasion of Tibet (1904). Thus far, apparently this manuscript has not been studied by Western scholars. The presentation will look at the structure of the manuscript contents, and pay attention to some of the passages that make references to Tibetan law of the Tibetan Empire period (7th-9th centuries).
Charles Manson is Tibetan Subject consultant librarian at Bodleian Libraries, Oxford, and also works as Tibetan cataloguer at The British Library. He teaches evening classes in Classical Tibetan at SOAS, University of London
2018-01
Law and the Tibetan Empire
SOAS Doctoral School
British Library
Manson
Charles
Charles Manson
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-9621-6532
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:34712
2021-07-18T13:02:03Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:34727
2024-02-09T15:17:46Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353030
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D626C6F67
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neoliberalization-of-indian-agriculture-undermining-of-the-right-to-food-of-farmers
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Neoliberalisation of Indian Agriculture: Undermining of the Right to Food of Farmers
Neoliberalisation of Indian Agriculture: Undermining of the Right to Food of Farmers (Text)
2021-01-31
Neoliberalisation of Indian Agriculture: Undermining of the Right to Food of Farmers
School of Law
SOAS Doctoral School
Lokhandwala
Zainab
Zainab Lokhandwala
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-2506-3425
Socio Legal Review
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:34769
2024-02-09T15:17:58Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D4A:35373230
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
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Hau_The Official Mind of British Post-Imperialism.pdf
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HTML Summary of #34769
The Official Mind of British Post-Imperialism: Influencing Parliamentary Opinions during the Anglo-Chinese Negotiations on the Future of Hong Kong, 1982-84
The Official Mind of British Post-Imperialism: Influencing Parliamentary Opinions during the Anglo-Chinese Negotiations on the Future of Hong Kong, 1982-84 (Text)
The Official Mind of British Post-Imperialism: Influencing Parliamentary Opinions during the Anglo-Chinese Negotiations on the Future of Hong Kong, 1982-84 (UNSPECIFIED)
The Official Mind of British Post-Imperialism: Influencing Parliamentary Opinions during the Anglo-Chinese Negotiations on the Future of Hong Kong, 1982-84 (UNSPECIFIED)
The Official Mind of British Post-Imperialism: Influencing Parliamentary Opinions during the Anglo-Chinese Negotiations on the Future of Hong Kong, 1982-84 (UNSPECIFIED)
The Official Mind of British Post-Imperialism: Influencing Parliamentary Opinions during the Anglo-Chinese Negotiations on the Future of Hong Kong, 1982-84 (UNSPECIFIED)
The Official Mind of British Post-Imperialism: Influencing Parliamentary Opinions during the Anglo-Chinese Negotiations on the Future of Hong Kong, 1982-84 (UNSPECIFIED)
Based on newly declassified archival sources, the author argues that parliamentary approval was a major British negotiation strategy during negotiations over the future of Hong Kong. British diplomats insisted to their Chinese counterparts that any agreement on the Future of Hong Kong be subject to parliamentary approval, though such pre-condition was a political and not a legal one. The role of Parliament was manipulated domestically to avoid public scrutiny. Through a series of briefings, the FCO discouraged parliamentarians from discussing or raising questions about the future of Hong Kong for fear of damaging confidence. The approval of Hongkongers, the majority of whom wanted to remain part of the British Empire was originally a prerequisite for the joint agreement. This condition was dropped in the later stages of negotiations when Hongkongers’ wishes became unattainable in the face of the People’s Republic of China (PRC)’s threat to take unilateral action on Hong Kong, and Ministers even openly discredited voices from Hong Kong. Eventually, Parliament approved the Joint Declaration on the basis of an unsound and tokenistic consultation of the opinion of Hongkongers. In an examination of the official mind in the post-imperial epoch, this paper offers new perspectives on the role of Parliament in British foreign affairs.
6
43
2021-02-14
The Official Mind of British Post-Imperialism: Influencing Parliamentary Opinions during the Anglo-Chinese Negotiations on the Future of Hong Kong, 1982-84
SOAS China Institute
SOAS Doctoral School
Taylor and Francis
Hau
Milia
Milia Hau
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9552-7600
07075332
The International History Review
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:34797
2024-02-09T15:18:06Z
7374617475733D707562
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7375626A656374733D53:38353230
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D636F6E666572656E63655F6974656D
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Naples Abstract.pdf
Naples Speech Poster-1.jpg
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The ‘Unity of Heaven and Man’: Inspiration from Confucianism for Reforming Chinese Environmental Law
The ‘Unity of Heaven and Man’: Inspiration from Confucianism for Reforming Chinese Environmental Law (Text)
The ‘Unity of Heaven and Man’: Inspiration from Confucianism for Reforming Chinese Environmental Law (Image)
The ‘Unity of Heaven and Man’: Inspiration from Confucianism for Reforming Chinese Environmental Law (UNSPECIFIED)
The ‘Unity of Heaven and Man’: Inspiration from Confucianism for Reforming Chinese Environmental Law (UNSPECIFIED)
The ‘Unity of Heaven and Man’: Inspiration from Confucianism for Reforming Chinese Environmental Law (UNSPECIFIED)
The ‘Unity of Heaven and Man’: Inspiration from Confucianism for Reforming Chinese Environmental Law (UNSPECIFIED)
The ‘Unity of Heaven and Man’: Inspiration from Confucianism for Reforming Chinese Environmental Law (UNSPECIFIED)
The ‘Unity of Heaven and Man’: Inspiration from Confucianism for Reforming Chinese Environmental Law (UNSPECIFIED)
The ‘Unity of Heaven and Man’: Inspiration from Confucianism for Reforming Chinese Environmental Law (UNSPECIFIED)
The ‘Unity of Heaven and Man’: Inspiration from Confucianism for Reforming Chinese Environmental Law (UNSPECIFIED)
2019-12-09
The ‘Unity of Heaven and Man’: Inspiration from Confucianism for Reforming Chinese Environmental Law
Law, Environment and Development Centre
School of Finance & Management
SOAS Doctoral School
Traditional Value and Culture of Asia and Islam
University of Naples “L'Orientale”
Huang
Linlan
Linlan Huang
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-3428-0162
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35123
2024-02-09T15:19:17Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363430
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
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Blalack- Hidāyat man ḥārā fī amr al-Naṣāra- The Western Sahara's Missing Witness at the International Court of Justice.pdf
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Hidāyat man ḥārā fī amr al-Naṣāra: The Western Sahara's Missing Witness at the International Court of Justice?
Hidāyat man ḥārā fī amr al-Naṣāra: The Western Sahara's Missing Witness at the International Court of Justice? (Text)
Hidāyat man ḥārā fī amr al-Naṣāra: The Western Sahara's Missing Witness at the International Court of Justice? (UNSPECIFIED)
Hidāyat man ḥārā fī amr al-Naṣāra: The Western Sahara's Missing Witness at the International Court of Justice? (UNSPECIFIED)
Hidāyat man ḥārā fī amr al-Naṣāra: The Western Sahara's Missing Witness at the International Court of Justice? (UNSPECIFIED)
Hidāyat man ḥārā fī amr al-Naṣāra: The Western Sahara's Missing Witness at the International Court of Justice? (UNSPECIFIED)
Hidāyat man ḥārā fī amr al-Naṣāra: The Western Sahara's Missing Witness at the International Court of Justice? (UNSPECIFIED)
The disputed Western Sahara is one of many cases where the colonial borders drawn across Africa did not translate into a coherent postcolonial state. Although dozens of legal and historical studies have already analyzed the 1975 International Court of Justice ruling on the Western Sahara, this article brings a highly relevant and previously neglected document into dialogue with the court proceedings. Hidāyat man ḥārā fī amr al-Naṣāra (“Guidance for Whomever is Confused Regarding the Christians”) was a legal ruling on territorial defense written in 1885 by a central figure in Morocco’s nationalist narrative: Saharan scholar and resistance leader al-Shaikh Mā al-ʻAynayn (1831-1910). Although Morocco held Mā alʻAynayn up as proof of its “immemorial possession” of the disputed Western Sahara, the case did not consult Mā al-ʻAynayn’s own thought or literature to see how he represented and interpreted historical events as they unfolded. Hidāyat man ḥārā fī amr al-Naṣāra offers new insight into how Saharan figures negotiated authority and legitimacy on the eve of colonization – especially internal debates regarding whether to contract peace with European settlers or forcibly expel them. The fatwa’s concepts of territory and sovereignty are compared to the historical narratives presented at the International Court of Justice in 1975.
12
2021-01
Hidāyat man ḥārā fī amr al-Naṣāra: The Western Sahara's Missing Witness at the International Court of Justice?
School of Languages, Cultures & Linguistics
SOAS Doctoral School
L'Harmattan
Blalack
July Scott
July Scott Blalack
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0038-4986
9782343224893
L'Ouest Saharien: Cahiers d'Etudes Pluridisciplinaires
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35170
2021-07-18T13:01:32Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35191
2024-02-09T15:19:34Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353030
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363830
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D626F6F6B5F726576696577
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0141778920940580.pdf
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Book Review: Unruly Visions: The Aesthetic Practices of Queer Diaspora by Gayatri Gopinath
Book Review: Unruly Visions: The Aesthetic Practices of Queer Diaspora by Gayatri Gopinath (Text)
Book Review: Unruly Visions: The Aesthetic Practices of Queer Diaspora by Gayatri Gopinath (UNSPECIFIED)
Book Review: Unruly Visions: The Aesthetic Practices of Queer Diaspora by Gayatri Gopinath (UNSPECIFIED)
Book Review: Unruly Visions: The Aesthetic Practices of Queer Diaspora by Gayatri Gopinath (UNSPECIFIED)
Book Review: Unruly Visions: The Aesthetic Practices of Queer Diaspora by Gayatri Gopinath (UNSPECIFIED)
Book Review: Unruly Visions: The Aesthetic Practices of Queer Diaspora by Gayatri Gopinath (UNSPECIFIED)
1
126
2020-11-01
Book Review: Unruly Visions: The Aesthetic Practices of Queer Diaspora by Gayatri Gopinath
School of Law
Centre for Gender Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Sage
Aaberg
Lars
Lars Aaberg
01417789
Feminist Review
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35192
2024-02-09T15:19:34Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363830
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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Aaberg, Lars_Masculinity at the interface of liberalised development.pdf
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Masculinity at the interface of liberalised development: an ethnographic study from an urban slum in Kerala, South India
Masculinity at the interface of liberalised development: an ethnographic study from an urban slum in Kerala, South India (Text)
Masculinity at the interface of liberalised development: an ethnographic study from an urban slum in Kerala, South India (UNSPECIFIED)
This article is a reflection on empirical data gathered in an ethnographic study of masculinity in a designated slum in urban Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala. This gestures towards possible new scholarly projects for those interested in gender, development, or otherwise critically analysing the well-being of those marginalised in Kerala. This paper seeks to draw attention to processes of gendering specifically located in a slum. I put into dialogue “Kerala-specific” cultural studies, with its emphasis on the state’s political history, and masculinities studies at the interface of a liberalising state. I used the Kudumbashree development programme as an entry point to discuss development in Kerala, the quotidian experiences of men in the slum and greater questions of value and ethics, all entangled with ideals of masculinity. Examining masculinity in Kulamnagar brings to light facets of development, while liberalisation informs new practices of embodying masculinity
2018-05
Masculinity at the interface of liberalised development: an ethnographic study from an urban slum in Kerala, South India
Centre for Gender Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Centre for Development Studies, Thiruvananthapuram. RULSG Lateral Studies Series on Kudumbashree : 2
Aaberg
Lars
Lars Aaberg
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35193
2024-02-09T15:19:34Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363830
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D626F6F6B5F726576696577
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Aaberg2019_Article_ReengineeringIndiaWorkCapitalA.pdf
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Review of: Reengineering India: Work, Capital, and Class in an Offshore Economy by Carol Upadhya
Review of: Reengineering India: Work, Capital, and Class in an Offshore Economy by Carol Upadhya (Text)
Review of: Reengineering India: Work, Capital, and Class in an Offshore Economy by Carol Upadhya (UNSPECIFIED)
Review of: Reengineering India: Work, Capital, and Class in an Offshore Economy by Carol Upadhya (UNSPECIFIED)
Review of: Reengineering India: Work, Capital, and Class in an Offshore Economy by Carol Upadhya (UNSPECIFIED)
Review of: Reengineering India: Work, Capital, and Class in an Offshore Economy by Carol Upadhya (UNSPECIFIED)
Review of: Reengineering India: Work, Capital, and Class in an Offshore Economy by Carol Upadhya (UNSPECIFIED)
62
2019-04-22
Review of: Reengineering India: Work, Capital, and Class in an Offshore Economy by Carol Upadhya
Centre for Gender Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Springer Nature
Aaberg
Lars
Lars Aaberg
00195308
The Indian Journal of Labour Economics
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35194
2024-02-09T15:19:35Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363830
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D626F6F6B5F726576696577
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Aaberg, Lars_Book review, Sexual States - newbooks.pdf
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Review of: Sexual States: Governance and the Struggle Over the Antisodomy Law in India by Jyoti Puri
Review of: Sexual States: Governance and the Struggle Over the Antisodomy Law in India by Jyoti Puri (Text)
Review of: Sexual States: Governance and the Struggle Over the Antisodomy Law in India by Jyoti Puri (UNSPECIFIED)
Review of: Sexual States: Governance and the Struggle Over the Antisodomy Law in India by Jyoti Puri (UNSPECIFIED)
Review of: Sexual States: Governance and the Struggle Over the Antisodomy Law in India by Jyoti Puri (UNSPECIFIED)
Review of: Sexual States: Governance and the Struggle Over the Antisodomy Law in India by Jyoti Puri (UNSPECIFIED)
Review of: Sexual States: Governance and the Struggle Over the Antisodomy Law in India by Jyoti Puri (UNSPECIFIED)
2018-03
Review of: Sexual States: Governance and the Struggle Over the Antisodomy Law in India by Jyoti Puri
Centre for Gender Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
International Institute for Asian Studies
Aaberg
Lars
Lars Aaberg
Newbooks.Asia
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35195
2024-02-09T15:19:35Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353030
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363830
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D626F6F6B5F726576696577
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Lars - Mobile Subjects review, newbooks.pdf
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Review of: Mobile Subjects: Transnational Imaginaries of Gender Reassignment by Aren Z. Aizura
Review of: Mobile Subjects: Transnational Imaginaries of Gender Reassignment by Aren Z. Aizura (Text)
Review of: Mobile Subjects: Transnational Imaginaries of Gender Reassignment by Aren Z. Aizura (UNSPECIFIED)
Review of: Mobile Subjects: Transnational Imaginaries of Gender Reassignment by Aren Z. Aizura (UNSPECIFIED)
Review of: Mobile Subjects: Transnational Imaginaries of Gender Reassignment by Aren Z. Aizura (UNSPECIFIED)
Review of: Mobile Subjects: Transnational Imaginaries of Gender Reassignment by Aren Z. Aizura (UNSPECIFIED)
Review of: Mobile Subjects: Transnational Imaginaries of Gender Reassignment by Aren Z. Aizura (UNSPECIFIED)
2021-05
Review of: Mobile Subjects: Transnational Imaginaries of Gender Reassignment by Aren Z. Aizura
School of Law
Centre for Gender Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
International Institute for Asian Studies
Aaberg
Lars
Lars Aaberg
Newbooks.Asia
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35211
2022-06-17T13:02:15Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D6F74686572
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The NCRM wayfinder guide to conducting ethnographic research in the COVID-19 era
Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, social researchers have been seeking ways to move their projects forward despite the unprecedented challenges of lockdowns, social distancing measures, and international travel restrictions. Ethnographic research is one of the areas where the challenges have been particularly pronounced, due to its traditional emphasis on close interactions and bonds between the researcher and research participants. This guide aims to provide practical pointers for researchers who wish to adapt ethnographic methods around the constraints imposed by the pandemic.
2021-06-09
The NCRM wayfinder guide to conducting ethnographic research in the COVID-19 era
SOAS Doctoral School
National Centre for Research Methods
Lee
Yenn
Yenn Lee
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0708-2948
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35276
2021-07-02T15:46:14Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353530:38353730
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D766964656F
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Guru: Yoga, Power, Abuse. [Jens Augspurger interviewed by BBC's Ishleen Kaur]. Episode 7 (Hindi version).
2021-06-28
Guru: Yoga, Power, Abuse. [Jens Augspurger interviewed by BBC's Ishleen Kaur]. Episode 7 (Hindi version).
Department of Religions & Philosophies
SOAS Doctoral School
Louise Adamou
Ishleen Kaur
BBC Hindi News
Augspurger
Jens
Jens Augspurger
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-5064-550X
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35310
2024-02-09T15:20:12Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353130
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D626C6F67
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HTML Summary of #35310
Conducting research in the midst of a military coup in Myanmar
Conducting research in the midst of a military coup in Myanmar (Text)
Conducting research in the midst of a military coup in Myanmar (UNSPECIFIED)
Conducting field research always comes with security and ethical considerations. Yet they are exacerbated in constraining political environments, where navigating the line between one’s own security, the safety of informants and ethical considerations on how to use and interpret data to analyse a rapidly unfolding political situation such as the current military coup in Myanmar, can be a struggle for field researchers. This piece is dedicated to my research assistant, unjustly arrested and currently in jail in Myanmar.
2021-06-02
Conducting research in the midst of a military coup in Myanmar
Department of Politics & International Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Dussud
Morgane
Morgane Dussud
LSE Field Research Methods Lab
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35315
2023-11-07T07:58:50Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
7375626A656374733D6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C73:6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C735F736F6173
74797065733D61727469636C65
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Bhardwaj_Feminist Social Movement Unionism.pdf
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Feminist Social Movement Unionism From South To North
Feminist Social Movement Unionism From South To North (Text)
Feminist Social Movement Unionism From South To North (UNSPECIFIED)
Feminist Social Movement Unionism From South To North (UNSPECIFIED)
Feminist Social Movement Unionism From South To North (UNSPECIFIED)
Feminist Social Movement Unionism From South To North (UNSPECIFIED)
Feminist Social Movement Unionism From South To North (UNSPECIFIED)
Employer crackdowns on trade unionisation, neoliberal governments’ gutting of trade union protections, and increasing bureaucratisation and risk-averseness of unions themselves, have led to declines in traditional trade union membership. This coupled with informalisation, feminisation, increased migrant labour, newer workforces, and alternate modes of worker organising, has forced trade unions to alter their methods of organising in order to retain their base and their relevance. One way that this has manifested is through social movement unionism, where trade unions explicitly partner with social movements and NGOs on campaigns and social movement work. In this paper, I assess the viability of these social movement unionism coalitions by examining several case studies in the Global North and South through secondary and primary research and identifying conditions for success and failure. I argue that due to increased migration of workers from the Global South to the Global North, the relocation of labour and capital to the Global South itself, and increasingly radical feminist lenses in worker organising and social movements, unions who have prioritised strategies led by people of colour and praxis that is explicitly decolonial, feminist, and transnational have greater success. This is true both when unions work independently and when collaborating with social movements. When such collaborations between unions and non-union social movement forces fail, it is often due to the opaque and top-down organising methods that plague traditional trade unions, and using outdated organising models that preference white, heterosexual men. But when collaborations occur successfully, these coalitions exhibit explicitly feminist and decolonial modes of organising through horizontal and diversified leadership that centre the most directly impacted organisers and activists, transparent and democratic decisionmaking and communications channels, and expansive and radical worldviews that reach beyond campaign wins to orient towards transformative change.
2019/2020
13
2021-07
Feminist Social Movement Unionism From South To North
SOAS Doctoral School
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
SOAS University of London
Bhardwaj
Maya
Maya Bhardwaj
25176226
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35316
2024-02-09T15:20:13Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353030
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
7375626A656374733D6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C73:6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C735F736F6173
74797065733D61727469636C65
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Anita_Geet Ga Rahe Hai Aaj Hum.pdf
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Geet Ga Rahe Hai Aaj Hum... Exploring songs of protest and hope in the Women’s Movement(s) in India
Geet Ga Rahe Hai Aaj Hum... Exploring songs of protest and hope in the Women’s Movement(s) in India (Text)
Geet Ga Rahe Hai Aaj Hum... Exploring songs of protest and hope in the Women’s Movement(s) in India (UNSPECIFIED)
Geet Ga Rahe Hai Aaj Hum... Exploring songs of protest and hope in the Women’s Movement(s) in India (UNSPECIFIED)
Geet Ga Rahe Hai Aaj Hum... Exploring songs of protest and hope in the Women’s Movement(s) in India (UNSPECIFIED)
Geet Ga Rahe Hai Aaj Hum... Exploring songs of protest and hope in the Women’s Movement(s) in India (UNSPECIFIED)
Geet Ga Rahe Hai Aaj Hum... Exploring songs of protest and hope in the Women’s Movement(s) in India (UNSPECIFIED)
Music has been an essential component of people's movements towards social transformation. In the West, antiracist and class struggles often inspired poetry and music which were used to communicate revolutionary ideas to the larger public and generate a political or social consciousness favourable to the ideologies of the movements. As a feminist scholar from India, I locate my interest in tracing the history of songs and poetry – of protest, of change, of invocation, of imagination, and of hope – that were sung and performed in the contemporary women's movement(s) that flourished from the 1970s in India. What I call the 'women’s movement(s)’ here are the myriad, multifaceted and multilayered voices and strands of feminist political engagement in India that came together at particular moments towards a common goal, while at times also parted ways and spoke to each other from standpoints of difference. In tracing the genealogy and context of the songs that were composed, sung, performed, and re-written during these political engagements, I also hope to trace the ‘flow’ of the women’s movement(s) – or perhaps certain aspects of it – and map the emergence and shifts of a feminist discourse in India as expressed through the songs and poetry it generated. What were the issues highlighted in these songs? What were the metaphors they expressed, and why were they relevant in the liberatory politics espoused by those who sung them? How did they change and evolve over time, and do their changes reflect the shifts in the discourse of the movement as well? These are some of the questions I shall explore in the paper.
2019/2020
13
2021-07
Geet Ga Rahe Hai Aaj Hum... Exploring songs of protest and hope in the Women’s Movement(s) in India
School of Law
SOAS Doctoral School
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
SOAS University of London
Anita
Sakhi
Sakhi Anita
25176226
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35317
2023-11-07T07:58:40Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
7375626A656374733D6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C73:6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C735F736F6173
74797065733D61727469636C65
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Mohanan_Sounds from a silenced divinity.pdf
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Sounds from a silenced divinity: the interaction of caste with music in the Theyyam rituals of Kerala
Sounds from a silenced divinity: the interaction of caste with music in the Theyyam rituals of Kerala (Text)
Sounds from a silenced divinity: the interaction of caste with music in the Theyyam rituals of Kerala (UNSPECIFIED)
Sounds from a silenced divinity: the interaction of caste with music in the Theyyam rituals of Kerala (UNSPECIFIED)
Sounds from a silenced divinity: the interaction of caste with music in the Theyyam rituals of Kerala (UNSPECIFIED)
Sounds from a silenced divinity: the interaction of caste with music in the Theyyam rituals of Kerala (UNSPECIFIED)
Sounds from a silenced divinity: the interaction of caste with music in the Theyyam rituals of Kerala (UNSPECIFIED)
The ritual art form popularly known as ‘Theyyam’ occurs annually in the northern regions of the South Indian state of Kerala. The ritual is orchestrated and demonstrated by Dalit communities, who were formerly treated as untouchables throughout the history of the subcontinent. The impact of caste dynamics on this form of religious expression is explored in this work through ethnomusicological analyses, wherein the musical elements of Theyyam are compared to forms of music practised by upper-caste communities in the same region. This work aims to highlight how knowledge, in essence, is a product of social hierarchy and forms of expressions birthed from knowledge are subtle representations of social discrepancy.
2019/2020
13
2021-07
Sounds from a silenced divinity: the interaction of caste with music in the Theyyam rituals of Kerala
SOAS Doctoral School
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
SOAS University of London
Mohanan
Aditya
Aditya Mohanan
25176226
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35318
2024-02-09T15:20:14Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353930
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
7375626A656374733D6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C73:6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C735F736F6173
74797065733D61727469636C65
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Chen_Rhetorical Space.pdf
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HTML Summary of #35318
Rhetorical Space: Culture of Curiosity in Yangcai under Emperor Qianlong’s Reign
Rhetorical Space: Culture of Curiosity in Yangcai under Emperor Qianlong’s Reign (Text)
Rhetorical Space: Culture of Curiosity in Yangcai under Emperor Qianlong’s Reign (UNSPECIFIED)
Rhetorical Space: Culture of Curiosity in Yangcai under Emperor Qianlong’s Reign (UNSPECIFIED)
Rhetorical Space: Culture of Curiosity in Yangcai under Emperor Qianlong’s Reign (UNSPECIFIED)
Rhetorical Space: Culture of Curiosity in Yangcai under Emperor Qianlong’s Reign (UNSPECIFIED)
Rhetorical Space: Culture of Curiosity in Yangcai under Emperor Qianlong’s Reign (UNSPECIFIED)
This research is arranged into three sections in order to elaborate on the hybrid innovation in yangcai. Firstly, the usage of pictorial techniques on porcelain will be discussed, followed by the argument that the modelling technique in the Qianlong period could be the revival of Buddhist tradition combined with European pictoriality. The second section continues the discussion of non-traditional attributes in terms of the ontology of porcelain patterns. Although it has been widely accepted that Western-style decorations were applied to the production of the Qing porcelain, the other possibility will be purported here by stating that the decorative pattern is a Chinese version of the multicultural product. The last section explores style and identity. By reviewing the history of Chinese painting technique, art historians can realise the difference between knowing and performing. Artworks produced in the Emperor Qianlong’s reign were more about Emperor Qianlong’s preference than the capability of the artists. This political reason differentiated the theory and practice in Chinese history of art. This essay argues that the design of yangcai is substantially part of the Emperor Qianlong’s portrait, which represents his multicultural background, authority over various civilisations, and transcendental identity as an emperor bridging the East and the West.
2019/2020
13
2021-07
Rhetorical Space: Culture of Curiosity in Yangcai under Emperor Qianlong’s Reign
School of Arts
SOAS Doctoral School
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
SOAS University of London
Chen
Chih-En
Chih-En Chen
25176226
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35319
2023-11-06T20:44:50Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
7375626A656374733D6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C73:6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C735F736F6173
74797065733D61727469636C65
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Huang_Late Ming Courtesan Culture.pdf
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HTML Summary of #35319
Late Ming Courtesan Culture And China’s Gender System
Late Ming Courtesan Culture And China’s Gender System (Text)
Late Ming Courtesan Culture And China’s Gender System (UNSPECIFIED)
Late Ming Courtesan Culture And China’s Gender System (UNSPECIFIED)
Late Ming Courtesan Culture And China’s Gender System (UNSPECIFIED)
Late Ming Courtesan Culture And China’s Gender System (UNSPECIFIED)
Late Ming Courtesan Culture And China’s Gender System (UNSPECIFIED)
This article argues against existing scholarship that sees courtesans as a transcending force that blurred social and gender boundaries in the late Ming gender system. The gendered position of courtesans is examined from two perspectives, the market economy and the kinship system, to analyse how the booming courtesan culture stemmed from and reinforced the male-dominated gender hierarchy. Firstly, in the market economy, courtesans emerged as a product of the patriarchal practice of objectifying and commodifying women, whereby the ownership of women lay with men. Under such a commercialised environment, the literary and artistic skills of courtesans were highly gendered, sexualised and essentially cultivated to increase their market value and the attraction they held for their male patrons. Secondly, in the kinship system, a clear boundary was constructed between courtesans and respectable women in the domestic sphere. The existence of courtesans prevented such women from entering the public realm. Meanwhile, the de facto freedom enjoyed by courtesans prevented themselves from entering orthodox household units, as they were constructed outside of the kinship system, and were marginalised by both men and women of the gentry class, by Ming legal regulations and by popular literary work, to ensure the continuance of the existing patriarchal family structure and the husband-wife hierarchy.
2019/2020
13
2021-07
Late Ming Courtesan Culture And China’s Gender System
SOAS Doctoral School
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
SOAS University of London
Huang
Aubury A.
Aubury A. Huang
25176226
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35320
2023-11-07T07:58:11Z
7374617475733D707562
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74797065733D61727469636C65
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Mazzeo_The Hong Kong factor.pdf
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HTML Summary of #35320
The 'Hong Kong Factor': Preliminary Research on Social Media Discourses during Taiwan 2020 Presidential Election Campaign
The 'Hong Kong Factor': Preliminary Research on Social Media Discourses during Taiwan 2020 Presidential Election Campaign (Text)
The 'Hong Kong Factor': Preliminary Research on Social Media Discourses during Taiwan 2020 Presidential Election Campaign (UNSPECIFIED)
The 'Hong Kong Factor': Preliminary Research on Social Media Discourses during Taiwan 2020 Presidential Election Campaign (UNSPECIFIED)
The 'Hong Kong Factor': Preliminary Research on Social Media Discourses during Taiwan 2020 Presidential Election Campaign (UNSPECIFIED)
The 'Hong Kong Factor': Preliminary Research on Social Media Discourses during Taiwan 2020 Presidential Election Campaign (UNSPECIFIED)
The 'Hong Kong Factor': Preliminary Research on Social Media Discourses during Taiwan 2020 Presidential Election Campaign (UNSPECIFIED)
As unrest erupted in Hong Kong in June 2019, the political scenario in Taiwan started to change as well. The aim of this preliminary research is to explore the changes that have occurred on Tsai Ing-wen and Han Kuo-yu discourses on social media after the beginning of the protests in Hong Kong and throughout the 2020 presidential election campaign in Taiwan. The main argument of the article is that the “Hong Kong factor” became a popular issue in the Taiwanese context to the extent that it influenced the narrative of both the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) and the Kuomintang (KMT). In order to prove this claim, the article analyses the posts on Facebook of Tsai Ing-wen and Han Kuo-yu shared between June 2019 and January 2020, and it seeks to reveal the discourse strategies they put into practice when talking about the Hong Kong situation and comparing it with the one in Taiwan. Although some early conclusions are reached in this paper, the research is still preliminary due to the extensiveness of the topic investigated.
2019/2020
13
2021-07
The 'Hong Kong Factor': Preliminary Research on Social Media Discourses during Taiwan 2020 Presidential Election Campaign
SOAS Doctoral School
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
SOAS University of London
Mazzeo
Eva
Eva Mazzeo
25176226
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35321
2023-11-07T07:58:28Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
7375626A656374733D6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C73:6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C735F736F6173
74797065733D61727469636C65
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Sanders_100% TZ Flava.pdf
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100% TZ Flava: Hybrid Hip Hop on the Swahili Coast
100% TZ Flava: Hybrid Hip Hop on the Swahili Coast (Text)
100% TZ Flava: Hybrid Hip Hop on the Swahili Coast (UNSPECIFIED)
100% TZ Flava: Hybrid Hip Hop on the Swahili Coast (UNSPECIFIED)
100% TZ Flava: Hybrid Hip Hop on the Swahili Coast (UNSPECIFIED)
100% TZ Flava: Hybrid Hip Hop on the Swahili Coast (UNSPECIFIED)
100% TZ Flava: Hybrid Hip Hop on the Swahili Coast (UNSPECIFIED)
This paper explores the hybrid nature of hip hop from Tanzania and Zanzibar on the East African Coast. First, it discusses the music known as taarab to explain the long-standing tradition of hybrid genres in this region. Then it explores how, since the 1990s, hip hop has followed a similar path of cultural assimilation to taarab, and how contemporary hip hop artists draw from both local and global influences. It also considers what hip hop means for the people of the Swahili coast and how the internet has advanced the circulation of music from this region.
2019/2020
13
2021-07
100% TZ Flava: Hybrid Hip Hop on the Swahili Coast
SOAS Doctoral School
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
SOAS University of London
Sanders
Danny
Danny Sanders
25176226
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35322
2023-11-06T20:44:39Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
7375626A656374733D6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C73:6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C735F736F6173
74797065733D61727469636C65
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Spence_From Victims to Colonizers.pdf
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From Victims to Colonizers: A Comparative Study of ‘Repatriated Indigenous Communities’ in Israel and Liberia
From Victims to Colonizers: A Comparative Study of ‘Repatriated Indigenous Communities’ in Israel and Liberia (Text)
From Victims to Colonizers: A Comparative Study of ‘Repatriated Indigenous Communities’ in Israel and Liberia (UNSPECIFIED)
From Victims to Colonizers: A Comparative Study of ‘Repatriated Indigenous Communities’ in Israel and Liberia (UNSPECIFIED)
From Victims to Colonizers: A Comparative Study of ‘Repatriated Indigenous Communities’ in Israel and Liberia (UNSPECIFIED)
From Victims to Colonizers: A Comparative Study of ‘Repatriated Indigenous Communities’ in Israel and Liberia (UNSPECIFIED)
From Victims to Colonizers: A Comparative Study of ‘Repatriated Indigenous Communities’ in Israel and Liberia (UNSPECIFIED)
Popular discourses have painted Israelis and Liberians as two peoples who fled persecution to return to their ancestral homelands. The oppression of blacks in America and Jews in Europe is without question. However, historical analysis indicates that the migration of Americo-Liberians to West Africa and European Jews to Palestine are unique examples of settler colonialism. Previous comparative work on Israel and Liberia is almost non-existent. Therefore, my writing attempts to fill the gap in academic literature. Throughout this article, I answer the question: “How and why did these two persecuted peoples perpetuate Western colonialism?” through the lens of comparative analysis and post-colonial theory. I hope that this work will open the door for a future comparative study of Israel and Liberia, black settler colonialism, and repatriated indigenous communities. Ultimately, I will demonstrate that, although they fled America and Europe for wholly legitimate reasons, Americo-Liberians and Israelis simultaneously adopted the role of colonial aggressors in West Africa and Palestine.
2019/2020
13
2021-07
From Victims to Colonizers: A Comparative Study of ‘Repatriated Indigenous Communities’ in Israel and Liberia
SOAS Doctoral School
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
SOAS University of London
Spence
David M.
David M. Spence
25176226
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35324
2023-11-06T18:59:52Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
7375626A656374733D6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C73:6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C735F736F6173
74797065733D61727469636C65
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Modestou_Fairuz as a National Symbol.pdf
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Fairuz as a National Symbol: Popular Music, Folklore and Nationhood in 1960s Lebanon
Fairuz as a National Symbol: Popular Music, Folklore and Nationhood in 1960s Lebanon (Text)
Fairuz as a National Symbol: Popular Music, Folklore and Nationhood in 1960s Lebanon (UNSPECIFIED)
Fairuz as a National Symbol: Popular Music, Folklore and Nationhood in 1960s Lebanon (UNSPECIFIED)
Fairuz as a National Symbol: Popular Music, Folklore and Nationhood in 1960s Lebanon (UNSPECIFIED)
Fairuz as a National Symbol: Popular Music, Folklore and Nationhood in 1960s Lebanon (UNSPECIFIED)
Fairuz as a National Symbol: Popular Music, Folklore and Nationhood in 1960s Lebanon (UNSPECIFIED)
This paper examines and explores the disputes of the religious communities of Lebanon and the ways these communities are unified through the music, as well as through the on and off-stage performances of Fairuz during the twentieth century. As a world-renowned singer and as a Lebanese national symbol of the twentieth century, Fairuz has become pivotal in the formation of the religious, as well as national identities of Lebanon. The cultural characteristics, political affiliation and sense of belonging of Lebanese national identity have been extensively debated and discussed in the relevant academic work surrounding Lebanon. However, the constitution and reproduction of a religious unified Lebanese national identity through music is seldom examined. This study analyses the interrelation of national identity and popular music in Lebanon through the examination of Fairuz as a national symbol, while taking into consideration Lebanon’s brief history as a nation-state and the dispute between the different religious communities. This paper further suggests that through her music and performance, Fairuz has become a symbol for multiple identities, not only religious but also national, transcending the restrictive identification of her music and performance with her religious, communal background.
2019/2020
13
2021-07
Fairuz as a National Symbol: Popular Music, Folklore and Nationhood in 1960s Lebanon
SOAS Doctoral School
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
SOAS University of London
Modestou
Anastasia
Anastasia Modestou
25176226
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35325
2023-11-06T19:00:02Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
7375626A656374733D6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C73:6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C735F736F6173
74797065733D61727469636C65
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McIntosh_Lets Make Them Hear it in Europe.pdf
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Let’s Make Them Hear it in Europe: The Sound of Banging Pots and Pans, the Internet and Networked Protest
Let’s Make Them Hear it in Europe: The Sound of Banging Pots and Pans, the Internet and Networked Protest (Text)
Let’s Make Them Hear it in Europe: The Sound of Banging Pots and Pans, the Internet and Networked Protest (UNSPECIFIED)
Let’s Make Them Hear it in Europe: The Sound of Banging Pots and Pans, the Internet and Networked Protest (UNSPECIFIED)
Let’s Make Them Hear it in Europe: The Sound of Banging Pots and Pans, the Internet and Networked Protest (UNSPECIFIED)
Let’s Make Them Hear it in Europe: The Sound of Banging Pots and Pans, the Internet and Networked Protest (UNSPECIFIED)
Let’s Make Them Hear it in Europe: The Sound of Banging Pots and Pans, the Internet and Networked Protest (UNSPECIFIED)
The internet and social media are radically changing the very nature of protests in the modern world, allowing people to connect and exchange information through new channels previously unavailable and in virtual rather than physical spaces. As music and sounds have long been an important factor in the way social movements are born, received and remembered, they too are disseminated more widely by this technology and help to motivate protests both online and offline. Through virtual fieldwork and interviews with members of London-based Chilean protest group Asamblea Chilena en Londres, I track the sound of cacerolazo—a form of popular protest involving banging pots and pans. I explore how this noise challenges and defies space, is mediated and disseminated through social media and the internet and connects individuals and communities, mobilising them both locally and globally.
2019/2020
13
2021-07
Let’s Make Them Hear it in Europe: The Sound of Banging Pots and Pans, the Internet and Networked Protest
SOAS Doctoral School
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
SOAS University of London
McIntosh
Finlay
Finlay McIntosh
25176226
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35326
2023-11-06T18:33:17Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
7375626A656374733D6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C73:6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C735F736F6173
74797065733D61727469636C65
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Mohanty_Opinion Piece Are Big Data Judgements.pdf
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Opinion Piece: Are Big Data Judgements About Health Or Personality More Accurate Than Those Made By Humans? An Anthropological Critique In Relation To The Quantified Self Movement.
Opinion Piece: Are Big Data Judgements About Health Or Personality More Accurate Than Those Made By Humans? An Anthropological Critique In Relation To The Quantified Self Movement. (Text)
Opinion Piece: Are Big Data Judgements About Health Or Personality More Accurate Than Those Made By Humans? An Anthropological Critique In Relation To The Quantified Self Movement. (UNSPECIFIED)
Opinion Piece: Are Big Data Judgements About Health Or Personality More Accurate Than Those Made By Humans? An Anthropological Critique In Relation To The Quantified Self Movement. (UNSPECIFIED)
Opinion Piece: Are Big Data Judgements About Health Or Personality More Accurate Than Those Made By Humans? An Anthropological Critique In Relation To The Quantified Self Movement. (UNSPECIFIED)
Opinion Piece: Are Big Data Judgements About Health Or Personality More Accurate Than Those Made By Humans? An Anthropological Critique In Relation To The Quantified Self Movement. (UNSPECIFIED)
Opinion Piece: Are Big Data Judgements About Health Or Personality More Accurate Than Those Made By Humans? An Anthropological Critique In Relation To The Quantified Self Movement. (UNSPECIFIED)
The paper presents a critical anthropological gaze at the difference in accuracy between human and big data judgements on health or personality, where the latter are engendered by wearables and self-trackers. Referencing journalistic and ethnographic literature, particularly on the Quantified Self movement, it argues for a resituating of this debate in the negotiations of big data by users in the everyday. The calibrations of health and personality are lived and phenomenologically experienced, and therefore continuously constructed by as also constructing the self in the cultural. At the same time, the paper cautions that an overt focus on individual interpretation and therefore individual agency distracts at once from big data’s social and political considerations, the temporality of the question of its accuracy, as well as the separate valence it commands depending upon the level of abstraction or aggregation of the judgement. The debate then warrants a repositioning as not between human or computer-based judgments, but between the potentialities of becoming-human of big-data and becoming-big data of the user.
2019/2020
13
2021-07
Opinion Piece: Are Big Data Judgements About Health Or Personality More Accurate Than Those Made By Humans? An Anthropological Critique In Relation To The Quantified Self Movement.
SOAS Doctoral School
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
SOAS University of London
Mohanty
Abhishek
Abhishek Mohanty
25176226
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35327
2023-11-06T19:12:25Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
7375626A656374733D6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C73:6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C735F736F6173
74797065733D626F6F6B5F726576696577
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Cojocaru_Book Review The Politics Of Technology In Africa.pdf
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Book Review: 'The Politics Of Technology In Africa' by Iginio Gagliardone
Book Review: 'The Politics Of Technology In Africa' by Iginio Gagliardone (Text)
Book Review: 'The Politics Of Technology In Africa' by Iginio Gagliardone (UNSPECIFIED)
Book Review: 'The Politics Of Technology In Africa' by Iginio Gagliardone (UNSPECIFIED)
Book Review: 'The Politics Of Technology In Africa' by Iginio Gagliardone (UNSPECIFIED)
Book Review: 'The Politics Of Technology In Africa' by Iginio Gagliardone (UNSPECIFIED)
Book Review: 'The Politics Of Technology In Africa' by Iginio Gagliardone (UNSPECIFIED)
Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs), in their advancement, have added a new dimension to development approaches and became a critical element in the integration of the developing world into the global knowledge society. This review explores Iginio Gagliardone´s book, The Politics of Technology in Africa, which provides a comprehensive account of ICT adoption and adaption in Ethiopia and an experimental framework for researching ICTs on the African continent, grounded in Hecht’s concepts of technopolitics and technopolitical regime. Drawing on the history of technology, international relations, African studies, and a decade of field research, the author´s alignment of the technological and political to study the relationship between development and ICT, not only challenges the assumption that African countries are passively accepting ICTs but also avoids the pitfalls of techno-determinism. Ethiopia, as the top “Official Development Assistance (ODA)” recipient in Africa and the staunchest advocate of an alternative development state for Africa, makes for an excellent case study and foregrounds a good presentation of the recipient/donor relationship, role of the state, African agency and communication strategies.
2019/2020
13
2021-07
Book Review: 'The Politics Of Technology In Africa' by Iginio Gagliardone
SOAS Doctoral School
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
SOAS University of London
Cojocaru
Mihaela
Mihaela Cojocaru
25176226
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35328
2023-11-06T19:12:15Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363330
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
7375626A656374733D6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C73:6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C735F736F6173
74797065733D61727469636C65
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01_NOTE FROM EDITOR.pdf
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A note from the editor-in-chief
A note from the editor-in-chief (Text)
A note from the editor-in-chief (UNSPECIFIED)
A note from the editor-in-chief (UNSPECIFIED)
A note from the editor-in-chief (UNSPECIFIED)
A note from the editor-in-chief (UNSPECIFIED)
A note from the editor-in-chief (UNSPECIFIED)
2019/2020
13
2021-07
A note from the editor-in-chief
Department of East Asian Languages & Cultures
SOAS Doctoral School
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
SOAS University of London
Gamberini
Federica
Federica Gamberini
25176226
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35329
2024-03-29T02:41:30Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
7375626A656374733D6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C73:6F70656E5F6163636573735F6A6F75726E616C735F736F6173
74797065733D61727469636C65
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02_INTRODUCTION.pdf
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Introduction to Volume 13
Introduction to Volume 13 (Text)
Introduction to Volume 13 (UNSPECIFIED)
Introduction to Volume 13 (UNSPECIFIED)
Introduction to Volume 13 (UNSPECIFIED)
Introduction to Volume 13 (UNSPECIFIED)
Introduction to Volume 13 (UNSPECIFIED)
2019/2020
13
2021-07
Introduction to Volume 13
SOAS Doctoral School
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
SOAS University of London
Lim
Iris
Iris Lim
Metveeva
Natalia
Natalia Metveeva
Gamberini
Federica
Federica Gamberini
25176226
The SOAS Journal of Postgraduate Research
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35370
2024-02-09T15:20:21Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363430:38363530
7375626A656374733D54
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
7375626A656374733D776F726B696E675F706170657273
74797065733D61727469636C65
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2_163.pdf
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新しい話者の視座から見た琉球諸語の開花の取り組み (Efflorescence of Ryukyuan Languages from Perspectives of New Speakers)
新しい話者の視座から見た琉球諸語の開花の取り組み (Efflorescence of Ryukyuan Languages from Perspectives of New Speakers) (Text)
新しい話者の視座から見た琉球諸語の開花の取り組み (Efflorescence of Ryukyuan Languages from Perspectives of New Speakers) (UNSPECIFIED)
新しい話者の視座から見た琉球諸語の開花の取り組み (Efflorescence of Ryukyuan Languages from Perspectives of New Speakers) (UNSPECIFIED)
新しい話者の視座から見た琉球諸語の開花の取り組み (Efflorescence of Ryukyuan Languages from Perspectives of New Speakers) (UNSPECIFIED)
新しい話者の視座から見た琉球諸語の開花の取り組み (Efflorescence of Ryukyuan Languages from Perspectives of New Speakers) (UNSPECIFIED)
新しい話者の視座から見た琉球諸語の開花の取り組み (Efflorescence of Ryukyuan Languages from Perspectives of New Speakers) (UNSPECIFIED)
筆者は現在,博士研究の一環として,Hintonのマスター・アプレンティス言語学習プログラムを参考にして,琉球諸語の新しい話者の支援に焦点を当てたMAI-Ryukyusプロジェクトを実施している。研究の問いは,新しい話者が琉球諸語を話す原動力,琉球諸語の多様性を可能な限り温存した言語習得,琉球の世界観に基づいた思考の枠組み(研究パラダイム)の探究である。本稿では,その中間所見に基づいて,琉球諸語話者が抱える心理的トラウマ,琉球諸語の言語運用能力を高め多様性を温存する方法,琉球の思考の枠組み,現行の日本国行政の問題点について考察した。
2
2021-07-15
新しい話者の視座から見た琉球諸語の開花の取り組み (Efflorescence of Ryukyuan Languages from Perspectives of New Speakers)
Department of Linguistics
SOAS Research Theses
SOAS Doctoral School
SOAS Working Papers
琉球大学島嶼地域科学研究所 (Research Institute for Islands and Sustainability at University of the Ryukyus)
Zlazli
Miho
Miho Zlazli
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-2200-5243
2435757X
島嶼地域科学 (Journal of Regional Science for Islands)
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35442
2024-02-09T15:20:32Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353830
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D626F6F6B5F726576696577
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Book Review Independent Filmmaking in South East Asia .pdf
text/html
HTML Summary of #35442
Review of: Independent filmmaking in Southeast Asia: conversations with filmmakers on building, and sustaining a creative career by Nico Meissner
Review of: Independent filmmaking in Southeast Asia: conversations with filmmakers on building, and sustaining a creative career by Nico Meissner (Text)
Review of: Independent filmmaking in Southeast Asia: conversations with filmmakers on building, and sustaining a creative career by Nico Meissner (UNSPECIFIED)
Review of: Independent filmmaking in Southeast Asia: conversations with filmmakers on building, and sustaining a creative career by Nico Meissner (UNSPECIFIED)
Review of: Independent filmmaking in Southeast Asia: conversations with filmmakers on building, and sustaining a creative career by Nico Meissner (UNSPECIFIED)
Review of: Independent filmmaking in Southeast Asia: conversations with filmmakers on building, and sustaining a creative career by Nico Meissner (UNSPECIFIED)
Review of: Independent filmmaking in Southeast Asia: conversations with filmmakers on building, and sustaining a creative career by Nico Meissner (UNSPECIFIED)
22
2021-08-06
Review of: Independent filmmaking in Southeast Asia: conversations with filmmakers on building, and sustaining a creative career by Nico Meissner
Department of Anthropology & Sociology
SOAS Doctoral School
Taylor and Francis
Krishnakumar
Jo
Jo Krishnakumar
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0125-171X
25741144
Media Practice and Education
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35494
2024-02-09T15:20:44Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D61727469636C65
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Contemporary Chinese Associations in Zambia_LI&SHI.pdf
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HTML Summary of #35494
Home Away From Home: The Social and Political Roles of Contemporary Chinese Associations in Zambia
Home Away From Home: The Social and Political Roles of Contemporary Chinese Associations in Zambia (Text)
Home Away From Home: The Social and Political Roles of Contemporary Chinese Associations in Zambia (UNSPECIFIED)
Home Away From Home: The Social and Political Roles of Contemporary Chinese Associations in Zambia (UNSPECIFIED)
Home Away From Home: The Social and Political Roles of Contemporary Chinese Associations in Zambia (UNSPECIFIED)
Home Away From Home: The Social and Political Roles of Contemporary Chinese Associations in Zambia (UNSPECIFIED)
Home Away From Home: The Social and Political Roles of Contemporary Chinese Associations in Zambia (UNSPECIFIED)
This article examines the social and political roles of contemporary Chinese associations in Africa with case studies from Zambia. These associations help Chinese migrants better integrate and promote China’s image in Zambian society. More importantly, they proactively engage in bilateral political relations, working with the embassy and state apparatus, defending China’s overseas interests, and providing public goods to the Chinese community. We argue that, because of the associations, Chinese migrants in Zambia are politicised beyond the fact of their living in economic enclaves. Contemporary Chinese associations should thus be recognised as a significant actor and an indispensable intermediary in the rapid evolution of China–Africa relations.
2
48
2019-08-01
Home Away From Home: The Social and Political Roles of Contemporary Chinese Associations in Zambia
SOAS Doctoral School
GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies
Shi
Xuefei
Xuefei Shi
Li
Hangwei
Hangwei Li
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-2914-9701
18684874
Journal of Current Chinese Affairs
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35528
2021-09-23T12:04:41Z
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South Korea
2021-09-21
South Korea
Centre of Korean Studies
SOAS Doctoral School
Freedom House
Funk
Allie
Allie Funk
Shahbaz
Adrian
Adrian Shahbaz
Lee
Yenn
Yenn Lee
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0708-2948
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35699
2024-03-29T02:41:38Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363430:38363530
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D6F74686572
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Zlazli - 2021 - Constant fear of ostracism.docx
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Constant fear of ostracism
Constant fear of ostracism (Text)
Constant fear of ostracism (UNSPECIFIED)
This chapter consists of my autoethnographic narrative, including diary entries, which delineates what it feels like to live as an Indigenous person whose community is under ongoing cultural assimilation, followed by its analysis. The main issues identified in the narrative were emotional insecurity and its coping mechanism – to pretend to be someone else. By applying Peirce’s Theory of Signs to motifs identified in the narrative, I examined relations between individual and groups to discuss solutions. I argue the importance of having an awareness in one’s own roots or Indigenous knowledge system, recognising historical context or power relations that one is involved in, and negotiating one’s contingent pluralistic identity to resolve constant fear of ostracism and establish agency in one’s life.
2021-08-18
Constant fear of ostracism
Department of Linguistics
SOAS Doctoral School
Self published research output
Zlazli
Miho
Miho Zlazli
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-2200-5243
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:35702
2024-02-09T15:21:41Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D54
7375626A656374733D646F63746F72616C
74797065733D746865736973
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Prosodic_Patterns_in_Ramari_Hatohobei.pdf
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Prosodic Patterns in Ramari Hatohobei
Prosodic Patterns in Ramari Hatohobei (Text)
Prosodic Patterns in Ramari Hatohobei (UNSPECIFIED)
Prosodic Patterns in Ramari Hatohobei (UNSPECIFIED)
Prosodic Patterns in Ramari Hatohobei (UNSPECIFIED)
Prosodic Patterns in Ramari Hatohobei (UNSPECIFIED)
Prosodic Patterns in Ramari Hatohobei (UNSPECIFIED)
With only one grammar describing the languages of Sonsorol-Tobi and only its phonetics, this dissertation focuses on describing prosodic patterns in Ramari Hatohobei, or Tobian, a severely endangered Micronesian language. The primary aim is to contribute to the description of Ramari Hatohobei based on data from the ELAR collection, “Documenting Ramari Hatohobei, the Tobian language, a severely endangered Micronesian language” (Black and Black, 2014). Another aim is to identify the extent to which such data could be useful for linguistic description and in particular to the field of phonology and phonetics. Spectrograms have been extracted using Praat from conversations, descriptions and stories and the ToBI conventions have been used for the analysis of prosodic patterns. Furthermore, the curators and speakers have been consulted in order to investigate particular hypotheses. Due to my personal interest in documenting Sonsorolese, a closely related language, this dissertation could potentially become an axis in distinguishing the different prosodic patterns between the two languages.
2020-09-30
Prosodic Patterns in Ramari Hatohobei
SOAS Research Theses
SOAS Doctoral School
Department of Linguistics, SOAS, University of London
SOAS, University of London
Vita
Vasiliki
Vasiliki Vita
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-7913-5869
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