239,218 research outputs found
Documentary film and ethical foodscapes : three takes on Caribbean sugar
This article demonstrates how certain stories, voices and values around agro-food networks can be made powerful by documentary film. Our central argument is that documentaries mobilize ethics by presenting a partial and affective account of their subject matter, which makes their audience feel differently about the social relations that underpin the production of food and acts as a focal point for media scrutiny and political interventions. We focus attention on three documentaries about Caribbean sugar to explore multiple and disparate ethical claims made about the farmers, workers and communities that embody Caribbean sugar industries. Through a comparison of the three documentaries, we chart how the production and distribution of these films have entailed quite different ethical narratives, encounters and interventions. A key finding is that the context in which films are received is just as important as the content they deliver. The paper concludes with a guarded endorsement for using documentary film to transform the unequal life conditions experienced in the global food system, stressing the need for empirically-grounded critique of the context of documentaries and suggesting the important role that geographers might play as interlocutors in their reception
The European Union in the World â A Community of Values
These are momentous times in Europe. The Euro has been successfully introduced, the enlargement negotiations are approaching their climax, and the European Convention (âConventionâ) is moving towards the drafting of a constitution for a new, continent-wide political entity. At the same time, unrest is manifest, particularly in two areas. On the one hand, many of our citizens, and not just the political elites, are dissatisfied with Europe\u27s performance on the world stage and are concerned about the maintenance of peace and security within the Union. In these areas they would like to see a strengthened, more effective entity-- âmore Europe.â On the other hand, their disenchantment with the long reach of European Union (âEUâ or âUnionâ) regulation in the first pillar area of economic policy is growing. The feeling of loss of local control over their destiny and a vague feeling of potential loss of identity within an ever more centralized polity is palpable. Here, they want âless Europe.â In the outside world, change is also the order of the day. The ice-sheet of bipolarity, which overlaid and hid the complexity of international relations during the Cold War, is breaking up at an ever-increasing speed and revealing a world in which two paradigms are competing to become the underlying ordering principles for the new century. The traditional paradigm of interacting Nation States, each pursuing its own separate interests, with alliances allowing the small to compete with the large, is alive and well, and its proponents like Machiavelli or Churchill continue to be in vogue in the literature of international relations and the rhetoric of world leaders. At the same time, there is a school of thought which points to the growing economic and ecological interdependence of our societies and the necessity for new forms of global governance to complement national action. It is also becoming abundantly clear that the concept of a âNation Stateâ is often a fiction, positing as it does an identity between the citizens of a State and the members of a culturally homogenous society. For both reasons, the concept of the Nation State as the principal actor on the world stage, is called into question. The experience of the Union with the sharing of State sovereignty is clearly related to the second paradigm and also to the EU\u27s firm support for the development of the United Nations (âU.N.â) as well as other elements of multilateral governance. It would hardly be wise to suggest that any foreign policy, and certainly not that of the EU, should be based only on this paradigm. Given the recurrent threats to security, which seem to be part of the human condition expressed by some as the âinevitability of warâ--the defense of territorial integrity; action against threats of aggression; and resistance to crimes against humanity such as genocide--the ability to conduct a security policy based much more on the old paradigm of interacting interests will continue to be required. That the EU needs to develop such a capability will be taken here as a given. Such a crisis-management capability will be essential to the Union, but will be distinguished here from the more long-term elements of foreign policy, which can be thought of as being designed to reduce the need for crisis management in the context of a security policy to a minimum. The crisis-management area of policy will not be treated further here. The thesis of this Essay is that the same set of political concepts can serve as a guide to the future internal development of the EU and as the basis of such a long-term foreign policy. Furthermore, it suggests that neither should be seen in terms of the balancing of interests but rather, as the expression of a small list of fundamental values. The list is as follows: (1) the rule of law as the basis for relations between members of society; (2) the interaction between the democratic process and entrenched human rights in political decision-making; (3) the operation of competition within a market economy as the source of increasing prosperity; (4) the anchoring of the principle of solidarity among all members of society alongside that of the liberty of the individual; (5) the adoption of the principle of sustainability of all economic development; and (6) the preservation of separate identities and the maintenance of cultural diversity within society. These values can be seen as the answer to the question posed both, by citizens of the Union and by our fellow citizens of the world: âWhat does the EU stand for?â In exploring these values we should, however, remember that in the real world there will be occasions on which Realpolitik will intrude and the interest-based paradigm will prevail
An Extensive Analysis of the Business and Economic Climate of McMinnville, Oregon from 1895-1910
This report provides an analysis of the dominant industries and consumer culture of McMinnville, Oregon during the time period 1895 to 1910. It provides an array of historic photographs, maps, advertisements, census information, anecdotes, and excavation data to formulate a unique and extensive review of McMinnville\u27s business and economic history during a primary period of growth
Mining and development : examining the effectiveness of mining company community development intervention in New Ireland Province, Papua New Guinea : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Development Studies at Massey University, Manawatu, New Zealand
This thesis explores the effectiveness of mining company contributions to development
within the gold mining communities of Lihir and Simberi islands, in New Ireland Province,
Papua New Guinea (PNG). More specifically, it analyses the extent to which forms of
community development intervention undertaken on Lihir Island by Newcrest Mining Ltd, and
on Simberi Island by St Barbara Ltd, actually support meaningful forms of development.
This has been achieved through the use of development ethics (Goulet 1995) as a
conceptual research framework, which when applied in research practice, gives priority to
the wellbeing of those whose realities may be ignored, misread or marginalised within the
neoliberal realm of development.
This research is based on a total of four months of fieldwork undertaken on Lihir and Simberi
islands. It draws on community narratives to frame the relevance of human wellbeing,
human rights and inclusive development as development ethics within the research context.
This development ethics research lens facilitates discussion about the meaningfulness of
development intervention from a morally-informed community development perspective.
Underpinned by a locally contextualised appreciation of what human wellbeing and
meaningful development means on Lihir and Simberi islands (which results in the exposition
of a set of local Community Wellbeing and Development Rights), a critical review of the
practice and governance of development intervention within each Island community is then
detailed. The analysis of development interventions then proceeds using firstly an evaluation
of practices within a human rights lens, and secondly consideration of inclusive development
outcomes relative to Newcrest's and St Barbaraâs development related rhetoric.
The resulting account of mining company community development intervention is critical, but
ultimately hopeful. This hopefulness reflects the hope of customary landowners that mining
will one day lead to meaningful development benefits. The analysis from this development
ethics lens reveals insights into the promotion of social justice through the delivery of mining
company development interventions. It is argued that mining companies have the
opportunity to enhance a set of locally significant and internationally recognised human
rights that are important to the wellbeing and development of customary landowners.
Although, in some instances, mining company performance is falling short with respect to the
enhancement of these human rights, it is argued that the enhancement of Community
Wellbeing and Development Rights exists as a potential means for mining companies to add
value to host communities. However, if such a development programme is to be meaningful
to customary landowners, it must also advance equity and fairness. If mining companies fail
to navigate such complexities, this thesis contends that mining, and forms of mining
company community development intervention, will likely do more harm to communities than
good
Managing Ambiguous Amphibians: Feral Cows, People, and Place in Ukraineâs Danube Delta
This paper analyzes how a herd of feral cattle emerged in the core zone of Ukraineâs Danube Biosphere Reserve and why it still exists despite numerous challenges to the legality of its presence there. Answering these questions requires an analytical approach that begins from the premise that animals, plants, substances, documents, and technologies are active participants in making social and political worlds rather than passive objects of human intervention and manipulation. Drawing together insights from multispecies ethnography, animal geography, amphibious anthropology, and studies of nature protection in former Soviet republics, the author argues that the feral cattle exist because they are part of an amphibious multispecies assemblage in which relations among cattle, elements of the deltaâs wetland ecologies, legal norms, and the Reserve managersâ documentation practices have aligned to create an autonomous space for cattle to dwell with minimal human intervention
Post crack flexural toughness in steel fabric and fibre reinforced concrete beams
The purpose of the paper is to provide independent research and evaluate manufacturersâ claims that structural polypropylene fibres provide satisfactory crack control reinforcement and compare the test results from macro synthetic polypropylene fibres against steel fabric reinforced concrete, extensively used as a crack control medium in concrete ground bearing floor/hardstanding slabs where tensile forces are likely to occur. Three concrete beam types were produced, plain, steel reinforced and fibre reinforced, and a comparative study was undertaken of post crack flexural toughness. The procedure used was to manufacture steel A 142 fabric and macro fibre reinforced concrete beams to provide load, deflection data, toughness indices and was compliant with, ASTM C1018 -97, [ASTM, 1997] using a three point loading arrangement. The data was representative of what might occur in a floor slab. The findings of the paper is that A1 42 steel fabric reinforcement as used in slabs was more effective in producing toughness and residual strength when directly compared to the performance of structural polypropylene fibre reinforced concrete. When small post crack forces are encountered within the concrete matrix, polypropylene macro fibres are suitable for crack control. The paper makes direct comparisons between known and widely used crack control using steel fabric, and the use of low modulus polypropylene macro synthetic fibres as a crack control medium
What secondary predicates in russian tell us about the link between tense, aspect and case
In this paper I show that the different case marking possibilities on predicate adjectives in depictive secondary predicates in Russian constitute the uninterpretable counterpart of the interpretable tense and aspect features of the adjective. Case agreement entails that the predicate adjective is non-eventive, i.e., it occurs when the event time of the secondary predicate is identical to the event time of the primary predicate. The instrumental case, however, entails that the secondary predicate is eventive: some change of state or transition occurred prior to or during the event time of the primary predicate. I claim that case agreement occurs in conjoined tense phrases in Russian, while the instrumental case occurs in adjoined aspectual phrases. In English, secondary predication is sensitive both to the structural location of its antecedent and to the event structure of the primary predicate. I suggest that depictives with subject antecedents in English are true adjunction structures, while those with direct object antecedents occur in a conjoined aspectual phrase. This hypothesis finds support in the different movement and semantic constraints in conjunction versus adjunction phrases in both English and Russian
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