1,449 research outputs found
Corporatisme québécois et performance des gouvernants : analyse comparative des politiques environnementales en agriculture
Lâarticle analyse la performance du corporatisme quĂ©bĂ©cois en ce qui concerne lâĂ©laboration des politiques gouvernementales dans un contexte qui lui apparaĂźt peu favorable. En plus dâoffrir une analyse concernant le secteur environnemental au QuĂ©bec, lâarticle prĂ©sente un examen de la situation en Ontario et en Caroline du Nord dans le mĂȘme secteur. Cet examen permet dâidentifier dâimportants contrastes. Lâanalyse comparative dĂ©montre en effet que les performances environnementales de lâOntario et de la Caroline du Nord sont infĂ©rieures Ă celle du QuĂ©bec. Elle permet aussi dâattribuer les performances Ă des diffĂ©rences dans les structures des rĂ©seaux de politiques gouvernementales. En dâautres termes, loin dâĂȘtre dĂ©passĂ©, le corporatisme quĂ©bĂ©cois continue dâĂȘtre une structure politique efficace.This article argues that in spite of inimical circumstances, QuĂ©bec corporatism can still produce high performing public policy. A comparative analysis of environmental policy-making between QuĂ©bec, Ontario and North Carolina illustrates that QuĂ©bec's performance in this sector outperforms the latter cases. This analysis further demonstrates that differences in performance can be attributed to the variations in each jurisdiction's public policy network. In other words, far from being anachronistic, QuĂ©bec corporatism still enjoys a good deal of success
Collaborative Online International Learning in an undergraduate genetics course
Collaborative Online International Learning (COIL) is a teaching and learning paradigm that promotes the development of intercultural competence across shared multicultural learning environments. Through the use of internet-based tools and online pedagogies, COIL fosters meaningful exchanges between university-level educators and students with peers in geographically distant locations and from different lingua-cultural backgrounds. In the winter term 2018, the 2nd year undergraduate course at the University of Ottawa will engage with other undergraduate courses in COIL modules to achieve âcapstoneâ experiences by engaging students in the evaluation of topics relating to social, cultural and environmental impacts of genetics. The COIL modules will explore human genetic and reproductive technologies that are rapidly being integrated into our lives and how the uses of these technologies provoke legal, ethical, and social questions. Issues pertaining to the use of genetic medicine, prenatal screening, newborn screening, pharmacogenomics, equal access to genetic services, and genetic discrimination are a few examples that will be explored. The course modules will be designed to be part of a blended learning experience that will include planned videoconference collaborative classes, joint online interactions and assignments, and regular scheduled face-to-face campus classes between each universityâs faculty and students. The objective of this session is to elicit interest in COIL and to recruit possible partners to engage in collaborative online international learning opportunities
Everything you always wanted to know about sex (in IR) but were afraid to ask: the âqueer turnâ in international relations
Queer International Relationsâ momentum in the past four years has made it inconceivable for disciplinary IR to make it âappear as if there is no Queer International Theoryâ. The âqueer turnâ has given rise to vibrant research programmes across IR subfields. Queer research is not only not a frivolous distraction from the âhardâ issues of IR, but queer analytics crack open for investigation fundamental dimensions of international politics that have hitherto been missed, misunderstood or trivialised by mainstream and critical approaches to IR. As queer research is making significant inroads into IR theorising, a fault line has emerged in IR scholarship on sexuality and queerness. Reflecting the tensions between Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) Studies and Queer Theory in the academy more broadly, the IR literature on (homo)sexuality largely coalesces into two distinct approaches: LGBT and Queer approaches. The article will lay out the basic tenets of Queer Theory and discuss how it diverges from LGBT Studies. The article then turns to the books under review and focuses on the ways in which they take up the most prominent issue in contemporary debates in Queer Theory: the increasing inclusion of LGBT people into international human rights regimes and liberal states and markets. The article finishes with a brief reflection on citation practices, queer methodologies and the ethics of queer research
Beyond the Erotics of Orientalism: Homeland Security, Liberal War and the Pacification of the Global Frontier
Beyond the Erotics of Orientalism: Homeland Security, Liberal War and the Pacification of the Global Frontier traces the post-9/11 ascendancy of a complex and seemingly contradictory U.S. national security imaginary and concomitant practices of war and violence. On the one hand, the U.S. security state supported at times quite radical transgressions from the gendered racial-sexual grammars of the usual âWar Storyâ (Cooke, 1996), such as the active involvement of women in the torture of enemy prisoners, the repeal of the Don't Ask Don't Tell policy and more recently its support for overturning the Defense of Marriage Act. The U.S. social formation also took a seemingly great leap forward towards âpost-racial triumphâ (Ho Sang & LaBennett, 2012, p. 5) with the most diverse Presidential cabinet in U.S. history under Bush Jr. culminating in 2008 in the election of Barack Obama, the first American President racialized as Black. On the other hand, the U.S. security state aggressively pursued the racialized expansion and intensification of the (extrajudicial) use of military and carceral force in time and space, including selective deportations, indefinite detentions, the creation of an official torture policy and targeted killings of so-called enemy combatants outside of official warzones, including of US citizens. Beyond the Erotics of Orientalism explores these reconfigurations of law and belonging within broader shifts in contemporary liberal governance, in particular the promise that the 19th century colour line (DuBois, 1903) has been transcended and no longer per se marks populations as in/violable. I show how in this era of post-racial/sexual/gender triumph, the liberal project of security governs not only through military and carceral force, but also affectively through self-rule and the promotion of social difference. The dissertation locates the U.S. War on Terror's ambiguous promise of liberal freedom, equal inclusion and self-rule in the desires and disavowals of a White settler society in âthe afterlife of slaveryâ (Hartman, 2007, p. 6). Building on the work of Native feminist and Afro-Pessimist theorists, this study suggests that we can only meaningfully interrogate the operations of power and violence in contemporary U.S. security making - including against Orientalized subjects - by accounting for the foundational role of anti-Black racism and the settler colonial character of the U.S. social formation. These interlocking racial-sexual logics mobilize knowledges of war and violence that facilitate not only the targeting of Muslim/ified people and spaces, but in turn also help secure the gendered racial-sexual order and property regime of the settler colonial homeland in this age of âpost-everythingâ (Crenshaw, 2014) triumph
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Is securitization theory racist? Civilizationism, methodological whiteness, and antiblack thought in the Copenhagen School
This article provides the first excavation of the foundational role of racist thought in securitization theory. We demonstrate that Copenhagen School securitization theory is structured not only by Eurocentrism but also by civilizationism, methodological whiteness, and antiblack racism. Classic securitization theory advances a conceptualization of ânormal politicsâ as reasoned, civilized dialogue, and securitization as a potential regression into a racially coded uncivilized âstate of natureâ. It justifies this through a civilizationist history of the world that privileges Europe as the apex of civilized âdesecuritizationâ, sanitizing its violent (settler-) colonial projects and the racial violence of normal liberal politics. It then constructs a methodologically and normatively white framework that uses speech act theory to locate âprogressâ towards normal politics and desecuritization in Europe, making becoming like Europe a moral imperative. Using ostensibly neutral terms, securitization theory prioritizes order over justice, positioning the securitization theorist as the defender of (white) âcivilized politicsâ against (racialized) âprimal anarchyâ. Antiblackness is a crucial building-block in this conceptual edifice: securitization theory finds âprimal anarchyâ especially in âAfricaâ, casting it as an irrationally oversecuritized foil to âcivilized politicsâ. We conclude by discussing whether the theory, or even just the concept of securitization, can be recuperated from these racist foundations
Queer international relations
Queer International Relations (IR) is not a new field. For more than 20 years, Queer IR scholarship has focused on how normativities and/or non-normativities associated with categories of sex, gender, and sexuality sustain and contest international formations of power in relation to institutions like heteronormativity, homonormativity, and cisnormativity as well as through queer logics of statecraft. Recently, Queer IR has gained unprecedented traction in IR, as IR scholars have come to recognize how Queer IR theory, methods, and research further IRâs core agenda of analyzing and informing the policies and politics around state and nation formation, war and peace, and international political economy. Specific Queer IR research contributions include work on sovereignty, intervention, security and securitization, torture, terrorism and counter-insurgency, militaries and militarism, human rights and LGBT activism, immigration, regional and international integration, global health, transphobia, homophobia, development and International Financial Institutions, financial crises, homocolonialism, settler colonialism and anti-Blackness, homocapitalism, political/cultural formations, norms diffusion, political protest, and time and temporalitie
PERCUSSION AND VIBRATION AIRWAY CLEARANCE THERAPY INCREASES INFLAMMATORY FACTORS
Ventilator associated pneumonia is a common problem with the mechanically ventilated population. Mortality, hospital stay, and cost increase with ventilator associated pneumonia. The importance of tackling this problem has spurred an effort within the medical community to prevent the onset of VAP. Upon years of study, a basic bundle of care has been recommended by the IHI for implementation in the hospital so that the incidence of VAP would decrease. This paper will focus on the nurseâs role in implementing the bundle of care. The paper will explore the different interventions and will cover the evidence behind the practice. The paper will also try to mention the avenues in which research can focus due to the lack of development in that area.https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/uresposters/1011/thumbnail.jp
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