20 research outputs found
Internal Parliamentary Communication and Moderation: Problems and Alternatives
κ΅νλ λμμλ μ 보κ΅λ₯μ μμ¬μν΅μ νμλ‘ νλ€. νΉν μ¬νμ λ€μν μ΄μ΅κ³Ό κ°μΉλ₯Ό λλ³νλ μ νλ€μ΄ μλ‘ νν Β· ν©μνλ κ³³μ΄λΌλ μ μμ μμ¬μν΅μ μ€μμ±μ λμ± ν¬λ€. κ·Έλ°λ° κ΅ν μμ¬μν΅μ μ€μ λ λλ΄ λμΈ λͺ¨λμμ κΈμ μ μ΄μ§ λͺ»νλ€. λ¨Όμ λκ΅λ―Ό μμ¬μν΅μ μ₯μ λ μ’
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κ΅νλ₯Ό λ¨Ό μ¬λλΌ λ‘ λ³μ§μν€λ κ²°κ³Όλ₯Ό λ³μλ€. 17 λ κ΅νμ 4 λ κ°νμ
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Όλμ μ€νλ € κ΅λ―Όμ λ°κ°μ λ³μκ³ οΌ μμμ± λ©΄μμλ κ΄μ¬ λ° μ¬μμ΄μλ€. κ·Έλμ κ΅νλ κ΅λ―Όλ€μκ² μ λ€λ§μ νμκ²μμ λͺ°λν΄ μλ μ νμ μΈ μ μΉκ³κΈ λͺ¨μ΅μΌλ‘λ§ λΉμΆ°μ‘λ€. κ΅ν λ΄ μμ¬μν΅μ μ₯μ λ μμ ννμ κ°μ Έμ¨λ€. 17 λ κ΅νμ κ²½μ°οΌ ννμ μ€νλ € λ μ¬ν΄μ§ κ²½ν₯μ 보μλ€ .2004λ
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λ² λ¬Έμ λ‘ ννμ κ±°λνλ° μ΄μ΄ 2005 λ
12μμλ μ¬νλ² κ°νμ²λ¦¬λ‘ κ΅νλ 53 μΌ κ°μ΄λ ννμ μ§μνλ€. κ΅νννμ λνμ ννμΌλ‘ ν©μμ μ΄λ₯΄μ§ λͺ»ν κ²½μ°μ λ°μνλ€λ μ μμ μμ¬μ§νμ λ¬Έμ λ‘ μ΄ν΄ν μ μλ€. μμ¬μ§νμ λ¬Έμ λ λ³ΈνμοΌ μμνμοΌ μνμοΌ λμ λΆμ§λ¬ΈοΌ κ΅μ κ°μ¬ λ±μμ λΉν¨μ¨μ Β·νμμ μ§νννμ μ€λ³΅λ νΉμ λΉν©λ¦¬μ μΈ μ μ°¨ Β· νμ λ±μμλΆν° κ°μμ μΈ 'λ μΉκΈ°' μ²λ¦¬μ μ΄λ₯΄κΈ°κΉμ§ λ€μνλ€. κ΅ν λ΄ μμ¬μ§νμμ λ¬Έμ λ μ μ°¨μ κΈ°μ μ λ¬Έμ μΈμ μμ κ°μ μ곑λ μμ¬μν΅ ννμλ λ°μ ν μ°κ΄λμ΄ μλ€. λ
Όμμ κ°λ₯Ό λ°©ν΄νλ λ§ λκΈ°λ λΌμ΄λ€κΈ° , λΉμ΄λ μμ΄οΌ κ·Όκ±° μλ μνΉ μ κΈ°οΌ μΈμ κ³΅κ²©οΌ νλ°±λ
Όλ¦¬οΌ μ½μ μ§λ¬Έ λ±μ μ곑λ λ°μΈμ ν΅ν΄ ν©λ¦¬μ μμ¬μ§νμ μ΄λ ΅κ² λ§λ€κΈ° λλ¬Έμ΄λ€. μμλ€μ μ곑λ μμ¬μν΅ ννλ λ¨μν κ°μΈμ μμ§ λΏλ§ μλλΌοΌ κ΅ν μμ¨μ± μ¬λΆμλ μμΈμ΄ μλ€. μ΄λ€μ μ²μλοΌ μμμ λΉ κ·Έλ¦¬κ³ μ§μꡬ민 Β· μ΄μ΅λ¨μ²΄λ‘λΆν° μν₯μ λ°λλ€. λ°λΌμ μ°λ¦¬κ° κ΅ν μμ¬μ§νκ³Ό μμ¬μν΅μ λ¬Έμ λ₯Ό κ°μ νλ € λ λ€λ©΄οΌ μΈ κ°μ§ μ°¨μμμμ μ κ·Όμ΄ νμνλ€. 첫째λ κ΅ν λ΄ λͺ¨λ νμμ μμ¬μ§νκ³Ό κ΄λ ¨λ λ²κ·λ μ μ°¨λ€μ 보μνλ μΌμ΄λ©°οΌ λμ§Έλ μμ κ°κ°μΈλ€μ μμ¬μν΅ λ₯λ ₯μ κ°μ νλ μΌκ³ οΌ μ
μ§Έλ κ΅νμ μμ¨μ±μ μ κ³ ν μ μλ λ°©μμ μΈμ°λ μΌμ΄λ€. μ΄λ° κΈ°μ μ Β· ꡬ쑰μ μ°¨μμ λμ±
μ ν΅ν΄ κΆκ·Ήμλ κ΅ν λ΄ μμ¬μν΅κ³Ό μμ¬μ μ°¨κ° μ΅μ μ 곡λμμ¬ κ²°μ μ λλ¬ν μ μλλ‘ ν΄μΌνλ€.
Parliament, as the highest national instance of negotiation, compromise and control of different social and party interests, needs constant internal and external communication. However, the realities of such parliamentary communication in South Korea cannot be positively considered. In mass media, it is often called a far staying island from the nation. Above all, the debate on 4 reform laws in this legislative period has not roused interest, but rather antagonistic feelings among most people. After passage of the Korean Private Schools Law in lightning manner and in absence of the opposition party, the national assembly had no more parliamentary meetings for 53 days from December 8, 2005 to February 1, 2006, thereby delaying deliberation on other pressing bills. The National Assembly is considered to be a typical political class concentrated on their own political power games. The politicians isolation comes from internal hindrance as well, with procedural hindrance from modΞ΅rating and communicating plenum or committee meetings. If a controversial bill cannot be regularly or numerically passed or refused, the minority group makes any further procedure impossible by physically interfering. There are also serious problems of irrational acts and regulations regarding parliamentary moderating and communicating. To make matters worse, most Assemblymen do not have refined dialog nor communication skills. They often make obstructive comments both intentionally and unintentionally, for example, cutting each other off or snatching away anothers speech, bringing up groundless rumors, throwing insults, and so on. They also make no further orderly procedures. Three ways of resolving these problems of parliamentary internal communication and moderation are to revise related acts and laws, improve debate and moderating capacity of Assemblymen, and increase autonomy away from the Chief Executive, the President
μ¬νμ΄λ‘ κ³Ό μνΈμ£Όκ΄μ± : νλ²λ§μ€μ λ―Έλ
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Όλ¬Έ(μμ¬)--μμΈλνκ΅ λνμ :μ² νκ³Ό μμμ² νμ 곡,1998.Maste
A Study on the Geography Teachers' Perception of Relevance about the Contents of the Geography Education
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Όλ¬Έ (λ°μ¬)-- μμΈλνκ΅ λνμ : μ¬νκ΅μ‘κ³Ό(μ§λ¦¬μ 곡), 2011.2. λ°λ°°κ· .Docto
μ€λΆν λ―Όκ° νλ©΄ ꡬ쑰μ κ΄ν μ°κ΅¬
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Όλ¬Έ(μμ¬)--μμΈλνκ΅ λνμ :μ¬νκ΅μ‘κ³Ό μ§λ¦¬μ 곡,2000.Maste