10 research outputs found

    The Chagos Islands cases: the empire strikes back

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    Good governance requires the accommodation of multiple interests in the cause of decision making. However, undue regard for particular sectional interests can take their toll upon public faith in government administration. Historically, broad conceptions of the good of the commonwealth were employed to outweigh the interests of groups that resisted colonisation. In the decision making of the British Empire, the standard approach for justifying the marginalisation of the interests of colonised groups was that they were uncivilised and that particular hardships were the price to be paid for bringing to them the imperial dividend of industrial society. It is widely assumed that with the dismantling of the British Empire, such impulses and their accompanying jurisprudence became a thing of the past. Even as decolonisation proceeded apace after the Second World War, however, the United Kingdom maintained control of strategically important islands with a view towards sustaining its global role. In an infamous example from this twilight period of empire, in the 1960s imperial interests were used to justify the expulsion of the Chagos islanders from the British Indian Ocean Territory (BIOT). Into the twenty-first century, this forced elision of the UKā€™s interests with the imperial ā€œcommon goodā€ continues to take centre stage in courtroom battles over the islandersā€™ rights, being cited before domestic and international tribunals in order to maintain the Chagossiansā€™ exclusion from their homeland. This article considers the new jurisprudence of imperialism which has emerged in a string of decisions which have continued to marginalise the Chagossiansā€™ interests

    Pedagogue and/or philosopher ? Some comments on attending, walking, talking, writing and ... caving

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    Ā© 2014 SensePublishers-Rotterdam, The Netherlands. All rights reserved. The man has been teaching educational philosophy and philosophy of/as education at the university for a rather long time. Now, at his pleasant surprise, he has been invited to write an 'intellectual self-portrait.' He accepted the invitation, as he mostly accepts them, but he knows it would be an illusion to conceive of this labor as a recollection of his past.status: publishe

    Normal or abnormal? 'Normative uncertainty' in psychiatric practice

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    Normal or Abnormal? ā€˜Normative Uncertaintyā€™ in Psychiatric Practice

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