8 research outputs found
Slumming it? Township tour reviews âgloss over povertyâ
Is it time to rethink âslum tourismâ? Researchers at the University of Bath believe the answer is a resounding yes. They claim that foreign visitors are glossing over the hardships of those living in poor areas with well-meaning attempts to portray their inhabitants in a positive ligh
Liberal market economies, business, and political finance: Britain under New Labour
The extent and nature of business financing of parties is an important feature of political finance. Britainâs transparent and permissive regulatory system provides an excellent opportunity to study business financing of parties. Business donations have been very important to the Conservative party over the last decade, and of only marginal importance to Labour. Unlike other Conservative contributors, business donors are more likely to contribute when the party is popular. In contrast to the previous period of Conservative government, the biggest British businesses tended to abstain from political finance under New Labour. However, their bias towards the Conservatives is affected by the partyâs popularity and the closeness of an election. Britain shares the political importance of business financing of parties and its mixture of ideological and pragmatic motivations with other liberal market economies. However, in Britain the bias towards the right is much stronger and the role of big business more marginal
Aristotle for the modern Ethicist
Elizabeth Anscombe and Mary Midgley discussed Aristotleâs ethics as an alternative to modern moral philosophy. This idea is best known from Anscombeâs 1958 paper âModern Moral Philosophyâ. The mainstream response has been to design a normative theory of âvirtue ethicsâ to rival deontology and consequentialism. This essay argues that that response is inadequate; it misses Anscombeâs point and obscures various aspects of Aristotleâs ethics, in particular his emphasis on friendship and human interconnectedness. This element of Aristotelianism was favoured by Midgley. By returning to Midgley, with the support of Aristotle, it is possible to find an alternative modern Aristotelianism in ethics