360 research outputs found
Which Constitution?
https://egrove.olemiss.edu/citizens_clip/1117/thumbnail.jp
An American Negro Looks at Black Africa
https://egrove.olemiss.edu/citizens_clip/1070/thumbnail.jp
Environmental impact assessments of the Three Gorges Project in China: issues and interventions
The paper takes China's authoritative Environmental Impact Statement for the Yangzi (Yangtze) Three Gorges Project (TGP) in 1992 as a benchmark against which to evaluate emerging major environmental outcomes since the initial impoundment of the Three Gorges reservoir in 2003. The paper particularly examines five crucial environmental aspects and associated causal factors. The five domains include human resettlement and the carrying capacity of local environments (especially land), water quality, reservoir sedimentation and downstream riverbed erosion, soil erosion, and seismic activity and geological hazards. Lessons from the environmental impact assessments of the TGP are: (1) hydro project planning needs to take place at a broader scale, and a strategic environmental assessment at a broader scale is necessary in advance of individual environmental impact assessments; (2) national policy and planning adjustments need to react quickly to the impact changes of large projects; (3) long-term environmental monitoring systems and joint operations with other large projects in the upstream areas of a river basin should be established, and the cross-impacts of climate change on projects and possible impacts of projects on regional or local climate considered. © 2013 Elsevier B.V.Xibao Xu, Yan Tan, Guishan Yan
How do professions globalize? Lessons from the Global South in US medical education
This article explores the professional construction of the space of Global Health. I argue that the growth of Global Health as a field of practice does not merely indicate an intensification of North-South intervention. It is also a professional project of reimporting lessons from the South to countries in the North. I focus on the emerging didactic regime for Global Health in US medical education and the deterritorialized "global" lessons that students are taught in poor countries. By rescaling these lessons to precarious settings at home, the space of Global Health is reterritorialized as a Global Medical South stretching into the United States, reinforcing the perception that health is not a right but a privilege. The analysis is based on a content analysis of university websites and didactic handbooks and a sample of sixty-four articles evaluating the education effects of study abroad experiences. It reveals an emerging canon of Global Health virtues and the construction of domestic scales for Global Health practices, which are based on ethnic and socioeconomic categories. This analysis of professional projects as spatial projects sheds new light on the geography of Global Health and of professional globalization more generally
The unusual practices within some neo-pentecostal churches in South Africa : reflections and recommendations
Dr Kgatle is participating in
the research project
‘Socio-cultural Readings’,
directed by Prof. Dr Ernest
van Eck, Department of New
Testament Studies, Faculty of
Theology, University of
Pretoria.CRL Rights Commission is the commission for the promotion and protection of the rights of cultural, religious and linguistic communities.This article reflects and makes recommendations on the recent unusual practices within some
Neo-Pentecostal churches in South Africa. Neo-Pentecostal churches in South Africa refer to
churches that have crossed denominational boundaries. These churches idolise the miraculous,
healing, deliverance and enactment of bizarre church performances often performed by
charismatic and highly influential spiritual leaders. There have been unusual practices within
some Neo-Pentecostal churches that include, among others, the eating of grass, eating of
snakes, drinking of petrol, spraying of Doom on the congregants and other experiences. There
are many possible theological, psychological and socio-economic explanations for these
unusual practices. Given the facts that many South Africans experience various socio-economic
challenges, it is argued here that the socio-economic factor is the main explanation for the
support of these unusual practices. The unusual practices within some Neo-Pentecostal
churches in South Africa are critically unpacked by looking at various churches where the
incidents happened. The possible theological, psychological and socio-economic explanations
for such practices are outlined in detail. Recommendations are made based on the scientific
findings on the unusual practices.http://www.hts.org.zaam2017New Testament Studie
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