162 research outputs found

    Law and the Dilemma of Stability and Change in the Modernization Process

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    Even as a student of comparative politics my interests have led me more to analyzing the newly developing countries, countries which often appear to be impervious to principles about the rule of law. Out of this awareness of my limitations for this occasion, I have chosen as my theme what I feel to be a significant paradox about the role of law in the modernization process which is now engrossing the energies of the underdeveloped countries of Asia, Africa, and the Middle East. Boldly stated, this paradox is that historically, when Western law was introduced into traditional societies with the intent of providing political order and stability, the consequence was always revolutionary social changes and tensions. Yet in the post-colonial era,when government policies have often been to accelerate social change,the weight of law has been that of a restraining and stabilizing force

    Freedom, power and development : ethical issues in communications research

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    Burma : opening on the left in the military manner

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    "June 1963.""#1391"--handwritten on cove

    Modernization, democratization, and nation building

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    "L2-1278"--handwritten on cover. -- Series statement handwritten on coverIncludes bibliographical reference

    Examining "The end of revolution": a foretaste of Wang Hui’s thought

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    Wang Hui is a significant contemporary Chinese thinker and a key representative of Chinese New Left thought. This article provides a critical review of some of the themes that emerge from Wang’s The End of Revolution as a means of situating his position in China’s intellectual landscape, with a particular mind to exploring the historicity of Wang’s thought as it informs his views. The essay engages some of the key discursive threads in The End of Revolution and provides a critical overview of Wang’s positions on neoliberalism, the tension between Western articulations of modernity and China’s own self-image

    Governmental Context Determines Institutional Value: Independently Certified Performance and Failure in the Spanish Newspaper Industry

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    Many societies demand that independent professionals (e.g. auditors) certify the performance of firms. The value placed on such certification (i.e. the public perception of reliability/unreliability that may impact on an organization's success/failure) is not uniform, however, but contingent upon changing political contexts. This study presents and analyses data on the entire population of newspapers in Spain from 1966 to 1993, a time of peaceful transition from military dictatorship to capitalist democracy. Our results highlight the contingent nature of institutional life, demonstrating how changes in political contexts are associated with varying understandings of institutions. In particular, our findings support the prediction that, under a dictatorship, independently certified performance is not instrumental in organizational success or failure whereas, in a modern democracy, the certification process has a positive effect on the survival chances of firms.Publicad

    Aspects of Political development

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    xiii, 205 hal.; 20 cm

    Communications and Political Development

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    xiv.381 hal.;20 c
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