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The free association narrative interview method
This encyclopaedia entry describes the characteristics of the method given in the title
A Proleptic Perspective of Music Education
By explaining the cultural mechanism of \u27prolepsis\u27 through examples of my own teaching, I posit that all too often educators\u27 and teacher educators\u27 (purely \u27ideal\u27) recall of our pasts and imagination of our students\u27 futures become fundamentally materialized constraints on our students\u27 life experiences in the present
The Future of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act in the Hands of a Conservative Court
This Essay argues that the future of the majority-minority district is in peril, as a conservative majority on the Court stands poised to strike down section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. When the Court takes up the constitutionality of Section 2, binding precedent will play a secondary role at best. Instead, the Justicesâ policy goals and ideological preferences - namely, their personal disdain for the use of race in public life - will guide the Courtâs conclusion. In this vein, Justice Kennedy holds the fate of the Act in his hands. To be clear, this Essay is not trying to prognosticate the future of the Act. Instead, it is far more intrigued by the many lessons that the fate of the Act offers about the Court as an institution; the Courtâs treatment of colored communities and their interests; and the role political attitudes play in guiding judicial behavior. As the Court continues to position itself at the center of many political controversies, these lessons gain greater urgency
Biographies in talk: a narrative-discursive research approach
This paper demonstrates the contribution a synthetic narrative-discursive approach can make to understanding biographical work within a research interview. Our focus is on biographical work as part of the ongoing, interactive process through which identities are taken up. This is of particular interest for people who, for example, are entering a new career and can be seen as 'novices' in the sense that they are constructing and claiming a new identity. Following a discussion of the theoretical and methodological background in narrative, discourse analytic and discursive work in social psychology (e.g. Bruner, 1990; Edley, 2001; Potter and Wetherell, 1987; Wetherell, 1998), the paper presents an analysis of biographical talk from an interview study with postgraduate Art and Design students. Our interest is in their identity work, including biographical work, as novices in their fields. The analysis illustrates the approach and the key analytic concepts of, first, shared discursive resources, such as interpretative repertoires (e.g. Edley 2001) and canonical narratives (e.g. Bruner 1991), and, secondly, troubled identities (e.g. Wetherell and Edley, 1998; Taylor 2005a) . It shows how speakers' biographical accounts are shaped and constrained by the meanings which prevail within the larger society. For our participants, these include established understandings of the nature and origins of an artistic or creative identity, and the biographical trajectory associated with it. The particular focus of our approach is on how, in a speaker's reflexive work to construct a biographical narrative, the versions produced in previous tellings become a constraint and a source of continuity
Corruption and confidence in public institutions : evidence from a global survey
Well-functioning institutions matter for economic development. In order to operate effectively, public institutions must also inspire confidence in those they serve. The authors use data from the Gallup World Poll, a unique and very large global household survey, to document a quantitatively large and statistically significant negative correlation between corruption and confidence in public institutions. This suggests an important channel through which corruption can inhibit development by eroding confidence in public institutions. This correlation is robust to the inclusion of a large set of controls for country and respondent-level characteristics, and they show how it can plausibly be interpreted as reflecting at least in part a causal effect from corruption to confidence. The authors also show that individuals with low confidence in institutions exhibit low levels of political participation, show increased tolerance for violent means to achieve political ends, and have a greater desire to"vote with their feet"through emigration.Public Sector Corruption&Anticorruption Measures,Government Diagnostic Capacity Building,Corruption&Anitcorruption Law,Poverty Monitoring&Analysis,Social Accountability
Remembering the bad old days: Human rights, economic conditions, and democratic performance in transitional regimes
Using the natural laboratory of 18 post-communist Central and Eastern European countries, this article presents a basic model for democratic transition, specifically testing two alternative explanations for the degree of citizen satisfaction with the performance of their fledgling democracies: 1) virtues of omission, which include bad actions from which the state refrains, namely violations of individual human rights, and 2) virtues of commission, which include positive state actions, in particular actions enhancing economic well-being. The findings clearly indicate that, during the transition period, citizens' sense of the condition of human rights is consistently more important than are perceived economic prospects as predictors of democratic performance. -- In der Untersuchung werden zwei alternative Hypothesen getestet, die den Grad der Zufriedenheit der BĂŒrger mit der Performanz der Demokratie in 18 post-kommunistischen LĂ€ndern erklĂ€ren sollen. Die eine Hypothese betont die Wichtigkeit der Garantie der individuellen Menschenrechte, die andere die Wichtigkeit der Verbesserung der ökonomischen Situation. In dem einen Fall soll sich der Staat menschenrechtsverletzender Handlungen enthalten (virtues of ommission), in dem anderen Fall soll er zur Hebung des wirtschaftlichen Wohlstands politisch eingreifen (virtues of commission). Der Befund zeigt, daĂ in der Ăbergangsperiode vom post-kommunistischen zum demokratischen Regime den BĂŒrgern der Zustand der Menschenrechte fĂŒr das Urteil ĂŒber die LeistungsfĂ€higkeit der Demokratie im eigenen Lande relativ wichtiger ist als die wirtschaftliche Entwicklung.
In the mood for democracy? Democratic support as thermostatic opinion
Public support has long been thought crucial for the vitality and survival of democracy. Existing research has argued that democracy also creates its own demand: through early-years socialization and later-life learning, the presence of a democratic system coupled with the passage of time produces widespread public support for democracy. Using new panel measures of democratic mood varying over 135 countries and up to 30 years, this article finds little evidence for such a positive feedback effect of democracy on support. Instead, it demonstrates a negative thermostatic effect: increases in democracy depress democratic mood, while decreases cheer it. Moreover, it is increases in the liberal, counter-majoritarian aspects of democracy, not the majoritarian, electoral aspects that provoke this backlash from citizens. These novel results challenge existing research on support for democracy, but also reconcile this research with the literature on macro-opinion
Institutional Trust in Central and Eastern Europe: Barometer of Democracy or Performance Thermostat?
New bryophyte taxon records for tropical countries 1
This is the first in a series of papers listing new records, which will be published whenever sufficient new records have been found. The taxa are arranged by countries for an easier evaluation, e.g. updates of checklists. The initials of the contributor for each record is shown in square brackets after the record, and these initials are interpreted at the end of the paper
Democracy and its discontents in post-wall Germany
This paper traces the political behavior intentions of satisfied democrats, dissatisfied democrats, and non-democrats in western and eastern Germany. Dissatisfaction is most commonly expressed in support for the loyal opposition, with some minor tilt toward parties of the ends of the spectrum. Non-democrats, a very small percentage of the populace, more commonly express their disapproval through withdrawal rather than through active extremism. Based on a 1997 general population survey, the analysis reveals some differences in the magnitude of western versus eastern conceptions of the elements that make up democracy. But most of those differences get channeled into seemingly benign forms of political participation. The core of the findings is that dissatisfaction with democracy may well be a healthy stimulant rather than a threat to the vitality of either established or emerging democracies. -- Die hier vorgelegte Untersuchung analysiert politische Einstellungen und Verhaltensabsichten von zufriedenen Demokraten, unzufriedenen Demokraten und Nicht-Demokraten in Ost- und Westdeutschland. Unzufriedenheit mit der Politik fĂŒhrt in der Regel zu einer verstĂ€rkten UnterstĂŒtzung demokratischer Oppositionsparteien, unter bestimmten Bedingungen aber auch zur Wahl extremer Oppositionsparteien. Die Untersuchung ergibt, dass Nicht-Demokraten, die in Ost- und Westdeutschland allerdings nur einen sehr geringen Prozentsatz ausmachen, ihre Unzufriedenheit weniger durch die Wahl einer extremen Partei, als durch einen RĂŒckzug aus der Politik ausdrĂŒcken. Die Daten der reprĂ€sentativen Bevölkerungsumfrage zeigen in einigen Aspekten Unterschiede in bestimmten Wertorientierungen und im DemokratieverstĂ€ndnis der Ost- und der Westdeutschen. Daraus ergeben sich allerdings keine gravierenden Konsequenzen fĂŒr den demokratischen Prozess. In beiden Teilen Deutschlands fĂŒhren politische Unzufriedenheiten in aller Regel zur Wahl demokratischer Oppositionsparteien. Unzufriedenheit mit der Performanz des demokratischen Systems in Deutschland kann deshalb eher als Stimulus und weniger als Bedrohung der Demokratie interpretiert werden.
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