6 resultados para F51 - International Conflicts

em QUB Research Portal - Research Directory and Institutional Repository for Queen's University Belfast


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Whilst Muriel Rukeyser's poetic affinity with Walt Whitman is generally acknowledged, the close relation of her work and poetic sensibility to the thought and writing of Herman Melville has somehow gone relatively unnoticed, and almost wholly unexamined. In 1918, Van Wyck Brooks called for the creation of a usable past that would energize America by recasting its cultural tradition. His plea addressed the need to rebuild a national heritage via the rediscovery of culturally great figures. By the late 1930s, many scholars and writers had answered the call, and the new discipline of American studies was beginning to take shape, aided by a reclamation of one of the country's greatest, most neglected, writers Herman Melville. This was also the period in which Rukeyser came of age; a time when political and international conflicts and economic crises generated both the stark, documentary representation of present social realities and the drive to retrieve or reconstruct a more golden age that might mobilize a dislocated nation. The following article examines the importance of Melville to Rukeyser's work, and situates her within the Melville revival as an important figure in the movement throughout the first half of the twentieth century to reconstruct an American cultural character.

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How can interlocking directorates cause financial instability for universal banks? A detailed history of the Rotterdamsche Bankvereeninging in the 1920s answers this question in a case study. This large commercial bank adopted a new German-style universal banking business model from the early 1910s, sharing directors with the firms it financed as a means of controlling its interests. Then, in 1924, it required assistance from the Dutch state in order to survive a bank run brought on by public concerns over its close ties with Mller & Co., a trading conglomerate that suffered badly in the economic downturn of the early 1920s. Using a new narrative history combined with an interpretive model, this article shows how the interlocking directorates between the bank and this major client, and in particular the direction of influence of these interlocks, resulted in a conflict of interest that could not be easily overcome.

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This report concerns the provisions and practices on betting-related match fixing in sports<br/>within the 28 Member States. Carried out in late 2013/early 2014, respondents in each Member<br/>State reported on that states gambling-related provisions in respect of football and tennis and<br/>(in each country) a third sport determined on the basis of either its popularity (in terms of<br/>participation or television viewing) or the existence of betting-related scandals in that sport<br/>within that particular jurisdiction. Those reports helped the authors to compare the Member<br/>States regulatory and self-regulatory frameworks relating to risk assessment and conflict of<br/>interest management, with a view to indicating areas of best practice, identifying particularly<br/>good legislative frameworks and highlighting areas where change was either desirable or<br/>necessary. While some individual Member States have legislation which might provide<br/>templates that others could adapt for their own use, the authors were not convinced that more<br/>law, whether at the national or European level, was desirable. Rather, more effective<br/>cooperation among the stakeholders was identified as being more likely to provide tangible<br/>benefits than would new legal frameworks.

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Three sources of urban conflicts are identified: (1) changing state-city relationships; (2) the relationship between the dynamics of capitalist development and cities and (3) the specific dynamics of urban life and the urban environment where the city itself is seen as a causal variable. Two sets of questions cross-cut all three strands. The first addresses how violent conflicts can be regulated, transformed and rendered into more constructive non-violent conflicts through the processes of urban civil society. The second concerns how, why, and where urban conflicts turn violent and with what consequences. In summary cities now rival states as arenas and stakes in political conflict and urban conflicts have increasing transnational and transcultural salience which underlines the necessity for sustained comparative analyis

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Complementarity has been extolled as the pioneering way for the International Criminal Court (ICC) to navigate the difficulties of state sovereignty when investigating and prosecuting international crimes. Victims have often been held up to justify and legitimise the work of the ICC and states complementing the Court through domestic processes. This article examines how Uganda has developed its laws, legal procedure, and accountability for international crimes over the past decade. This has culminated in the trial of Thomas Kwoyelo, which after five years of proceedings, has yet to move to the trial phase, due to the issue of an amnesty. While there has been a profusion of provisions to allow victims to participate, avail of protection measures and reparations, in practice very little has changed for them. This article highlights the dangers of complementarity being the sole solution to protracted conflicts, in particular the realisation of victims rights.