4 resultados para Musical instruments--Arab countries
em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
This research investigates the Soviet Union’s role in guiding state-building processes of postcolonial Arab countries of the Middle East, leading them to adopt economic and political elements of the socialist-Leninist models of development. The widespread narrative depicts the Soviets as having failed to export communism in those states and, therefore, as having failed to bring them closer to Moscow’s sphere of influence and values. However, various Soviet archives suggest a different reality. As the Cold War burst forth, between the mid-1950s and mid-1960s, contacts between Soviet and Arab officials were not just incredibly frequent but they went to the core of all main issues of socio-economic development of these transforming countries: party politics, institution building, agrarian reforms, industrialisation, security sector reforms, etc. The research focuses on a period that may be labelled as ‘the launching phase’ of the Soviet Middle East policy, which established a long-lasting framework for the Soviet-Arab dialogue. It also places significant attention on the ‘personal dimension’ of such a dialogue, showing how Moscow’s influence went hand in hand with the ability of Soviet leaders and diplomats to establish relations of personal trust with postcolonial Arab élites. A selected number of Arab countries are examined: Egypt, Iraq and Syria. For each of these countries, a limited period of time will be taken into consideration, when Soviet influence reached its peak and state-building policies might have drawn from the Soviet model (for Egypt 1954-1958; for Iraq 1958-1963; for Syria 1961-1966). On the one hand, the analysis of specific case-studies will allow to investigate the relationship between Moscow and each of these new Arab regimes; on the other, such a large geographical scope will permit to grasp the elements and the objectives of the broader Soviet policy towards the Middle East region.
Resumo:
Il presente lavoro è il risultato di cinque anni di ricerca sulla performance rituale delle Nava Durgā del popolo newar a Bhaktapur (Nepal). Dal 1512, per circa nove mesi all'anno, gli uomini della casta inferiore Banmālā reincarnano le nove manifestazioni femminili della dea Durgā ed eseguono le danze in maschera. La performance della Nava Durgā è una pratica culturale molto complessa, composta da suoni, danze, processioni, momenti di venerazione (pūjā), rituali tantrici e momenti sacrificali. Gli aspetti musicali e teatrali della performance costituiscono il focus dell’indagine di questo studio. Dopo una descrizione analitica degli strumenti musicali utilizzati nella performance, alcuni elementi sonori vengono trascritti e analizzati mettendo in luce le caratteristiche tipiche della musica newar. I contenuti narrativi delle danze e il ciclo vitale delle Nava Durgā rispecchiano la vita hindu. La loro interpretazione viene realizzata in base alle osservazioni etnografiche; alcuni temi che costituiscono gli obiettivi dei devoti hindu (puruṣārtha) vengono esaminati attraverso l’approccio storico e quello etnografico, anche al fine di sottolineare il ruolo didascalico e formativo della performance. Un altro argomento discusso in questo lavoro consiste nell'identità dei danzatori Banmālā e quella del popolo newar in generale; questo aspetto è emerso in modo rilevante anche durante le fasi di mediatizzazione della performance delle Nava Durgā avvenute nel periodo del COVID-19. Da questo punto di vista, il presente lavoro costituisce un contributo alla diffusione della conoscenza della tradizione delle Nava Durgā; questo converge con l'obiettivo dei Banmālā di aumentare la visibilità della performance al fine di affermare la propria identità sia nel contesto nazionale che in quello internazionale.
Resumo:
The thesis focuses on the process of international openness of Transition Countries. This study provides a theoretical analysis based on reference literature, and an empirical analysis which is aimed at estimating some main effects of Foreign Direct Investment. Transition has represented a highly complex phenomenon, characterized by several aspects, whose interaction has shaped the developmental path of each country involved. Although the thesis focuses on economic issues it is outstanding to underline that Transition implies political, institutional, and even social deep changes, which must be taken into consideration in the general overview of the contex. The empirical part has been developed along two different ways: a country analysis and a firm analysis, thus allowing to widen the study and delve deeper into the use of econometric instruments. More specifically, in the first empirical stage both static (Fixed Effects) and dynamic (LSDV Corrected) methodologies have been implemented, whereas in the second stage the Cox Proportional Function has been chosen in order to handle with censored data.
Resumo:
In the last few years, a steadily increasing number of Latin American countries have been adopting policy assessment instruments and new governance structures for them, as part of their policymaking process. Even though the literature argues that these instruments serve, among other things, as tools for accountability, for this to be so, it is necessary to take into account the legal system, decision-making process, and regulatory relationships that exist in the adopting countries. This Thesis researches the policy assessment arrangements adopted and implemented in the Latin American region to understand why are these countries adopting and implementing tools for policy evaluation? Can this contribute towards regulatory accountability, and if so, in which conditions? The Thesis first analyzes the rationales that these countries might have to adopt these regulatory policy arrangements. It then studies the various tools used for policy assessment, paying attention to the scope of the assessments, the times and the stages on which regulations are assessed, referred to as the Policy Evaluation Cycle (PEC), as well as to the governance of these processes. The Thesis develops a framework where each of these components are organized and classified based on which goals or rationales they serve. This can assist countries on deciding how to implement their policy evaluation arrangements, to serve their own goals. Since all of the studied countries have presidential systems, this Thesis studies how regulations are made in this system, and the multiple needed delegations for policymaking, which results in various regulatory relationships. Thus, the desired accountability of policymakers towards their different forums makes relevant the adoption this agenda for regulatory accountability reasons. Bringing to together the literatures on public law, accountability and policy evaluation, this Thesis builds a framework for assessing the contribution towards accountability that each stage of the PEC might have in a specific regulatory relationship. The framework shows to which degree the stages, and the cycle as a whole, contribute towards accountability in specific relationships of a presidential constitutional system. The results evidence that even when a policy assessment structure might contribute towards accountability, this contribution is not absolute as it only operates in specific regulatory relationships, and even more, only in some stages of the PEC contributing at different degrees. This framework can be used by governments or regulatory agencies as an instrument to assess the contribution to accountability of their existing or potential regulatory policy structures in order to improve it.