5 resultados para Punic wars
em Digital Peer Publishing
Resumo:
The transition of political power in former Yugoslavia and the wars that followed have led to the country's reassessment of the proper role of women in society, culture, nation, and family. Advocates of a new vision of nationalist womanhood assert that the continued existence of the entire country depends solely on women carrying out their reproductive and nurturing roles. This new envisioning clearly serves a political purpose, solely at the expense of the women's movement that has made significant strides in this nation. It is the purpose of this article to provide a brief historical overview of the development of the new idealized "mother of the nation" from a strengths-based social work perspective.
Resumo:
Die Verwendung europäischer Architektursettings in japanischen "Trick"-Filmen (anime) ist mehr als die bloße Adaption einer – aus asiatischer Perspektive – exotischen Kulisse. Populäre Medien vertreten keine kritische Positionen; sie sind bemüht, an Vorstellungswelten und Seherfahrungen ihrer Betrachter anzuknüpfen. Auf diese Weise gelesen, sagen Kopien und bewusste (Re-)Kombinationen europäischer Motive im japanischen Film eine Menge über die Assoziationen, die asiatische Betrachter mit bestimmten Phasen europäischer Geschichte verbinden. Doch auch Eigengesetzlichkeiten des "Trick"-Films als Medium dürfen nicht vernachlässigt werden. Wenig bekannte Motive aus der expressionistischen Architektur können beispielsweise dazu eingesetzt werden, einen bloßen Verfremdungseffekt zu erzielen. In subtileren Beispielen kann der Umweg über europäische Kulissen aber auch dazu dienen, Spannungen der jüngeren Geschichte Japans in einem verfremdeten Gewand zu verarbeiten.
Resumo:
Racial and ethnic violence takes many forms. Genocides, ethnic cleansing, pogroms, civil wars, and violent separatist movements are the most obvious and extreme expressions, but less organized violence such as rioting, and hate crimes by individuals or small groups are products of racial and ethnic conflict as well. Also, the distribution of criminal violence within societies, which may or may not be aimed at members of another group, is in some places a by-product of ongoing conflicts between superior and subordinated racial or ethnic groups. Although estimates of the number of deaths attributable to ethnic violence vary widely, range of eleven to twenty million given for the period between 1945 and the early 1990s show the gravity of this type of conflict (Williams 1994, 50). So it comes as no surprise that scholars have paid increasing attention to such conflicts over the last decades.
Resumo:
The majority of those living in the border region of Kenya, Sudan, and Uganda are pastoralists, whose livelihoods are dictated by the upkeep and size of their herds. Harsh environmental conditions force pastoralists to migrate in search of water and pasturelands during the dry season. With limited access to water and competing rights to land, inter-tribal conflict arises when pastoralists from one tribe enter the territory of another. The increased availability of small arms in the region from past wars increasingly makes ordinary clashes fatal. Governments in the region have responded with heavy-handed coercive disarmament operations. These have led to distrust and subsequent violent clashes between communities and security providers. This report reviews the scale, consequences of, and responses to the many pastoral conflicts, utilizing methodological tools such as key informant interviews, retrospective analy¬sis, and a thorough review of available literature.
Resumo:
Rather than discarding Clausewitz’s theory of war in response to the revolutionary changes in modern warfare, this article articulates a broader theory of war based on his concept of the “wondrous trinity,” identifying it as his true legacy. The author shows that the concept of trinitarian war attributed to Clausewitz by his critics, which seems to be applicable only to wars between states, is a caricature of Clausewitz’s theory. He goes on to develop Clausewitz’s theory that war is composed of the three tendencies of violence/force, fighting, and the affiliation of the combatants to a warring community. Each war can be analyzed as being composed of these three tendencies and their opposites.