300 resultados para Morals
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A work on morals, completed on 25 Safer 973 AH [21 Sept. 1565 AD], while the author was serving as judge in Damascus. First section is on personnal morals, second on family morals and third on political morals and art of governance.
Resumo:
The impacts of WTO on women’s labour rights in the developing countries have been raised to the international agenda by various nongovernmental organizations. On the one hand it is assumed that international trade policies are gender neutral. On the other hand a number of authors hold the view that the negative impacts of WTO policies are more pronounced on female than male workers. This paper takes a critical look at these claims. It argues that the impact of the WTO system, the driving force of trade liberalization, on women’s labour rights in the developing countries is a complicated issue, because the effects have been both negative and positive. In support of this claim, this paper first briefly reviews the international framework for the protection of women’s labour rights. Next, the WTO agreements and policies are analysed insofar as they are relevant for the protection of women’s labour rights. The analysis covers, for example, the use of the trade policy review mechanism and restrictions of trade on grounds of violation of public morals.. Finally, a case study is conducted on the situation of female workers in Bangladesh and Pakistan, countries that have recently undergone a liberalization of trade in the textiles and clothing sectors. It is concluded that the increase of international trade in the developing countries has created many work opportunities for women, helped them to become more independent and allowed them to participate in the society more actively. However, it is at the same time posited that in order to comply with its own objectives of raising standards of living and full employment, the WTO should engage itself in active policies to overcome the negative aspects of trade on female workers in the developing countries.
Resumo:
Since Vladimir Putin returned to the Kremlin as President in May 2012, the Russian system of power has become increasingly authoritarian, and has evolved towards a model of extremely personalised rule that derives its legitimacy from aggressive decisions in internal and foreign policy, escalates the use of force, and interferes increasingly assertively in the spheres of politics, history, ideology or even public morals. Putin’s power now rests on charismatic legitimacy to a much greater extent than it did during his first two presidential terms; currently the President is presented not only as an effective leader, but also as the sole guarantor of Russia’s stability and integrity. After 15 years of Putin’s rule, Russia’s economic model based on revenue from energy resources has exhausted its potential, and the country has no new model that could ensure continued growth for the economy. The Putinist system of power is starting to show symptoms of agony – it has been unable to generate new development projects, and has been compensating for its ongoing degradation by escalating repression and the use of force. However, this is not equivalent to its imminent collapse.
Resumo:
"The four versions of the Cursor are from 1. Cotton ms. Vesp. A3 in the ... British Museum; 2. Fairfax ms. 14 in the Bodleian Library; 3. Ms. Theol. 107 in the Göttingen University Library; 4, Ms. R. 3. 8 in the library of Trinity College, Cambridge; supplemented by mss. Laud 416, Cotton Galba E9, and mss. in the College of Arms, the Edinburgh College of Physicians, and the Bedford Library."
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Cover title.
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Contains also Minutes of Vermont annual conference 1845, Catalobue 1843, 44, 45 of Newbury seminary, Benefit and danger of society: an address to the ladies' mutual improvement association of Newbury seminary, 1845. A reformation of morals practicable indispensable: a sermon by L. Beecher, 1814.
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Includes first-fifth reports and appendices.
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Later editions have title: Draper̓s self culture.
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Bread and the newspaper.--My hunt after "the captain."--The inevitable trail.--The physiology of walking.--The seasons.--The human body and it's management.--Cinders from the ashes.--Mechanism in thought and morals.--The physiology of versification.--Crime and automatism.--Jonathan Edwards.--The pulpit and the pew.
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George Eliot.--Nathaniel Hawthorne.--Thomas Hardy.--George MacDonald and the Scottish school.--Mark Rutherford.
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The authority of criticism.--Apropos of Shelley.--Literature and morals.--The nature of literature.--On translating Horace.--The Byron revival. --Teaching the spirit of literature.--Mr. Howells and romanticism.--Tennyson and Musset once more.
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Added title page, engraved: The complete works of Hannah More.
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Bread and the newspaper.--My hunt after "the captain."--The inevitable trail.--The physiology of walking.--The seasons.--The human body and it's management.--Cinders from the ashes.--Mechanism on thought and morals.--The physiology of versification.--Crime and automatism.--Jonatahan Edwards.--The pulpit and the pew.
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Mostly reprinted from various sources.
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First published at the Claredon Press, Oxford, 1870.