711 resultados para Political Science and International Relations


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La migración internacional está relacionada, en principio, con el movimiento de un grupo de personas a través de las fronteras nacionales y que implica la intención de desplazarse y permanecer en el lugar de destino , creando así vínculos de tipo comercial, económico, social y político. Sin embargo una subcategoría de análisis es la movilidad. De este flujo migratorio hacen parte aquellos movimientos de personas en las que la permanencia a largo plazo no es el objetivo fundamental, sino el desarrollo de una actividad concreta durante un periodo de tiempo determinado en el destino. Dentro de estos flujos se pueden mencionar la movilidad estudiantil, la movilidad de trabajadores calificados y empresarios, inversionistas y otros que son calificados por algunos como expatriados . La idea más fuerte para lograr materializar la movilidad internacional como parte del diseño de la política exterior de los Estados se basa en el hecho que la población que emigra a un nuevo destino encuentra un espacio laboral y profesional diferente en el cual desempeñarse, y es a partir de esto que existe la posibilidad de generar una homogenización de los patrones culturales ya que el intercambio de ideas, imágenes y conocimientos crea de inmediato un enlace y un impacto mucho más concreto entre los individuos originarios y las personas del Estado receptor.

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This entry discusses ‘immigration,’ which is the permanent movement of people across states, seen from the perspective of the receiving (rather than sending) states. The focus is on the relationship between immigration and states, a neglected topic in classic immigration research, but receiving more attention in recent scholarly literature. The entry discusses, in particular, some explanatory models of immigration policy and how the immigration experience has changed or reconfirmed the institution of citizenship.

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In this paper we discuss how an innovative audio-visual project was adopted to foster active, rather than declarative learning, in critical International Relations (IR). First, we explore the aesthetic turn in IR, to contrast this with forms of representation that have dominated IR scholarship. Second, we describe how students were asked to record short audio or video projects to explore their own insights through aesthetic and non-written formats. Third, we explain how these projects are understood to be deeply embedded in social science methodologies. We cite our inspiration from applying a personal sociological imagination, as a way to counterbalance a ‘marketised’ slant in higher education, in a global economy where students are often encouraged to consume, rather than produce knowledge. Finally, we draw conclusions in terms of deeper forms of student engagement leading to new ways of thinking and presenting new skills and new connections between theory and practice.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Williams, Mike, 'Why ideas matter in International Relations: Hans Morgenthau, Classical Realism, and the Moral Construction of Power Politics', International Organization (2004) 58(4) pp.633-665 RAE2008

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Kurki, M. (2007). Critical realism and causal analysis in international relations. Millennium: Journal of International Studies, 35 (2), 361-378. RAE2008

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Williams, Mike, Realist Tradition and the Limits of International Relations (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005), pp.ix+236 RAE2008

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Relations between political violence and child adjustment are matters of international concern. Past research demonstrates the significance of community, family, and child psychological processes in child adjustment, supporting study of interrelations between multiple social ecological factors and child adjustment in contexts of political violence. Testing a social ecological model, 300 mothers and their children (M = 12.28 years, SD = 1.77) from Catholic and Protestant working class neighborhoods in Belfast, Northern Ireland, completed measures or community discord, family relations, and children's regulatory processes (i.e., emotional security) and outcomes. Historical political violence in neighborhoods based on objective records (i.e., politically motivated deaths) were related to family members' reports of current sectarian antisocial behavior and nonsectarian antisocial behavior. Interparental conflict and parental monitoring and children's emotional security about both the community and family contributed to explanatory pathways for relations between sectarian antisocial behavior in communities and children's adjustment problems. The discussion evaluates support for social ecological models for relations between political violence and child adjustment and its implications for understanding relations in other parts of the world.