884 resultados para Social ethics -- India


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Se comenta el programa de una ONG, establecida en ciudades de la India, cuya actividad se centra en la educación social de los niños por medio del deporte. Se reseñan los inconvenientes que tienen los niños indios para acceder a la educación, como consecuencia de la pobreza, la religión y las tradiciones. Se hace una breve reseña sobre la huelga de hambre emprendida por dos españoles pertenecientes a la ONG, debido a la extorsión del gobierno indio, que ha robado terrenos para especular.

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Great possessions. - Crime and punishment. - Christianity a danger to the state. - The salt of the earth. - The rights of majorities. - Discreditable conduct. - What is womanly? - Use and ornament. - Art and Citizenship. - Conscious and unconscious immortality.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Some of the addresses have appeared in the International journal of ethics, the National review and the Contemporary review.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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"The following lectures have been prepared for delivery, in March, 1902, before the students of the Divinity School of Yale University, upon the Lyman Beecher Foundation"--Pref.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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[v. 1. General ethics] tr. from the Danish by C. Spence.--[v. 2] Special part: pt. 1, Individual ethics, tr. from the author's German ed. by William Affleck; pt. 2, Social ethics, tr. from the author's German ed. by Sophia Taylor.

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The purposes of this research are: (1) to compare the similarides and differences in intra-group and inter-group social rules of hospital doctors and nurses; (2) to compare rule following, rule breaking & tolerance of rule breaking of doctors and nurses with respect to different work reladonships. Professional discipline and idendficadon, ingroup-outgroup membership and reladve status were used as predictors. In-depth interview of 20 doctors and 20 nurses were conducted to elicit social rules and goals. In the second study, 30 rules and 10 goals with high consensus were selected from study one and developed into a quesdonnaire which measured their applicadon to four different work reladonships, namely, padents, peers, seniors and doctors/nurses. Forty-three doctors and one hundred and seven nurses completed this questionnaire. In the third study, the frequency and goals of violation and tolerance of violation of five different social rules were measured. One hundred and thirty-six doctors and one hundred and sixty-six nurses completed the questionnaire.

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Reporters sans frontiéres (RSF) has repeatedly declared Asia to be the most demanding continent for journalists and their news organizations to operate in, and in some countries, even simply to survive in. The many reports issued by RSF and other global agencies regularly show Asia to be the region in which the largest number of murders of journalists occur per year, even when Asian–Arabic states and Central Asia are not included in the definition of ‘Asia’. The reports describe numerous physical, legal and economic threats as well as serious political repression and restrictions that journalists face as they attempt to function as watch-dogs, agenda-setters and gate-keepers for their societies. The statistics and examples provided within these reports, however, do not provide the full picture. Most Asian nations also host vibrant media cultures in which journalists play an important role in supporting social and democratic processes and activities. This chapter outlines the political and economic influences on Asian journalism; the impact of new technologies; the debates about philosophies such as 'development journalism', 'peace journalism' and 'Asian values'; and the influence of the so-called 'envelope culture' or practices of gift-giving and bribery that pervade journalism in some countries. To illustrate how these principles affect journalists' practice, the chapter presents a comparison of the starkly contrasting situations in India versus North Korea (Democratic People's Republic of Korea). The chapter also describes issues affecting countries as far afield as China to Kazakhstan, including a short case study of journalism during the so-called Saffron Revolution in Burma in 2007. The chapter concludes with suggestions about how training and aid for the Asian should be contextualized to take into account the specific cultural, economic and political factors that shape and limit the media’s performance, and how journalists might be best placed to negotiate around them. Such training needs to be sensitive to valid variations in perceptions of what kind of governance and journalism best serves development, without serving politically motivated rhetoric.