951 resultados para Democracy Governance
Resumo:
O presente estudo aborda questões como a democracia, participativa e representativa, governança, capital social e associativismo. O seu objetivo é o de perceber de que forma o associativismo, enquanto elemento de concentração de capital social, e governança enquanto mecanismo de ações participadas, podem levar ao desenvolvimento sustentável, e a uma melhor implementação da democracia. De que forma o associativismo influenciou o desenvolvimento, neste caso em particular, do município de Castelo Branco. Com base nesse objetivo foram realizadas entrevistas a várias associações do município e ao poder local, nomeadamente a três Juntas de Freguesia e à Câmara Municipal para tentar perceber se existe um modelo de governança implementado no município. Se as associações enquanto espaços de produção de capital social têm ou não uma palavra, um espaço de opinião, no que refere ao desenvolvimento da cidade nos diversos campos, social, económico, urbano, etc. Tentar compreender os motivos que levaram à criação dessas associações, sejam elas comerciais, empresariais ou recreativas, e qual o seu contributo para o processo de desenvolvimento local, apurando não só os seus níveis de atividade, mas também o seu contributo para o desenvolvimento local e com que intuito surgiram, uma vez que a participação nas associações, a um nível individual, pode ser visto como um incentivo à identificação e seleção de respostas a problemas pessoais, que ao serem transpostos para a esfera pública, os problemas vividos pelos indivíduos na esfera privada, incentivam a participação coletiva numa ação organizada visando o bem comum e a resolução de problemas de ordem social.
Resumo:
En la Unión Europea la relación entre el desarrollo e identidad territorial permite fortalecer la gobernanza democrática en el proceso de ampliación en la medida en que las estrategias de cohesión territorial estén acompañadas por mecanismos de cooperación entre el gobierno local y las instituciones supranacionales que permitan la participación activa del ciudadano en dichos procesos.
Resumo:
El propósito de esta monografía consiste en analizar el discurso de la Unión Europea en materia de Derechos Humanos y Democracia y su importancia en el proceso de ampliación de la Organización. Se estudia y explica el criterio de condicionalidad del discurso como una medida preventiva y/o sancionatoria para la entrada de Turquía a la UE, estableciendo que dicho discurso es un factor determinante en las negociaciones entre la UE y Turquía. Para ésto, se analiza el discurso europeo a partir del análisis del discurso ideológico, de Teun Van Dijk, y el discurso de la condicionalidad, de Maria del Carmen Muñoz Rodríguez, lo cual permite hacer un estudio detallado de la incidencia del discurso de la UE en el proceso de negociación de la adhesión de Turquía a la Unión.
Resumo:
Incluye bibliografía
Resumo:
Seven endemic governance problems are shown to be currently present in governments around the globe and at any level of government as well (for example municipal, federal). These problems have their roots traced back through more than two thousand years of political, specifically ‘democratic’, history. The evidence shows that accountability, transparency, corruption, representation, campaigning methods, constitutionalism and long-term goals were problematic for the ancient Athenians as well as modern international democratisation efforts encompassing every major global region. Why then, given the extended time period humans have had to deal with these problems, are they still present? At least part of the answer to this question is that philosophers, academics and NGOs as well as MNOs have only approached these endemic problems in a piecemeal manner with a skewed perspective on democracy. Their works have also been subject to the ebbs and flows of human history which essentially started and stopped periods of thinking. In order to approach the investigation of endemic problems in relation to democracy (as the overall quest of this thesis was to generate prescriptive results for the improvement of democratic government), it was necessary to delineate what exactly is being written about when using the term ‘democracy’. It is common knowledge that democracy has no one specific definition or practice, even though scholars and philosophers have been attempting to create a definition for generations. What is currently evident, is that scholars are not approaching democracy in an overly simplified manner (that is, it is government for the people, by the people) but, rather, are seeking the commonalities that democracies share, in other words, those items which are common to all things democratic. Following that specific line of investigation, the major practiced and theoretical versions of democracy were thematically analysed. After that, their themes were collapsed into larger categories, at which point the larger categories were comparatively analysed with the practiced and theoretical versions of democracy. Four democratic ‘particles’ (selecting officials, law, equality and communication) were seen to be present in all practiced and theoretical democratic styles. The democratic particles fused with a unique investigative perspective and in-depth political study created a solid conceptualisation of democracy. As such, it is argued that democracy is an ever-present element of any state government, ‘democratic’ or not, and the particles are the bodies which comprise the democratic element. Frequency- and proximity-based analyses showed that democratic particles are related to endemic problems in international democratisation discourse. The linkages between democratic particles and endemic problems were also evident during the thematic analysis as well historical review. This ultimately led to the viewpoint that if endemic problems are mitigated the act may improve democratic particles which might strengthen the element of democracy in the governing apparatus of any state. Such may actively minimise or wholly displace inefficient forms of government, leading to a government specifically tailored to the population it orders. Once the theoretical and empirical goals were attained, this thesis provided some prescriptive measures which government, civil society, academics, professionals and/or active citizens can use to mitigate endemic problems (in any country and at any level of government) so as to improve the human condition via better democratic government.
Governance and Democracy in Northern Ireland: the Voluntary and Community Sector after the Agreement
Resumo:
Book Review: Emerson, Peter, Defining Democracy: Voting Procedures in Decision-making, Elections and
Governance (2nd edn), Springer, London, 2012,