Results for ' protectionism'

155 found
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  1.  26
    Aesthetic Protectionism.S. Godlovitch - 1989 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 6 (2):171-180.
    ABSTRACT Aesthetic protectionists think nature worth preserving and protecting from harm on aesthetic rather than moral grounds. Their outlook can be compared with the drive to shelter and sustain artworks. As such, protectionists seem rather like curators. However, this kind of attention to natural objects leads to a minimisation of the significance of the naturalness of those objects. This raises questions about the protectionist's real regard for nature. By examining what in nature is aesthetically worthy of protection, and then asking (...)
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  2.  22
    From protectionism to inclusion: A New Zealand perspective on health‐related research involving adults incapable of giving informed consent.Alison Douglass & Angela Ballantyne - 2018 - Bioethics 33 (3):384-392.
    The revision of the Council of International Organizations of Medical Sciences (CIOMS) International ethical guidelines for health‐related research (2016) heralds a paradigm shift from the ‘protectionist’ policies that emerged following historical research atrocities of the 20th century, towards a more nuanced and inclusive approach to research participation. Adopting this modified approach will enable countries to secure the benefits of research for individuals and for society as a whole, while at the same time minimizing the potential for exploitation and research‐related harms. (...)
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  3.  18
    The Protectionist Purpose of Law: A Moral Case from the Biblical Covenant with Noah.David VanDrunen - 2015 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 35 (2):101-117.
    Political and legal theorists sometimes assign attempts to define the purpose of law and government into one of two categories: protectionism indicates that law and government should protect people from the violation of their rights while perfectionism indicates that law and government should also actively promote virtue in the human community. In this essay I draw primarily from the biblical covenant with Noah, supplemented with other biblical and moral-theological considerations. I argue that protectionism, contrary to common assumptions, need (...)
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  4.  41
    Histories of mistrust and protectionism: Disadvantaged minority groups and human-subject research policies.Justin M. List - 2005 - American Journal of Bioethics 5 (1):53 – 56.
    Rosamond Rhodes' evaluation of modern American research ethics emphasizes a need to shift from a protectionist understanding of human subjects to one that focuses more on the conduct of research in...
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  5. Defending Aesthetic Protectionism.Ned Hettinger - 2016 - In David Schmidtz (ed.), Philosophy: Environmental Ethics. Macmillan. pp. 287-308.
    Aesthetic reasons should be significant factors in justifying decisions about both natural and humanized environments. Far from being trivial or mere tools to find serious considerations, aesthetic rationales are necessary for appropriate environmental protection. Aesthetic responses to environments should be construed broadly to include cognitive, expressive, and sense-of-place dimensions. Aesthetic justifications for environmental protection go beyond shallow and deep anthropocentric rationales and involve direct appeal to environmental aesthetic merit. Although nature is not aesthetically positive in all dimensions, natural beauty is (...)
     
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  6.  29
    Fairness in Trade and Protectionist Policies: some Reflections.Sylvie Loriaux - 2018 - Archiv Fuer Rechts Und Sozialphilosphie 104 (3):346-361.
    n spite of their divergences, global justice thinkers tend to agree that fairness in international trade requires the removal of trade barriers and hence of protectionist measures, especially on the part of rich countries. Behind this agreement, we find different kinds of considerations, some of which related to the idea that trade liberalisation is not genuinely, or at least not wrongfully, harming members of rich countries. My main purpose in this paper is to examine this idea in more detail and (...)
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  7.  31
    Protectionism and the New Research Imperative in Pediatric AIDS.Terrence F. Ackerman - 1990 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 12 (5):1.
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  8.  5
    The Protectionist (Interventionist) Economic Model and the Liberal Economic Model in Peru: 1961-2021.J. Adolfo Hinojosa Pérez - forthcoming - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture:484-499.
    The objective of this research is to conduct a comparative analysis of the two models of growth and development that were applied in Peru over the past six decades (1961-2021). The objective is to conduct a comparative analysis of the Import Substitution Model (ISM) and the Liberal Model (LM), to determine which of these models has demonstrated superior performance in terms of economic growth and social welfare for the country. In this instance, the documentary and systematic review of the material (...)
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  9.  10
    Naturalism and protectionism in the study of religions.Juraj Franek - 2020 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    How should we study religion? Must we be religious ourselves to truly understand it? Do we study religion to advance our knowledge, or should the study of religions help to reintroduce the sacred into our increasingly secularized world? Juraj Franek argues that the study of religion has long been split into two competing paradigms: reductive (naturalist) and non-reductive (protectionist). While the naturalistic approach seems to run the risk of explaining religious phenomena away, the protectionist approach appears to risk falling short (...)
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  10.  13
    Protectionism or Free Trade. Actuality of Johann Gottlieb Fichte's Closed Commercial State.Aneli Dragojević Mijatović - 2018 - Filozofska Istrazivanja 38 (3):459-477.
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  11.  23
    (1 other version)Professional Protectionism Rides Again.Judith P. Swazey - 1980 - Hastings Center Report 10 (2):18-19.
  12.  21
    Robbers and Incendiaries: Protectionism Organizes at the Harrisburg Convention of 1827.W. Kesler Jackson - 2010 - Libertarian Papers 2:21.
    Though lobbying for federal money may seem like business as usual today–with billions of dollars spent annually by companies, labor unions, and other organizations in an effort to win a piece of what has become an enormous federal pie–this was not always the case in the United States. An all-but-forgotten event, the Harrisburg Convention of 1827, may have been one of the key historical turning points in this regard, an opening of a floodgate that would transform the role of the (...)
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  13.  15
    Sophisms of the protectionists.Frederic Bastiat - unknown
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  14.  66
    Bentham on Spanish Protectionism.Pedro Schwartz & Carlos Rodriguez Braun - 1992 - Utilitas 4 (1):121.
    In 1821, John Bowring published, probably with only his own additions, a manuscript of Bentham's under the title of Observations on the restrictive and prohibitory commercial system: especially with a reference to the Decree of the Spanish Cortes of July 1820. It seems likely that Bentham's text was originally conceived as an appendix to a work that Bentham never published, ‘Rid Yourselves of Ultramaria’, a commentary on Spanish colonization.
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  15. The Political Power of Economic Ideas: Protectionism in Turn of the Century America.Peter H. Bent - 2015 - Economic Thought 4 (2):68.
    One of the main economic debates taking place in late-nineteenth and early-twentieth-century America was between supporters of protectionism and advocates of free-trade policies. Protectionists won this debate, as the 1897 Dingley Tariff raised tariff rates to record highs. An analysis of this outcome highlights the overlapping interests of Republican politicians and business groups. Both of these groups endorsed particular economic arguments in favour of protectionism. Contemporary studies by academic economists informed the debates surrounding protectionist policies at this time, (...)
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  16.  26
    Against Over-Protectionism: Riskier Decisions Require Clearer Evidence of Capacity But Don’t Call for Stricter Criteria.Paul S. Appelbaum & Manuel Trachsel - 2022 - American Journal of Bioethics 22 (10):53-55.
    In their article, Pickering, Newton-Howes, and Young argue that “a person who is considering or has already made a decision which appears seriously harmful to that person should in some case...
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  17.  27
    European technological protectionism and the risk of moral isolationism: The case of quantum technology development.Clare Shelley-Egan & Pieter Vermaas - 2024 - Journal of Responsible Technology 18 (C):100084.
  18.  15
    Free trade for protectionists: a customs officer’s struggle to establish Adam Smith’s economic thought in Sweden.Anna Knutsson - 2022 - Intellectual History Review 32 (2):281-297.
    Adam Smith was quickly gaining fame in northern Europe in the late eighteenth century. His most famous work, An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (1776), was translated in...
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  19.  18
    How Over-Protectionism Can Evidence Unethical Outcomes: Examples from South Africa.Jerome Amir Singh - 2006 - Research Ethics 2 (2):63-66.
    South Africa has adopted a paternalistic stance on the minimum age of enrolment for HIV vaccine trials, and on the level of compensation for trial participants. Whilst this approach has presumably been taken to protect the interests of research participants an over-protective approach, however well-intended, does not always serve the interests of the particularly vulnerable. It will be argued that an inclusive approach, based on the principles of beneficence and justice, can better guide research in such a way that the (...)
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  20.  62
    Looking at "Protectionism".Stephen Bostock - 2007 - Society and Animals 15 (2):206-208.
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  21.  14
    Has Backsliding Replaced Federal Protectionism?E. L. Pattullo - 1985 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 7 (3):10.
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  22.  10
    (1 other version)Book Review: The New Protectionism: Protecting the Future against Free Trade. [REVIEW]Tim Cooper - 1995 - Environmental Values 4 (1):81-82.
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  23. Mass Culture and World Culture: On "Americanisation" and the Politics of Cultural Protectionism.Gregory Claeys - 1986 - Diogenes 34 (136):70-97.
    The debate over the influence of American culture upon Europe and the rest of the world is hardly new. Discussions about the cultural effects of video recorders, satellite broadcasting, cable television and their likely content are only the latest episode in a long-running drama in which the young and aggressive culture of America bludgeons the elderly culture of old Europe (or correspondingly overruns and wipes out the quaint but ill-armed ethnic cultures of the less-developed world, dragging the natives from coconuts (...)
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  24.  6
    Book Review: The New Protectionism: Protecting The Future against Free Trade. [REVIEW]J. Quentin Merritt - 1998 - Environmental Values 7 (1):120-122.
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  25. The Animal Ethics of Temple Grandin: A Protectionist Analysis.Andy Lamey - 2019 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics (1):1-22.
    This article brings animal protection theory to bear on Temple Grandin’s work, in her capacity both as a designer of slaughter facilities and as an advocate for omnivorism. Animal protection is a better term for what is often termed animal rights, given that many of the theories grouped under the animal rights label do not extend the concept of rights to animals. I outline the nature of Grandin’s system of humane slaughter as it pertains to cattle. I then outline four (...)
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  26.  30
    Goodbye to All That The End of Moderate Protectionism in Human Subjects Research.Jonathan D. Moreno - 2001 - Hastings Center Report 31 (3):9-17.
    Federal policies on human subjects research have performed a near‐about face. In the 1970s, policies were motivated chiefly by a belief that subjects needed protection from the harms and risks of research. Now the driving concern is that patients, and the populations they represent, need access to the benefits of research.
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  27.  42
    A Commentary on Peter Bent's ‘The Political Power of Economic Ideas: Protectionism in Turn of the Century America’.Eithne Murphy - 2015 - Economic Thought 4 (2):80.
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  28.  41
    Reassessing Marshall's Producers' Surplus: a Case for Protectionism.Daniel Linotte - 2018 - Economic Thought 7 (1):50.
    The rationale for liberal economic policies refers inter alia to the so-called producer and consumer surpluses, namely welfare concepts which were proposed by Alfred Marshall in his seminal work Principles of Economics, first published in 1890. In the case of trade policy, relying on surpluses and referring to the 'small country case', it is recommended to remove tariff barriers imposed on the imports of commodities because it should increase welfare and, in theory at least, the losers of such a trade (...)
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  29.  22
    The Case Against Liberal Federalism and Protectionism -- Reply to Johnstone.Paul Piccone - 1992 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1992 (93):27-42.
  30.  65
    Balancing liberation and protection: A moderate approach to adolescent health care decision-making.Andy Piker - 2011 - Bioethics 25 (4):202-208.
    In this paper I examine the debate between ‘protectionists’ and ‘liberationists’ concerning the appropriate role of minors in decision-making about their health care, focusing particularly on disagreements between the two sides regarding adolescents. Protectionists advocate a more traditional, paternalistic approach in which minors have relatively little input into the healthcare decision-making process, and decisions are made for them by parents or other adults, guided by a commitment to the patient's best interests. Liberationists, on the other hand, argue in favour of (...)
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  31. In Their Best Interest?: The Case Against Equal Rights for Children.Laura Martha Purdy - 1992 - Cornell University Press.
    Proponents of children's liberation (CL) argue that there are no morally relevant differences between children and adults. Consequently, special protective laws that limit children's freedom are unjustified, and should be abolished. Protectionists reject the premise of this argument, and hence also the conclusion. Proponents of CL mostly fix upon the capacity for instrumental reasoning as the criterion that should separate autonomous from non-autonomous individuals. I argue that most children are substantially worse at instrumental reasoning than most adults, and although drawing (...)
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  32.  30
    Technology, Theology, and Spirituality in the Digital Age.Antje Jackelén - 2021 - Zygon 56 (1):6-18.
    Digitalization and the development of Artificial Intelligence (AI) will bring about substantial changes in all aspects of life. This happens in a world marked by the poisonous synergy of five Ps, polarization, populism, protectionism, post‐truth, patriarchy, as well as an ambiguous interplay of secularization and new visibility of religion.If development of AI is to be beneficial for people and planet a number of challenges must be met. In this regard, religion‐and‐science dialogue needs improvement in making things not only intellectually (...)
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  33.  39
    Paradoxes of populism during the pandemic.Rogers Brubaker - 2021 - Thesis Eleven 164 (1):73-87.
    Populist protests against Coronavirus-related restrictions in the US appear paradoxical in three respects. Populism is generally hostile to expertise, yet it has flourished at a moment when expertise has seemed more indispensable than ever. Populism thrives on crisis and indeed often depends on fabricating a sense of crisis, yet it has accused mainstream politicians and media of overblowing and even inventing the Corona crisis. Populism, finally, is ordinarily protectionist, yet it has turned anti-protectionist during the pandemic and challenged the allegedly (...)
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  34.  39
    China’s policy environment toward foreign companies: implications to high-tech sectors.Erja Kettunen - 2014 - AI and Society 29 (3):403-413.
    The paper discusses the Chinese policy environment as regards the experiences of foreign firms in China. In particular, the study focuses on the changes in China’s policies toward foreign-invested firms and the companies’ perceptions of protectionism of the Chinese regulatory environment. Theoretically, the paper reflects approaches in international political economy and business studies on the bargaining relations between host states and firms, and institutional perspective on business strategy that focuses on the dynamic interaction between organizations and their institutional environment. (...)
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  35.  71
    Fairness in International Trade and Investment: North American Perspectives. [REVIEW]Frederick Bird, Thomas Vance & Peter Woolstencroft - 2009 - Journal of Business Ethics 84 (S3):405 - 425.
    This article reviews the practices and differing sets of attitudes North Americans have taken with respect to fairness in international trade and proposes a set of common considerations for ongoing debates about these matters. After reviewing the asymmetrical relations between Canada, the United States, and Mexico and the impact of multilateral trade agreements on bilateral trade between these countries, the article looks at four typical normative views with respect to trade held by North Americans. These views variously emphasize concerns for (...)
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  36. (1 other version)The Relevance of Speciesism to Life Sciences Practices.Roger Wertheimer - 2007 - Journal of Philosophical Research 32 (9999):27-38.
    Animal protectionists condemn speciesism for motivating the practices protectionists condemn. This misconceives both speciesism and the morality condoning those practices. Actually, animal protectionists can be and generally are speciesists. The specifically speciesist aspects of people’s beliefs are in principle compatible with all but the most radical protectionist proposals. Humanity’s speciesism is an inclusivist ideal encompassing all human beings, not an exclusionary ethos opposing moral concern for nonhumans. Anti-speciesist rhetoric is akin to anti-racist rhetoric that condemned racists for regarding people as (...)
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  37.  13
    Liberal bioethics and contested surgeries.David DeGrazia - 2004 - Hastings Center Report 34 (2):3.
    Arthur Franks's consumer protectionist bioethics focus on the mainstream bioethical offshoot of modern liberalism that focuses on risks and benefits, adequate disclosure, and the consumer's sovereign choice. On the other hand, Socratic bioethics ask questions about the good life and its relation to health that takes seriously the effects of someone's choice on the choices open to others. Degrazia expounds on Franks views on liberal bioethics and Socratic approach on bioethics.
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  38.  47
    Japan's New Agricultural Trade Policy and Electoral Reform: 'Agricultural Policy in an Offensive Posture [ seme no nosei]'.Hironori Sasada - 2008 - Japanese Journal of Political Science 9 (2):121-144.
    The Japanese government maintained protectionist agricultural policies for several decades after the end of World War II. However, it recently introduced a new policy that aims at promoting the export of agricultural products to overseas markets. Agricultural export promotion policy is fundamentally different from traditional agricultural trade policies, as it focuses primarily on the promotion of competitiveness of Japanese agriculture rather than protection of inefficient farmers. This paper tries to explain this intriguing development in Japanese agricultural trade policy by focusing (...)
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  39. What Will Consumers Pay for Social Product Features?Pat Auger, Paul Burke, Timothy M. Devinney & Jordan J. Louviere - 2003 - Journal of Business Ethics 42 (3):281 - 304.
    The importance of ethical consumerism to many companies worldwide has increased dramatically in recent years. Ethical consumerism encompasses the importance of non-traditional and social components of a company's products and business process to strategic success - such as environmental protectionism, child labor practices and so on. The present paper utilizes a random utility theoretic experimental design to provide estimates of the relative value selected consumers place on the social features of products.
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  40. New nature narratives. Landscape hermeneutics and environmental ethics.M. Drenthen - 2013 - In Forrest Clingerman, Brian Treanor, Martin Drenthen & David Utsler (eds.), Interpreting Nature. Fordham University Press. pp. 225-241.
    In this paper, I seek to provide building blocks for a reconciliation of the ethical care for heritage protection and nature restoration ethics. It will do so, by introducing a hermeneutic landscape philosophy that takes landscape as a multi-layered “text” in need of interpretation, and place identities as build upon certain readings of the landscape. I will argue that from a hermeneutic perspective, both approaches appear to complement each other. Renaturing presents a valuable correction to the anthropocentrism of many European (...)
     
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  41.  45
    IRBs and the Protection-Inclusion Dilemma: Finding a Balance.Phoebe Friesen, Luke Gelinas, Aaron Kirby, David H. Strauss & Barbara E. Bierer - 2022 - American Journal of Bioethics 23 (6):75-88.
    Institutional review boards, tasked with facilitating ethical research, are often pulled in competing directions. In what we call the protection-inclusion dilemma, we acknowledge the tensions IRBs face in aiming to both protect potential research participants from harm and include under-represented populations in research. In this manuscript, we examine the history of protectionism that has dominated research ethics oversight in the United States, as well as two responses to such protectionism: inclusion initiatives and critiques of the term vulnerability. We (...)
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  42.  97
    An Absurd Tax on our Fellow Citizens: The Ethics of Rent Seeking in the Market Failures (or Self-Regulation) Approach.Peter Martin Jaworski - 2014 - Journal of Business Ethics 121 (3):1-10.
    Joseph Heath lumps in quotas and protectionist measures with cartelization, taking advantage of information asymmetries, seeking a monopoly position, and so on, as all instances of behavior that can lead to market failures in his market failures approach to business ethics. The problem is that this kind of rent and rent seeking, when they fail to deliver desirable outcomes, are better described as government failure. I suggest that this means we will have to expand Heath’s framework to a market and (...)
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  43. The Ethics of Aid and Trade: U.S. Food Policy, Foreign Competition, and the Social Contract.Paul B. Thompson - 1992 - Cambridge University Press.
    The traditional military-territorial model of the nation state defines international duties in terms of protecting citizens' property from foreign threats. In this 1992 book about the principles of the US agricultural policy and foreign aid, Professor Thompson replaces this model with the notion of the trading state that sees its role in terms of the establishment of international institutions that stabilize and facilitate cultural and intellectual, as well as commercial, exchanges between nations. The argument focuses on protectionist challenges to foreign (...)
     
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  44. Understanding Speciesism -2005.Roger Wertheimer - manuscript
    People espousing human moral equality encompassing every conspecific have been unumbrageous being labeled ‘speciesists’ and likened to Nazis and Klansmen, despite the insult’s being indefensible, and, if meant seriously, enraging. Perhaps their equanimity is unruffled because anti-speciesist acquaintances are remarkably chummier with them than with real racists. -/- Anti-speciesists confuse two questions: (1) Is the bare fact of an individual’s being a human in itself a reason for us humans to deal with it as we'd like to be dealt with? (...)
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  45.  43
    Vital Powers: Cultivating a Critter Community.Stephen Smith - 2018 - Phenomenology and Practice 12 (2):15-27.
    This paper is based on the eco-pedagogical aspiration to live with domesticated animals in accordance with Alphonso Lingis's Community of those who have nothing in common. I draw upon this remarkable text as well as Lingis's animal writings in describing moments and movements of pathic community. Such a community in affective affiliation with one another, where symbiotic relations are possible and bodily kinships are exercised, exemplifies what is possible in more rational human communities where domesticating impulses seek to harness the (...)
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  46.  49
    The Animal Rights Debate: Abolition or Regulation?Gary Lawrence Francione & Robert Garner - 2010 - Columbia University Press.
    Gary L. Francione is a law professor and leading philosopher of animal rights theory. Robert Garner is a political theorist specializing in the philosophy and politics of animal protection. Francione maintains that we have no moral justification for using nonhumans and argues that because animals are property—or economic commodities—laws or industry practices requiring "humane" treatment will, as a general matter, fail to provide any meaningful level of protection. Garner favors a version of animal rights that focuses on eliminating animal suffering (...)
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  47. Contesting Moral Capital in Campaigns Against Animal Liberation.Lyle Munro - 1999 - Society and Animals 7 (1):35-53.
    This article addresses a countermovement to the animal liberation movement and its campaigns against vivisection, factory farming, and recreational hunting in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia. As moderate welfarists, pragmatic animal liberationists , and radical abolitionists who advocate animal rights, animal protectionists campaign for animals. The countermovement defends acts that animal protectionists decry. Meanwhile, sociologists accord little study to interplay between the movements . In Buechler's and Cylke's collection of 34 papers on social movements , only one (...)
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  48.  20
    Considering the Diverse Views of Ecologisation in the Agrifood Transition: An Analysis Based on Human Relationships with Nature.Danièle Magda, Claire Lamine & Jean-Paul Billaud - 2022 - Environmental Values 31 (6):657-679.
    This article aims to characterise the visions of ecologisation found within scientific approaches embraced by different epistemic communities, and which have inspired empirical work and public action on agrifood system transitions. Based on comparative readings of works anchored in our two disciplinary fields (ecology and sociology), we identified six large ensembles of epistemic communities as well as their points of convergence and divergence. We identify six ideotypical visions of ecologisation based on the types of ‘relationships to nature’ embedded in these (...)
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  49.  41
    The British industrial revolution and the ideological revolution: Science, Neoliberalism and History.William J. Ashworth - 2014 - History of Science 52 (2):178-199.
    During the late-nineteenth and twentieth centuries interpretations of the British Industrial Revolution became embedded within debates over competing systems of political economy, primarily liberal democracy (free trade) versus socialism (state regulation). At the heart of this contest was also the question of epistemology. A picture emerged of the Industrial Revolution that reflected such contrasting perspectives; for those with a Western liberal bent Britain industrialized first due to a weak state, an emphasis upon individual liberty, the right institutions and culture of (...)
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  50. Rethinking the Relationship between China and the West.Qingben Li & Jinghua Guo - 2012 - Cultura 9 (2):45-60.
    In the age of Globalization, cultural identity is a pointed and hotly debated question in academia. Cultural identity involves a core of traditional values and therecognition of several developing layers: the individual, the community and the nation. China has two dominant cultural tendencies: conservatism and protectionism. This has resulted in rejecting Western discourse to preserve a supposedly unchangeable Chinese identity. Comparative models that study cultural and literary exchanges between China and the West were based on dualist perceptions of spatio-temporal (...)
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