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Books > Social sciences > Politics & government > Central government > Central government policies
Nick Buckley MBE explores the relationship between "givers" and
"takers," and the damaging symbiotic relationship between them. He
examines the motivation of disheveled individuals sitting on street
corners holding out paper cups, as well as the intergenerational
problem of poverty and welfare dependency. Different types of
beggars are highlighted, such as politicians begging for votes,
charities begging for donations, and even the woke begging for
validation and attention. Buckley shows that begging is a
complicated topic, part nature and part nurture, and that many
engage in such behavior unknowingly. Unlike most authors on this
topic, Buckley explores his own history of begging from being
raised in a workless household on benefits, to claiming
unemployment benefits as an adult, and the journey that eventually
led him to found an award-winning charity. Buckley offers us an
antidote to such unbecoming behavior: personal responsibility.
For Georgia, the signing of the Association Agreement and the DCFTA
with the European Union in 2014 was an act of strategic
geopolitical significance. Of all the EU's eastern partners, the
country distinguished itself since the Rose Revolution of 2003 by
pushing ahead with a radical liberalisation and economic reform
agenda. Georgia is unique among the countries in the region for
having largely cleansed its economy of corruption in the post-Rose
Revolution period, although its political system is marked by
oligarchal state capture since the change of government in 2012.
The purpose of this Handbook is to make the complex political,
economic and legal content of the Association Agreement readily
understandable. This third edition, published seven years since
signature of after entry into force of the Agreement's
implementation is substantially new in content, both updating how
Georgia has been implementing the Agreement, and introducing new
dimensions (including the Green Deal, the Covid-19 pandemic, cyber
security, and gender equality). The Handbook is also up to date in
analysing Georgia's troubled democracy. Two teams of researchers
from leading independent think tanks, CEPS in Brussels and
Reformatics in Tbilisi, collaborated on this project, with the
support of the Swedish International Development Agency (Sida).
This Handbook is one of a trilogy examining similar Association
Agreements made by the EU with Ukraine and Moldova.
This unique collection of data includes concise definitions and
explanations relating to all aspects of the European Union. It
explains the terminology surrounding the EU, and outlines the roles
and significance of its institutions, member countries, foreign
relations, programmes and policies, treaties and personalities. It
contains over 1,000 clear and succinct definitions and explains
acronyms and abbreviations, which are arranged alphabetically and
fully cross-referenced. Among the 1,000 entries you can find
explanations of and background details on: ACP states Article 50
Brexit competition policy Donald Tusk the European Maritime and
Fisheries Fund the euro Greece Jean-Claude Juncker Europol
migration and asylum policy the Schengen Agreement the Single
Supervisory Mechanism the single rulebook the Treaty of Lisbon
Ukraine
Winner of the 2021 Sara A. Whaley Prize of the National Women's
Studies Association (NWSA) On May 1, 1954, striking banana workers
on the North Coast of Honduras brought the regional economy to a
standstill, invigorating the Honduran labor movement and placing a
series of demands on the US-controlled banana industry. Their
actions ultimately galvanized a broader working-class struggle and
reawakened long-suppressed leftist ideals. The first account of its
kind in English, Roots of Resistance explores contemporary Honduran
labor history through the story of the great banana strike of 1954
and centers the role of women in the narrative of the labor
movement. Drawing on extensive firsthand oral history and archival
research, Suyapa G. Portillo Villeda examines the radical
organizing that challenged US capital and foreign intervention in
Honduras at the onset of the Cold War. She reveals the everyday
acts of resistance that laid the groundwork for the 1954 strike and
argues that these often-overlooked forms of resistance should
inform analyses of present-day labor and community organizing.
Roots of Resistance highlights the complexities of transnational
company hierarchies, gender and race relations, and labor
organizing that led to the banana workers' strike and how these
dynamics continue to reverberate in Honduras today.
Zakat, a religious obligation in the form of almsgiving, is highly
important both in Islam and in the Islamic economy. As Muslim
communities face financial hardships around the world, Zakat has
emerged as a vital component within these communities and could
play a major role in sustainable economic development by helping
society to alleviate poverty and promote social equality. Impact of
Zakat on Sustainable Economic Development is a pivotal reference
source that contributes practical solutions and knowledge
production in alleviating poverty in Muslim countries by adopting
Islamic approaches to contemporary socio-economics and the
importance of Zakat in sustaining development and supporting the
welfare of society. Featuring coverage on a wide range of topics
such as corporate governance, ethics, and sustainable economic
development, this book is ideally designed for economists,
government officials, regulators, entrepreneurs, financial
professionals, religious authorities, researchers, academicians,
and students at the postgraduate level.
On tax day, April 15, 2010, hundreds of thousands of Americans
demonstrated with signs demanding lower taxes on the richest one
percent. Where do protest movements like this come from? Rich
people are an unpopular minority with plenty of political
influence. Why would rich people need to demonstrate in the streets
to demand lower taxes-and why would anyone who wasn't rich join in
the protest on their behalf? Such rich people's movements are hardy
perennials of American politics. Ever since the ratification of the
Sixteenth Amendment in 1913, they have emerged whenever public
policies are perceived to threaten the property rights of rich
people. The protesters on behalf of the rich have picked up the
protest tactics of the poor and powerless because they have been
organized and led by activists who have acquired their skills and
protest techniques from other social movements, from the Populists
and Progressives of the early twentieth century to the feminists
and anti-war activists of the mid-twentieth century. At times when
conservative Republicans are in power, rich people's movements have
helped to bring about some of the biggest tax cuts for the rich in
American history. This is the untold story of the tax clubs and Tea
Parties that have shaped American politics and policy for the last
hundred years.
The statesman and reformer James Oglethorpe was a significant
figure in the philosophical and political landscape of
eighteenth-century British America. His social contributions--all
informed by Enlightenment ideals--included prison reform, the
founding of the Georgia colony on behalf of the "worthy poor," and
stirring the founders of the abolitionist movement. He also
developed the famous ward design for the city of Savannah, a design
that became one of the most important planning innovations in
American history. Multilayered and connecting the urban core to
peripheral garden and farm lots, the Oglethorpe Plan was intended
by its author to both exhibit and foster his utopian ideas of
agrarian equality.
In his new book, the professional planner Thomas D. Wilson
reconsiders the Oglethorpe Plan, revealing that Oglethorpe was a
more dynamic force in urban planning than has generally been
supposed. In essence, claims Wilson, the Oglethorpe Plan offers a
portrait of the Enlightenment, and embodies all of the major themes
of that era, including science, humanism, and secularism. The
vibrancy of the ideas behind its conception invites an exploration
of the plan's enduring qualities. In addition to surveying
historical context and intellectual origins, this book aims to
rescue Oglethorpe's work from its relegation to the status of a
living museum in a revered historic district, and to demonstrate
instead how modern-day town planners might employ its principles.
Unique in its exclusive focus on the topic and written in a clear
and readable style, "The Oglethorpe Plan "explores this design as a
bridge between New Urbanism and other more naturally evolving and
socially engaged modes of urban development.
This book addresses one of the enduring questions of democratic
government: why do governments choose some public policies but not
others? Political executives focus on a range of policy issues,
such as the economy, social policy, and foreign policy, but they
shift their priorities over time. Despite an extensive literature,
it has proven surprisingly hard to explain policy prioritisation.
To remedy this gap, this book offers a new approach called public
policy investment: governments enhance their chances of getting
re-elected by managing a portfolio of public policies and paying
attention to the risks involved. In this way, government is like an
investor making choices about risk to yield returns on its
investments of political capital. The public provides signals about
expected political capital returns for government policies, or
policy assets, that can be captured through expressed opinion in
public polls. Governments can anticipate these signals in the
choices they make. Statecraft is the ability political leaders have
to consider risk and return in their policy portfolios and do so
amidst uncertainty in the public's policy valuation. Such actions
represent the public's views conditionally because not every
opinion change is a price signal. It then outlines a quantitative
method for measuring risk and return, applying it to the case of
Britain between 1971 and 2000 and offers case studies illustrating
statecraft by prime ministers, such as Edward Heath or Margaret
Thatcher. The book challenges comparative scholars to apply public
policy investment to countries that have separation of powers,
multiparty government, and decentralization.
Who has access, and who is denied access, to food, and why? What
are the consequences of food insecurity? What would it take for the
food system to be just? Just Food: Philosophy, Justice and Food
presents thirteen new philosophical essays that explore the causes
and consequences of the inequities of our contemporary food system.
It examines why 842 million people globally are unable to meet
their dietary needs, and why food insecurity is not simply a matter
of insufficient supply. The book looks at how food insecurity
tracks other social injustices, covering topics such as race,
gender and property, as well as food sovereignty, food deserts, and
locavorism. The essays in this volume make an important and timely
contribution to the wider philosophical debate around food
distribution and justice.
The development of a green and sustainable economy continues to
grow in awareness and popularity due to its promotion of a more
comprehensive way of achieving economic development through social
and environmental efficiency. Sustainable Technologies, Policies,
and Constraints in the Green Economy carefully investigates the
complex issues which surround the wide array of concepts, policies,
and measures that come into play when promoting this somewhat new
ideology. This publication covers over 50 years of research in the
field in order to provide the best theoretical frameworks and
empirical research to its readers. Professors, researchers,
practitioners, and students will all benefit from the relevant
discussions and diverse conclusions which are revealed in these
chapters.
This Open Access book aims to find out how and why states in
various regions and of diverse cultural backgrounds fail in their
gender equality laws and policies. In doing this, the book maps out
states' failures in their legal systems and unpacks the clashes
between different levels and forms of law-namely domestic laws,
local regulations, or the implementation of international law,
individually or in combination. By taking off from the confirmation
that the concept of law that is to be used in achieving gender
equality is a multidimensional, multi-layered, and to an extent,
contradictory phenomenon, this book aims to find out how different
layers of laws interact and how they impact gender equality.
Further to that, by including different states and jurisdictions
into its analysis, this book unravels whether there are any
similarities/patterns in how these states define and utilise
policies and laws that harm gender equality. In this way, the book
contributes to the efforts to devise holistic and universal
policies to address various forms of gender inequalities across the
world. This volume will be of interest to scholars and students in
Gender Studies, Sociology, Law, and Criminology.
Though the history of hikes in petroleum prices began in 1973 when
the military government of Gen. Yakubu Gowon increased the price of
petrol to 9 kobo per litre from the equivalent of 8.8 kobo that had
prevailed before then, the politics and economics of removal of
subsidies on premium petroleum products entered into the national
lexicon in 1986 when the military administration of General Ibrahim
Babangida announced that due to the devaluation of the Naira, the
domestic price of fuel had become unsustainable cheap and was
becoming a burden on the national purse. Ever since, most regimes
in the country have toyed with the idea of removing the subsidies,
with organised labour and the civil society usually vehemently
opposed to the idea. In late 2011 the Jonathan administration
announced plans to completely remove the subsidies but gave no
timeline amid threats by organised labour, students and civil
society groups to stoutly resist the move. On January 1 2012, the
regime announced the removal of the subsidies and subsequently
reiterated that its decision on the issue was irreversible. It
however announced some measures, including the provision of buses,
to help cushion the impact of the move. This volume takes a
critical look at the politics and economics of the pro- and
anti-subsidisation lobbies. It also examines the likely economic
and social impacts of the move and its implications for the poor,
the overall economy and the country's democratic project.
_____________________________ Jideofor Adibe has been a Guest
research fellow in a number of institutions across the world
including the Centre for Development Research, Copenhagen, Denmark;
the Nordic Institute for African Studies, Uppsala, Sweden, the
Centre for Developing Area Studies, McGill University, Montreal,
Canada and the Institute for Commonwealth Studies, University of
London, UK. He currently teaches political science at Nasarawa
State University, Keffi and also writes a weekly column for the
Nigerian newspaper Daily Trust. He is equally a member of the
paper's Editorial Board. _________
This uniquely composed textbook provides a cross-disciplinary
introduction to the field of homeland and civil security. It unites
U.S. and international scholars and practitioners in addressing
both foundational topics and risk- informed priorities in fostering
secure societies. The book examines research-related foundations of
homeland and civil security across national boundaries, and how
those apply to addressing real-world challenges of our time.
Representing different disciplines, intellectual styles, and
methodological choices in meeting those challenges, chapters
provide a comprehensive perspective across different approaches and
levels of governance within an all-hazards framework. The book
covers international experiences in border management; intelligence
for homeland security; comparative political and legal frameworks
for use of "drones"; risk management at the tribal level; terrorism
as a strategic hybrid threat; critical infrastructure protection
and resilience; historical lessons for emergency management in the
homeland security era; the leadership challenge in homeland
security; ethics, legal, and social issues in homeland and civil
security research and practice; and examples of the scientific
status of the field from the epistemic as well as the educational
point of view. Including a research guide, a glossary, a
bibliography, and an index, the book will be of distinctive worth
to homeland security students in graduate courses, as well as to an
international student community taking courses in political
science, public administration, "new security studies", and
security research.
This definitive Handbook addresses the current lack of research
into European policy-making and development using an interpretive
perspective. Questioning areas that mainstream approaches tend to
neglect, contributors target the ways in which ideas, arguments and
discourses shape policies in the institutional context of the EU.
The Handbook of European Policies provides an in-depth and
comprehensive introduction for all significant policy areas in the
EU, highlighting the theories of post-positivism and
interpretivism. With rich explanations of different methodological
and conceptual approaches to post-positivist research, key chapters
consider the essential exchange between EU integration studies and
EU policy studies, examining how both can benefit from this new and
exciting approach. Offering theoretically grounded answers, this
Handbook creates a dialogue between critical policy studies and
European integration theory. Academics and practitioners concerned
with the functioning of EU policies will benefit from the eminent
contributors? insights into issues high on the institutional agenda
of the EU and its member states. In addition, the Handbook is
suitable for both undergraduate and graduate courses concerned with
European integration and EU policies. Contributors include: R.
Atkinson, P. Biegelbauer, Y. Bollen, D. Dakowska, F. Daviter, P.H.
Feindt, H. Heinelt, J. Kantola, J.D. Kelstrup, M. Knodt, X.
Kurowska, E. Lombardo, S. Munch, F. Nullmeier, J. Orbie, K.T. Paul,
W. Petzold, C.M. Radaelli, D. Sack, E.K. Sarter, S. Saurugger, M.A.
Schreurs, K. Serrano Velarde, V.A. Schmidt, M.A. Schreurs, H.
Strassheim, M. Weber, K. Zimmermann
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