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While "economic forces" are often cited as being a key cause of
language loss, there is very little research that explores this
link in detail. This work, based on policy analysis and
ethnographic data, addresses this deficit. It examines how
neoliberalism, the dominant economic orthodoxy of recent decades,
has impacted the vitality of Irish in the Republic of Ireland since
2008. Drawing on concepts well established in public policy
studies, but not prominent in the subfield of language policy, the
neoliberalisation of Irish-language support measures is charted,
including the disproportionately severe budget cuts they received.
It is argued that neoliberalism's antipathy towards social planning
and redistributive economic policies meant that supports for Irish
were inevitably hit especially hard in an era of austerity.
Ethnographic data from Irish-speaking communities reinforce this
point and illustrate how macro-level economic disruptions can
affect language use at the micro-level. Labour market
transformations, emigration and the dismantling of community
institutions are documented, along with many related developments,
thereby highlighting an issue of relevance to communities around
the world, the fundamental tension between neoliberalism and
language revitalisation efforts.
This book explores the emerging EU-China relationship with a focus
on the impact of the Belt and Road Initiative. It takes a narrative
approach to understanding the EU-China relationship as a means to
highlight how scholars in the EU and China interpret the
narrativization of EU-China bilateral relations and to how this
bilateral relationship is refracted through relations with third
parties. The volume brings together scholars from China and Europe
in the fields of Chinese foreign policy, EU studies, and strategic
communication. The empirical focus cuts across policy, publics and
media, and across history, political economy and diplomacy. The
Belt and Road Initiative, alongside the other policy areas
addressed in the chapters, offers ways for people in Europe and
China to get to know one another in new ways, and for the EU and
its member states and the Chinese state to forge new partnerships.
Take outdoor cooking to the next level with the BBQ Companion, the
must-have compendium of recipes by acclaimed Australian chef, TV
presenter and barbecue expert, Ben O'Donoghue. With more than 180
diverse and contemporary recipes on and off the barbecue, this book
is the ultimate guide for anyone who loves to cook and entertain
outdoors, no matter what the occasion or equipment. Be inspired by
the exciting world of barbecued food with recipes that cover
everything from juicy Mexican suckling pig, delicious Singapore
chilli crab or Pancetta kebabs to succulent vegetarian dishes for
outdoor dining like Artichokes with lemon, honey, thyme and almond
or Grilled Haloumi with lemon and mint â you'll have your friends
talking about your barbecue for years. Whether your pride and joy
is a simple wire rack over an open fire, an everyday kettle
barbecue or a BBQ with all the bells and whistles, the recipes in
this book can be cooked on any equipment. In BBQ Companion you'll
also find recipes for rubs and marinades, breads, salads and
vegetables along with the best drinks and desserts to accompany
your meal â everything you'll ever need to make your barbecues
the best in the neighbourhood.
Communication is central to how we understand international
affairs. Political leaders, diplomats, and citizens recognize that
communication shapes global politics. This has only been amplified
in a new media environment characterized by Internet access to
information, social media, and the transformation of who can
communicate and how. Soft power, public diplomacy 2.0, network
power - scholars and policymakers are concerned with understanding
what is happening. This book is the first to develop a systematic
framework to understand how political actors seek to shape order
through narrative projection in this new environment. To explain
the changing world order - the rise of the BRICS, the dilemmas of
climate change, poverty and terrorism, the intractability of
conflict - the authors explore how actors form and project
narratives and how third parties interpret and interact with these
narratives. The concept of strategic narrative draws together the
most salient of international relations concepts, including the
links between power and ideas; international and domestic; and
state and non-state actors. The book is anchored around four
themes: order, actors, uncertainty, and contestation. Through
these, Strategic Narratives shows both the possibilities and the
limits of communication and power, and makes an important
contribution to theorizing and studying empirically contemporary
international relations. International Studies Association:
International Communication Best Book Award
This book examines the circulation and effects of radical discourse
by analysing the role of mass media coverage in promoting or
hindering radicalisation and acts of political violence. There is a
new environment of conflict in the post-9/11 age, in which there
appears to be emerging threats to security and stability in the
shape of individuals and groups holding or espousing radical views
about religion, ideology, often represented in the media as
oppositional to Western values. This book asks what, if anything is
new about these radicalising discourses, how and why they relate to
political acts of violence and terror, and what the role of the
mass media is in promoting or hindering them. This includes
exploring how the acts themselves and explanations for them on the
web are picked up and represented in mainstream television news
media or Big Media, through the journalistic and editorial uses of
words, phrases, graphics, images, and videos. It analyses how
interpretations of the term 'radicalisation' are shaped by news
representations through investigating audience responses,
understandings and misunderstandings. Transnational in scope, this
book seeks to contribute to an understanding of the connectivity
and relationships that make up the new media ecology, especially
those that appear to transcend the local and the global, accelerate
the dissemination of radicalising discourses, and amplify
media/public fears of political violence. This book will be of
interest to students of security studies, media studies, terrorism
studies, political science and sociology.
This book examines the circulation and effects of radical discourse
by analysing the role of mass media coverage in promoting or
hindering radicalisation and acts of political violence. There is a
new environment of conflict in the post-9/11 age, in which there
appears to be emerging threats to security and stability in the
shape of individuals and groups holding or espousing radical views
about religion, ideology, often represented in the media as
oppositional to Western values. This book asks what, if anything is
new about these radicalising discourses, how and why they relate to
political acts of violence and terror, and what the role of the
mass media is in promoting or hindering them. This includes
exploring how the acts themselves and explanations for them on the
web are picked up and represented in mainstream television news
media or Big Media, through the journalistic and editorial uses of
words, phrases, graphics, images, and videos. It analyses how
interpretations of the term 'radicalisation' are shaped by news
representations through investigating audience responses,
understandings and misunderstandings. Transnational in scope, this
book seeks to contribute to an understanding of the connectivity
and relationships that make up the new media ecology, especially
those that appear to transcend the local and the global, accelerate
the dissemination of radicalising discourses, and amplify
media/public fears of political violence. This book will be of
interest to students of security studies, media studies, terrorism
studies, political science and sociology.
This book explores the emerging EU-China relationship with a focus
on the impact of the Belt and Road Initiative. It takes a narrative
approach to understanding the EU-China relationship as a means to
highlight how scholars in the EU and China interpret the
narrativization of EU-China bilateral relations and to how this
bilateral relationship is refracted through relations with third
parties. The volume brings together scholars from China and Europe
in the fields of Chinese foreign policy, EU studies, and strategic
communication. The empirical focus cuts across policy, publics and
media, and across history, political economy and diplomacy. The
Belt and Road Initiative, alongside the other policy areas
addressed in the chapters, offers ways for people in Europe and
China to get to know one another in new ways, and for the EU and
its member states and the Chinese state to forge new partnerships.
Communication is central to how we understand international
affairs. Political leaders, diplomats, and citizens recognize that
communication shapes global politics. This has only been amplified
in a new media environment characterized by Internet access to
information, social media, and the transformation of who can
communicate and how. Soft power, public diplomacy 2.0, network
power - scholars and policymakers are concerned with understanding
what is happening. This book is the first to develop a systematic
framework to understand how political actors seek to shape order
through narrative projection in this new environment. To explain
the changing world order - the rise of the BRICS, the dilemmas of
climate change, poverty and terrorism, the intractability of
conflict - the authors explore how actors form and project
narratives and how third parties interpret and interact with these
narratives. The concept of strategic narrative draws together the
most salient of international relations concepts, including the
links between power and ideas; international and domestic; and
state and non-state actors. The book is anchored around four
themes: order, actors, uncertainty, and contestation. Through
these, Strategic Narratives shows both the possibilities and the
limits of communication and power, and makes an important
contribution to theorizing and studying empirically contemporary
international relations.
Spaces of War, War of Spaces provides a rich, international and
multi-disciplinary engagement with the convergence of war and media
through the conceptual lens of 'space'. 'Space' offers a profound,
challenging and original framework through which notions of
communication, embodiment, enactment, memory and power are
interrogated not only in terms of how media spaces (traditional,
digital, cultural, aesthetic, embodied, mnemonic) transform the
conduct, outcomes and consequences of war for all involved, but how
'war' actors (political, military, survivors, victims) recreate
space in a manner that is transformative across political, social,
cultural and personal spheres. Foregrounding the work of artists,
activists and practitioners alongside more traditional scholarly
approaches Spaces of War, War of Spaces engages with the
'messiness' of war and media through the convergence of practice
and theory, where showing and embodying is made explicit.
Spaces of War, War of Spaces provides a rich, international and
multi-disciplinary engagement with the convergence of war and media
through the conceptual lens of 'space'. 'Space' offers a profound,
challenging and original framework through which notions of
communication, embodiment, enactment, memory and power are
interrogated not only in terms of how media spaces (traditional,
digital, cultural, aesthetic, embodied, mnemonic) transform the
conduct, outcomes and consequences of war for all involved, but how
'war' actors (political, military, survivors, victims) recreate
space in a manner that is transformative across political, social,
cultural and personal spheres. Foregrounding the work of artists,
activists and practitioners alongside more traditional scholarly
approaches Spaces of War, War of Spaces engages with the
'messiness' of war and media through the convergence of practice
and theory, where showing and embodying is made explicit.
EVERY DAY, the Jakarta Globe newspaper publishes a column with a
deceptively simple premise - we interview someone living in Jakarta
and ask: what's your life here like? As we show in this selection
of columns, the answers are far from simple. But then, so are the
lives of the people you will meet in these pages. Inside you will
find the street robber and gangster just trying to feed his family,
the star student who happens to be a beauty queen and lawyer in her
spare time, the 105-year-old masseur who has outlasted eight wives,
the grammar teacher who is a punk rock god by night... The name of
the column, My Jakarta, conveys the intimacy with which we all
carry our hopes, experiences and dreams. Here you will get a
glimpse of how others high and low relate to our steamy,
unpredictable, dirty, vibrant, addictive city.
In this ultimate barbecue cookbook, the humble backyard barbecue is
a force to be reckoned with. Ben O'Donoghue's recipes offer up
everything from juicy meats such as Mexican suckling pig and
Caribbean jerk chicken to Indian spice-crusted fish, Singapore
chilli crab, and spice-crusted tuna with tahini dressing. Ben also
includes an array of succulent vegetarian dishes - try artichokes
with lemon, honey, thyme and almond, or grilled haloumi with lemon
and mint. In this compendium you'll also find the best drinks and
desserts to accompany your meal, along with recipes for all the
rubs and marinades, breads, salads and vegetables you'll ever need
to make your barbecues the best in the neighbourhood. Whether your
pride and joy is a wire rack over an open fire, a sturdy kettle
barbecue or a deluxe gas-fired hotplate, The BBQ Companion is full
of easy and satisfying recipes that get the home fires burning.
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