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The application of the Political Question Doctrine is at a crucial
crossroads as the Supreme Court continues to test new 'War on
Terrorism' initiatives. Historically, the political question
doctrine has held the courts from resolving constitutional issues
that are better left to other departments of government, as a way
of maintaining the system of checks and balances. However, the
doctrine's many ambiguities have allowed a roughly defined
juxtaposition of the branches of government during previous years
when the Republic was concerned with both international matters and
those within its continental confines. The Political Question
Doctrine and the Supreme Court of the United States discusses the
gradual changes in the parameters of the doctrine, including its
current position dealing with increasingly extraterritorial
concerns. Nada Mourtada-Sabbah and Bruce E. Cain bring together
critical essays that examine the broad issues of judicial
involvement in politics and the future of the doctrine. With a wide
range of historical and theoretical perspectives, this book will
stimulate debate among those interested in political science and
legal studies.
The application of the Political Question Doctrine is at a crucial
crossroads as the Supreme Court continues to test new "War on
Terrorism" initiatives. Historically, the political question
doctrine has held the courts from resolving constitutional issues
that are better left to other departments of government, as a way
of maintaining the system of checks and balances. However, the
doctrine's many ambiguities have allowed a roughly defined
juxtaposition of the branches of government during previous years
when the Republic was concerned with both international matters and
those within its continental confines. The Political Question
Doctrine and the Supreme Court of the United States discusses the
gradual changes in the parameters of the doctrine, including its
current position dealing with increasingly extraterritorial
concerns. Nada Mourtada-Sabbah and Bruce E. Cain bring together
critical essays that examine the broad issues of judicial
involvement in politics and the future of the doctrine. With a wide
range of historical and theoretical perspectives, this book will
stimulate debate among those interested in political science and
legal studies.
For centuries, the Arabian Gulf has been a crossroads where
seafaring people and Bedouins alike traveled great distances
transacting business. Events of the past few years, both good and
bad, have directed the world's attention to the Arabian Peninsula,
where a rich cultural tradition is rapidly incorporating the latest
innovations from around the world. This is the process of
globalization.
New economies create enormous potential, but it will require great
care for the people of the region to steer through a period of
profound change. Political and economic interests intent on
maintaining the flow of petroleum products on one hand, and people
in the Gulf region who assess their won interests from quite a
different perspective, on the other, exert pressures from
conflicting directions. Reconciling these interests in a time of
rapid globalization poses enormous challenges.
This timely volume, "Globalization and the Gulf" brings together
the work of scholars from both the Middle East and the West who
have the expertise to evaluate the interaction of new ideas, new
technologies and new economies. Brought together by the American
University of Sharjah and the Sociological Association of the UAE,
the contributors reflect on both the process of globalism and on
the traditions of Gulf society and culture, and they offer views on
how these trends interact within the global system.
For centuries, the Arabian Gulf has been a crossroads where
seafaring people and Bedouins alike traveled great distances
transacting business. Events of the past few years, both good and
bad, have directed the world's attention to the Arabian Peninsula,
where a rich cultural tradition is rapidly incorporating the latest
innovations from around the world. This is the process of
globalization.
New economies create enormous potential, but it will require great
care for the people of the region to steer through a period of
profound change. Political and economic interests intent on
maintaining the flow of petroleum products on one hand, and people
in the Gulf region who assess their won interests from quite a
different perspective, on the other, exert pressures from
conflicting directions. Reconciling these interests in a time of
rapid globalization poses enormous challenges.
This timely volume, "Globalization and the Gulf" brings together
the work of scholars from both the Middle East and the West who
have the expertise to evaluate the interaction of new ideas, new
technologies and new economies. Brought together by the American
University of Sharjah and the Sociological Association of the UAE,
the contributors reflect on both the process of globalism and on
the traditions of Gulf society and culture, and they offer views on
how these trends interact within the global system.
John Fox here offers a fresh and persuasive view of the crucial
Classic-Postclassic transition that determined the shape of the
later Maya state. Drawing this data from ethnographic analogy and
native chronicles as well as archaeology, he identifies segmentary
lineage organisation as the key to understanding both the political
organisation and the long-distance migrations observed among the
Quiche Maya of Guatemala and Mexico. The first part of the book
traces the origins of the Quiche, Itza and Xiu to the homeland on
the Mexican Gulf coast where they acquired their potent Toltec
mythology and identifies early segmentary lineages that developed
as a result of social forces in the frontier zone. Dr Fox then
matches the known anthropological characteristics of segmentary
lineages against the Mayan kinship relationships described in
documents and deduced from the spatial patterning within Quiche
towns and cities. His conclusion, that the inherently fissile
nature of segmentary lineages caused the leapfrogging migrations of
up to 500km observed amongst the Maya, offers a convincing solution
to a problem that has long puzzled scholars.
Factionalism is an important force of social transformation, and
this volume examines how factional competition in the kinship and
political structures in ancient New World societies led to the
development of chiefdoms, states and empires. The case studies,
from a range of New World societies, represent all levels of
non-egalitarian societies and a wide variety of ecological settings
in the New World. They document the effects of factionalism on the
structure of particular polities: for example, how it might have
led to the growth of social inequality, or to changing patterns of
chiefly authority, or to state formation and expansion, or
institutional specialisation. The work is a creative and
substantial contribution to our understanding of the political
dynamics in early state society, and will interest archaeologists,
anthropologists, political scientists and historians.
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