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Throughout history, the right to vote has been extended to
landowning men, the poor, minorities, women, and young adults. In
each case, the meaning of democracy itself has been transformed.
The one major group still denied suffrage is the third of humanity
who are under 18 years of age. However, children are becoming
increasingly active in political movements for climate regulation,
labor rights, gun control, transexual identity, and racial justice.
And these have led to a growing global movement to eliminate
minimum ages of enfranchisement. This book argues that it is time
to give children the vote. Using political theory and drawing on
childhood studies, it shows why suffrage cannot legitimately be
limited according to age, as well as why truly universal voting is
beneficial to all and can help save today's crumbling democratic
norms. It carefully responds to a wide range of objections
concerning competence, knowledge, adult rights, power relations,
harms to children, and much more. And it develops a detailed
childist theory of voting based on holding elected representatives
maximally responsive to the people's different lived experiences.
The book also introduces the concept of proxy-claim voting, wherein
parents or guardians exercise proxy votes for non-competent
persons, both child and adult, until whatever time those persons
wish to claim or reclaim the exercise of their vote for themselves.
Ultimately, the book maps out a new vision of democratic voting
that, by equally empowering children, is at last genuinely
democratic.
This book is a broadly historical account of a remarkable and very
exciting scientific story-the search for the number of human
chromosomes. It covers the processes and people, culminating in the
realization that discovering the number of human chromosomes
brought as much benefit as unraveling the genetic code itself. With
the exception of red blood cells, which have no nucleus and
therefore no DNA, and sex cells, humans have 46 chromosomes in
every single cell. Not only do chromosomes carry all of the genes
that code our inheritance, they also carry them in a specific
order. It is essential that the number and structure of chromosomes
remains intact, in order to pass on the correct amount of DNA to
succeeding generations and for the cells to survive. Knowing the
number of human chromosomes has provided a vital diagnostic tool in
the prenatal diagnosis of genetic disorders, and the search for
this number and developing an understanding of what it means are
the focus of this book.
Children make up one third of all humanity. Yet too often children
are perceived as merely undeveloped adults, pre-moral and innocent,
remaining marginalized figures in our ethical landscape. Across
diverse societies and cultures, throughout history and today,
serious questions about being human and about moral behavior are
almost always understood from the perspective of adulthood.
Ethicist John Wall proposes a Copernican shift, contending that
considerations of childhood should not only have greater importance
on our ethical lives but that they should fundamentally transform
how morality is understood and practiced. The experiences of
children, Wall argues, should become new lenses for interpreting
what it means to exist, to live good lives, and to form just
communities--much in the same way that feminism legitimizes the
experiences of women for the benefit of all humankind. In Part 1
Wall examines traditional Western assumptions about children that
continue, for good and for ill, to ground ethical life today. Part
II constructs a more fully child-responsive moral theory, using the
strengths and weaknesses or our inherited historical perspectives.
Part III further refines this ethical vision by considering three
specific areas of social practice: human rights, family life, and
ethical thinking. In each case, the point of view of childhood is
shown to expand what it means to be human in social relations. This
is the meaning of ethics in light of childhood: not to dismiss or
minimize adult experiences of the moral life, but to widen them to
include considerations of children.
This accessible and authoritative book provides the first
systematic overview of the global children's rights movement. It
introduces both beginners and experts to child and youth rights in
all their theoretical, historical, cultural, political, and
practical complexity. In the process, the book examines key
controversies about globalization, cultural relativism, social
justice, power, economics, politics, freedom, ageism, and more.
Combining vivid examples with cutting-edge scholarship, Children's
Rights: Today's Global Challenge lifts up the rights of the
youngest third of humanity as the major human rights challenge of
the twenty-first century.
This accessible and authoritative book provides the first
systematic overview of the global children's rights movement. It
introduces both beginners and experts to child and youth rights in
all their theoretical, historical, cultural, political, and
practical complexity. In the process, the book examines key
controversies about globalization, cultural relativism, social
justice, power, economics, politics, freedom, ageism, and more.
Combining vivid examples with cutting-edge scholarship, Children's
Rights: Today's Global Challenge lifts up the rights of the
youngest third of humanity as the major human rights challenge of
the twenty-first century.
In Moral Creativity, John Wall argues that moral life and thought
are inherently and radically creative. Human beings are called by
their own primordially created depths to exceed historical evil and
tragedy through the ongoing creative transformation of their world.
This thesis challenges ancient Greek and biblical separations of
ethics and poetic image-making, as well as contemporary conceptions
of moral life as grounded in abstract principles or preconstituted
traditions. Taking as his point of departure the poetics of the
will of Paul Ricoeur, and ranging widely into critical
conversations with Continental, narrative, feminist, and
liberationist ethics, Wall uncovers the profound senses in which
moral practice and thought involve tension, catharsis, excess, and
renewal. In the process, he draws new connections between sin and
tragedy, practice and poetics, and morality and myth. Rather than
proposing a complete ethics, Moral Creativity is a meta-ethical
work investigating the creative capability as part of what it
means, morally, to be human. This capability is explored around
four dimensions of ontology, teleology, deontology, and social
practice. In each case, Wall examines a traditional perspective on
the relation of ethics to poetics, critiques it using resources
from contemporary phenomenology, and develops a conception of a
more original poetics of moral life. In the end, moral creativity
is a human capability for inhabiting tensions among others and in
social systems and, in the image of a Creator, creating together an
ever more radically inclusive moral world.
This book tells the story of an unprecedented experiment in public
participation: the government-sponsored debate on the possible
commercialization of 'GM' crops in the UK. Giving a unique and
systematic account of the debate process, this revealing volume
sets it within its political and intellectual contexts, and
examines the practical implications for future public engagement
initiatives. The authors, an experienced team of researchers,
produce a conceptually-informed and empirically-based evaluation of
the debate, drawing upon detailed observation of both public and
behind-the-scenes aspects of the process, the views of participants
in debate events, a major MORI-administered survey of public views,
and details of media coverage. With innovative methodological work
on the evaluation of public engagement and deliberative processes,
the authors analyze the design, implementation and effectiveness of
the debate process, and provide a critique of its official
findings. The book will undoubtedly be of interest to a wide
readership, and will be an invaluable resource for researchers,
policy-makers and students concerned with cross-disciplinary
aspects of risk, decision-making, public engagement, and governance
of technology.
Here, some of the most influential thinkers in theological and
philosophical ethics develop new directions for research in
contemporary moral thought. Taking as their starting point
Ricoeur's recent work on moral anthropology, the contributors set a
vital agenda for future conversations about ethics and just
community.
The Bloomsbury Handbook of Theories in Childhood Studies showcases
the cutting-edge theoretical work that has been produced within the
field of childhood studies. It speaks to both scholars and students
in the field by addressing basic questions such as what childhood
is, how childhoods are diversely constructed and how children’s
experiences can be better understood. The volume draws together a
wide range of theoretical perspectives from the social sciences,
humanities, politics, postcolonialism, feminism, critical race
studies, queer theory, disabilities studies to generate a
much-needed conversation about how to move childhood studies
forward as a grounded field of research. The volume is subdivided
into three broad sections - subjectivities, relationalities, and
structures - each of which contains around ten chapters from a
diversity of disciplines and author identities. The chapters are
written by experts from Brazil, Canada, Denmark, Finland, India,
the Netherlands, Norway, Switzerland, the UK, and the USA.
This book is a broadly historical account of a remarkable and very
exciting scientific story-the search for the number of human
chromosomes. It covers the processes and people, culminating in the
realization that discovering the number of human chromosomes
brought as much benefit as unraveling the genetic code itself. With
the exception of red blood cells, which have no nucleus and
therefore no DNA, and sex cells, humans have 46 chromosomes in
every single cell. Not only do chromosomes carry all of the genes
that code our inheritance, they also carry them in a specific
order. It is essential that the number and structure of chromosomes
remains intact, in order to pass on the correct amount of DNA to
succeeding generations and for the cells to survive. Knowing the
number of human chromosomes has provided a vital diagnostic tool in
the prenatal diagnosis of genetic disorders, and the search for
this number and developing an understanding of what it means are
the focus of this book.
This edited volume offers a critical, thorough, and
interdisciplinary examination of arguments for eliminating the
minimum democratic voting age. As children and youth increasingly
assert their political voices on issues such as climate change, gun
legislation, Black Lives Matter, and education reform, calls for
youth enfranchisement merit further academic conversation. Leading
scholars in childhood studies, political science, philosophy,
history, law, medicine, and economics come together in this
collection to explore the diverse assumptions behind excluding
children from voting rights and why these are open to question.
While arriving at different and sometimes competing conclusions,
each chapter deconstructs the idea of voting as necessarily tied to
age while reconstructing a more democratic imagination able to
enfranchise the third of humanity made up by children and youth.
Thus, this book defines and establishes a new field of academic
study and public debate around children's suffrage. Chapter "The
Reform that never happened: a history of children's suffrage
restrictions" is available open access under a Creative Commons
Attribution 4.0 International License via link.springer.com.
Here, some of the most influential thinkers in theological and
philosophical ethics develop new directions for research in
contemporary moral thought. Taking as their starting point
Ricoeur's recent work on moral anthropology, the contributors set a
vital agenda for future conversations about ethics and just
community.
Throughout history, the right to vote has been extended to
landowning men, the poor, minorities, women, and young adults. In
each case, the meaning of democracy itself has been transformed.
The one major group still denied suffrage is the third of humanity
who are under 18 years of age. However, children are becoming
increasingly active in political movements for climate regulation,
labor rights, gun control, transexual identity, and racial justice.
And these have led to a growing global movement to eliminate
minimum ages of enfranchisement. This book argues that it is time
to give children the vote. Using political theory and drawing on
childhood studies, it shows why suffrage cannot legitimately be
limited according to age, as well as why truly universal voting is
beneficial to all and can help save today's crumbling democratic
norms. It carefully responds to a wide range of objections
concerning competence, knowledge, adult rights, power relations,
harms to children, and much more. And it develops a detailed
childist theory of voting based on holding elected representatives
maximally responsive to the people's different lived experiences.
The book also introduces the concept of proxy-claim voting, wherein
parents or guardians exercise proxy votes for non-competent
persons, both child and adult, until whatever time those persons
wish to claim or reclaim the exercise of their vote for themselves.
Ultimately, the book maps out a new vision of democratic voting
that, by equally empowering children, is at last genuinely
democratic.
The true story of Raymond Loewy, whose designs are still celebrated
for their unerring ability to advance American consumer taste. Born
in Paris in 1893 and trained as an engineer, Raymond Loewy
revolutionized twentieth-century American industrial design.
Combining salesmanship and media savvy, he created bright, smooth,
and colorful logos for major corporations that included Greyhound,
Exxon, and Nabisco. His designs for Studebaker automobiles, Sears
Coldspot refrigerators, Lucky Strike cigarette packs, and
Pennsylvania Railroad locomotives are iconic. Beyond his timeless
designs, Loewy carefully built an international reputation through
the assiduous courting of journalists and tastemakers to become the
face of both a new profession and a consumer-driven vision of the
American dream. In Streamliner, John Wall traces the evolution of
an industry through the lens of Loewy's eclectic life, distinctive
work, and invented persona. How, he asks, did Loewy build a
business while transforming himself into a national brand a half
century before "branding" became relevant? Placing Loewy in context
with the emerging consumer culture of the latter half of the
twentieth century, Wall explores how his approach to business
complemented-or differed from-that of his well-known
contemporaries, including industrial designers Henry Dreyfuss,
Walter Teague, and Norman Bel Geddes. Wall also reveals how Loewy
tailored his lifestyle to cement the image of "designer" in the
public imagination and why the self-promotion that drove Loewy to
the top of his profession began to work against him at the end of
his career. Streamliner is an important and engaging work on one of
the longest-lived careers in industrial design.
Welcome to Victoria, Canada's most beautiful city. Explore the
bustling Inner Harbour area, where hotels, shops and restaurants
abound. Admire First Nations art at Thunderbird Park and see
world-class exhibits in the Royal BC Museum. Amble the paths of
Beacon Hill Park and watch goats frolic at its popular petting zoo.
Revel in the beauty of The Butchart Gardens, one of the most
magnificent show gardens in the world. You will see why Victoria is
one of Canada's top tourist destinations, and this keepsake book
will let you relive your visit time and again.
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