|
Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
This ambitious interdisciplinary volume places population processes
in their social, political, and economic contexts while it
considers their environmental impacts. Examining the multi-faceted
patterns of human relationships that overlay, alter, and distort
our ties to urban and rural landscapes, the book focuses especially
on the essential experi
This book presents a selection of major research texts by Prof. Dr.
Lourdes Arizpe Schlosser, a Mexican Pioneer in Anthropology. A
global intellectual leader on culture, social development,
sustainability, women's studies and indigenous groups, her texts
provide both an outlook on the evolution of specific social
scientific concepts and historical debates and a long-term and
meta-analytical perspective integrating academic and policy
discussions. By linking debates from different fields, the book
helps readers to understand why people and groups make the choices
they make and how the principles of social life must change to meet
the challenges that new generations face in building social
sustainability and effective environmental management in the
twenty-first century.
A decade after the approval of the UNESCO 2003 Convention for the
Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH), the concept has
gained wide acceptance at the local, national and international
levels. Communities are recognizing and celebrating their
Intangible Heritage; governments are devoting important efforts to
the construction of national inventories; and anthropologists and
professionals from different disciplines are forming a new field of
study. The ten chapters of this book include the peer-reviewed
papers of the First Planning Meeting of the International Social
Science Council's Commission on Research on ICH, which was held at
the Centro Regional de Investigaciones Multidisciplinarias (UNAM)
in Cuernavaca, Mexico in 2012. The papers are based on fieldwork
and direct involvement in assessing and reconceptualizing the
outcomes of the UNESCO Convention. The report in Appendix 1
highlights the main points raised during the sessions.
This book presents major texts by Prof. Dr. Lourdes Arizpe
Schlosser, a pioneering Mexican anthropologist, on the occasion of
her 70th birthday. She is a leading researcher into indigenous
peoples, an innovator in women's studies and a global scientific
leader who has inspired the international research and policy
communities. Throughout her distinguished career she has analysed
ethnicism and indigenous peoples, women in migratory flows,
cultural and social sustainability and intangible cultural heritage
as social capital, placing these issues on the world agenda for
research and policy. Several of the 12 major texts in this volume
have been published since 1972 in the US, Europe, Latin America and
India; some were first published in Spanish and are available in
English for the first time. This anthology also includes recent
unpublished texts on culture, development and international
cultural policy delivered at high-level international meetings.
This book analyses how global transactions have been progressively
conducted and negotiated in the last 25 years. Achieving a new
understanding of sustainability transition in the Anthropocene
requires a deeper analysis on culture. The development of new
positions of international institutions, national governments,
scientific organizations, private fora and civil society movements
on culture and nature shows how global transactions must take place
in a rapidly transforming world. In her book the author provides a
multi-situated ethnography of live debates on culture, global
environmental change, development and diversity directly recorded
by the author as a participating and decision-making anthropologist
from 1988 to 2016. She examines the politicization and
internationalization of culture by recognizing, negotiating and
diversifying views on cultures and re-thinking culture in the
Anthropocene. The merging of science and policy in taking up
cultural and natural challenges in the Anthropocene is discussed.
The texts presented in this book trace the rise of culture as a
major concern for development, international diplomacy,
sustainability and national politics over the past two decades. As
a major participant in anthropological field research, advocate for
cultural freedom and decision-maker in international programs on
culture, the author gives a firsthand account of the trade-offs,
the contradictions and the management of consensus in these fields.
She argues that the constitutive, functional and instrumental
aspects of cultural narratives call for a more in-depth
understanding of knowledge, leading to cultural and social
sustainability in the framework of a "new worlding". Many of the
texts gathered here were presented at the United Nations General
Assembly and other high-level international meetings. Most of the
texts are unpublished; some were first published in Spanish and are
now available in English for the first time.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Tenet
John David Washington, Robert Pattinson, …
DVD
(1)
R51
Discovery Miles 510
|