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The Sophiology of Death (Hardcover)
Sergius Bulgakov; Translated by Roberto J de la Noval; Foreword by David Bentley Hart
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R996
R816
Discovery Miles 8 160
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This book examines the effectiveness and consistency of EU
democracy promotion in its Eastern neighbourhood between 1991 and
2014. It concludes that the EU's democratization role in this
region was, not surprisingly, weak within this time period.
However, this weak role only took shape under four domestic and
transnational conditions: (a) a higher cost-benefit balance of rule
transfer, (b) a lower structural difficulty a given country would
need to overcome on its way towards a democratic regime, (c)
increased levels of authority distribution across branches of
power, and (d) a higher extent of democratic diffusion resulting
from regional interactions. In those countries where these domestic
and transnational conditions were present, as in Moldova, Ukraine,
and Georgia, the EU's democratizing influence was in causal terms
only the tip of the iceberg. Most variation in regime dynamics
remains to be explained by domestic and transnational contexts.
Contemporary political parties often use state resources to win
elections. In this context, electoral clientelism evolved from the
straightforward vote buying to sophisticated exchanges in which the
relationship between patrons (parties or candidates) and clients
(voters) is sometimes difficult to grasp. We address the question
how do the distributive politics and electoral clientelism
interact, how these forms of interactions differ across various
context, and what implications they bring for the functioning of
political systems. The special issue provides theoretical,
methodological and empirical contributions to the burgeoning
literature about the multi-faceted feature of electoral
clientelism. It unfolds the complex relationship between
distributive politics and clientelism, and conceptualizes electoral
clientelism as a dynamic process that occurs through different
sequences. It enriches the methodological tools aimed at
investigating electoral clientelism. Finally, the special issue
approaches clientelism from several perspectives and brings
together substantive empirical evidence about the varieties of
clientelism around the world.
* Fills a gap in the market by coupling theoretical grounding with
real-life examples that show application in practice. * Each
chapter concludes with two case studies from international Higher
Education institutions alongside reflective questions to provoke
further thought. * Suitable for a broad audience, from students
studying services marketing and specific higher education
management modules, to practitioners working in administrative
roles within universities. * A particularly timely and "hot topic"
title, as universities look to promote their brand and drive
revenue in the (optimistically) post-pandemic world.
Although party membership has been extensively analysed in the EU
Members States from Western and Eastern Europe, there is a gap in
systematic data collection and analyses for the other countries in
the Balkans and post-Soviet region. This book provides new and
innovative insights in the area of party membership research to
analyse the evolution of membership organizations in political
parties from under-investigated countries. Specifically, it seeks
to understand the way in which political parties and the national
legislation conceptualize the notion of membership within and
across countries. It provides original data and affords a first
comprehensive, comparative study of party members in the EU
neighbouring countries, which resonate particular interest because
some of them occupy the "precarious middle ground between a
full-fledge democracy and outright dictatorship". In light of these
relevant observations, this systematic analysis of membership
evolutions in democratizing countries brings valuable insights for
the study of party politics in general. This text will be of key
interest to scholars and students of political parties and party
systems, party organisation and elections, post-Soviet and East
European politics and more broadly to democratization studies and
comparative politics.
Democratic Innovations in Central and Eastern Europe expands
research on democratic innovations by looking specifically at
different forms of democratic innovations in Central and Eastern
Europe. The book covers direct democracy (referendums in
particular), deliberative democracy practices and e-participation -
forms which are salient in practice because they match the
political realities of our time. Expert contributors show how the
recent actions of ordinary citizens in several Central and Eastern
European countries have challenged the contemporary political
order, and grassroots movements and diverse forms of mobilization
have challenged the notion of weak civil societies in the East. The
empirical evidence presented attempts to deepen citizen involvement
in political contexts sometimes quite different from the democratic
political systems in the Western world. Using lessons from a still
largely underexplored part of Europe, the book both complements and
revises theoretical approaches, or complements empirical results in
existing studies on democratic innovations. Democratic Innovations
in Central and Eastern Europe will be of great interest to scholars
working on democracy, political systems, political engagement, and
Central and Eastern European politics. The chapters originally
published as a special issue of Contemporary Politics.
What will be the final destiny of humanity? At God's final
judgement, will all be saved, or only a few? How does Christian
eschatology affect Christian political action in the here and now?
And what is the destiny of each individual facing the prospect of
earthly death? In these essays, Sergius Bulgakov brings the
resources of scripture and tradition to bear on these vital
questions, arguing for the magnificent final restoration of all
creatures to union with God in a universal salvation worthy of the
infinite scope of Christ's redemption. Combining practical theology
with doctrinal questions, Bulgakov provides on the one hand insight
into how Christians can strive to bring God's kingdom to earth in
anticipation of the peace and justice of the heavenly Jerusalem. On
the other, he offers profound theological reflections on the
nature of human death and Christ's accompaniment of all humans in
their dying, based on his own near-death experience. Although
originating firmly within the Russian Orthodox tradition,
Bulgakov's sensitive and incisive writing will shed new light for
all on eschatology in all its facets: personal, political, and
universal. Â
This book explores the relationship between the personality of
political leaders, its interaction with top leadership positions
and its impact on the respective parties' electoral performance and
organization. It focuses on the less-investigated region of Eastern
Europe and includes chapters on Bosnia-Herzegovina, Bulgaria,
Croatia, Czech Republic, Georgia, Hungary, Poland, Montenegro,
Romania, Serbia and Slovakia. Each chapter compares and contrasts
two party leaders with at least two terms in office between 1991
and 2019. The book applies systematically a common theoretical and
methodological framework across leaders and countries, thus
providing rich empirical evidence.
The concept of Greater Tibet has surfaced in the political and
academic worlds in recent years. It is based in the inadequacies of
other definitions of what constitutes the historical and modern
worlds in which Tibetan people, ideas, and culture occupy. This
collection of papers is inspired by a panel on Greater Tibet held
at the XIIIth meeting of the International Association of Tibet
Studies in Ulaan Baatar in 2013. Participants included leading
Tibet scholars, experts in international law, and Tibetan
officials. Greater Tibet is inclusive of all peoples who generally
speak languages from the Tibetan branch of the Tibeto-Burman
family, have a concept of mutual origination, and share some common
historical narratives. It includes a wide area, including peoples
from the Central Asian Republics, Pakistan, India, Nepal Bhutan,
Bangladesh, Myanmar, People's Republic of China, Mongolia, Russia,
and Tibetan people in diaspora abroad. It may even include
practitioners of Tibetan Buddhism who are not of Tibetan origin,
and Tibetan peoples who do not practice Buddhism. Most of this area
corresponds to the broad expansion of Tibetan culture and political
control in the 7th-9th centuries AD, and is thus many times larger
than the current Tibet Autonomous Region in China-the Tibetan
"culture area." As a conceptual framework, Greater Tibet stands in
contrast to Scott's concept of Zomia for roughly the same region, a
term which defines an area of highland Asia and Southeast Asia
characterized by disdain for rule from distant centers, failed
state formation, anarchist, and "libertarian" individual
proclivities.
Human and Minority Rights Protection by Multiple Diversity
Governance provides a comprehensive overview and critical analysis
of minority protection through national constitutional law and
international law in Europe. Using a critical theoretical and
methodological approach, this textbook: provides a historical
analysis of state formation and nation building in Europe with
context of religious wars and political revolutions, including the
(re-)conceptualisation of basic concepts and terms such as
territoriality, sovereignty, state, nation and citizenship;
deconstructs all primordial theories of ethnicity and provides a
sociologically informed political theory for how to reconcile the
functional prerequisites for political unity, legal equality and
social cohesion with the preservation of cultural diversity;
examines the liberal and nationalist ideological framing of
minority protection in liberal-democratic regimes, including the
case law of the European Court of Human Rights and the European
Court of Justice; analyses the ongoing trend of re-nationalisation
in all parts of Europe and the number of legal instruments and
mechanisms from voting rights to proportional representation in
state bodies, forms of cultural and territorial autonomy and
federalism. This textbook will be essential reading for students,
scholars and practitioners interested in European politics, human
and minority rights, constitutional and international law,
governance and nationalism.
Although party membership has been extensively analysed in the EU
Members States from Western and Eastern Europe, there is a gap in
systematic data collection and analyses for the other countries in
the Balkans and post-Soviet region. This book provides new and
innovative insights in the area of party membership research to
analyse the evolution of membership organizations in political
parties from under-investigated countries. Specifically, it seeks
to understand the way in which political parties and the national
legislation conceptualize the notion of membership within and
across countries. It provides original data and affords a first
comprehensive, comparative study of party members in the EU
neighbouring countries, which resonate particular interest because
some of them occupy the "precarious middle ground between a
full-fledge democracy and outright dictatorship". In light of these
relevant observations, this systematic analysis of membership
evolutions in democratizing countries brings valuable insights for
the study of party politics in general. This text will be of key
interest to scholars and students of political parties and party
systems, party organisation and elections, post-Soviet and East
European politics and more broadly to democratization studies and
comparative politics.
This volume explores the recent advances in the study of
translational paths in central inflammation and focuses on ongoing
pathophysiological processes and the transition between
inflammatory stages and progressive states with neurodegeneration.
Chapters cover topics such as pathophysiological hallmarks of
neuroinflammation from tissue damage to reorganization; connecting
studies of mouse models; and investigations of humans with multiple
sclerosis. In the Neuromethods series style, chapters include the
kind of detail and key advice from the specialists needed to get
successful results in your laboratory. Cutting-edge and practical,
Translational Methods for Multiple Sclerosis Research is a valuable
resource for researchers who want to learn more about this chronic
ad progressive disease, and pave the way for new advancements.
Political parties in post-communist countries have very high levels
of electoral volatility. In these environments, political factions
fail to establish long-term connections with the electorate and
thus regularly rise and fall from the political arena. This book
provides an organizational explanation for the variations in
party-level electoral volatility. It looks comparatively at 29
political parties in six Central and Eastern European democracies
between 1990 and 2008 to examine how political parties can
influence their electoral environment. Using empirical evidence,
Gherghina tests the effect of candidate selection procedures,
membership organizations, and re-nomination of incumbent MPs on
voters' loyalty, and in doing so, demonstrates how party
organization greatly affects electoral stability. Including case
studies from Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Romania,
and Slovakia this book will be of interest to students and scholars
of comparative politics, party politics, democratization,
elections, and Central and Eastern European politics.
The concept of Greater Tibet has surfaced in the political and
academic worlds in recent years. It is based in the inadequacies of
other definitions of what constitutes the historical and modern
worlds in which Tibetan people, ideas, and culture occupy. This
collection of papers is inspired by a panel on Greater Tibet held
at the XIIIth meeting of the International Association of Tibet
Studies in Ulaan Baatar in 2013. Participants included leading
Tibet scholars, experts in international law, and Tibetan
officials. Greater Tibet is inclusive of all peoples who generally
speak languages from the Tibetan branch of the Tibeto-Burman
family, have a concept of mutual origination, and share some common
historical narratives. It includes a wide area, including peoples
from the Central Asian Republics, Pakistan, India, Nepal Bhutan,
Bangladesh, Myanmar, People's Republic of China, Mongolia, Russia,
and Tibetan people in diaspora abroad. It may even include
practitioners of Tibetan Buddhism who are not of Tibetan origin,
and Tibetan peoples who do not practice Buddhism. Most of this area
corresponds to the broad expansion of Tibetan culture and political
control in the 7th-9th centuries AD, and is thus many times larger
than the current Tibet Autonomous Region in China-the Tibetan
"culture area." As a conceptual framework, Greater Tibet stands in
contrast to Scott's concept of Zomia for roughly the same region, a
term which defines an area of highland Asia and Southeast Asia
characterized by disdain for rule from distant centers, failed
state formation, anarchist, and "libertarian" individual
proclivities.
Political parties in post-communist countries have very high
levels of electoral volatility. In these environments, political
factions fail to establish long-term connections with the
electorate and thus regularly rise and fall from the political
arena.
This book provides an organizational explanation for the
variations in party-level electoral volatility. It looks
comparatively at 29 political parties in six Central and Eastern
European democracies between 1990 and 2008 to examine how political
parties can influence their electoral environment. Using empirical
evidence, Gherghina tests the effect of candidate selection
procedures, membership organizations, and re-nomination of
incumbent MPs on voters loyalty, and in doing so, demonstrates how
party organization greatly affects electoral stability.
Including case studies from Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Hungary,
Poland, Romania, and Slovakia this book will be of interest to
students and scholars of comparative politics, party politics,
democratization, elections, and Central and Eastern European
politics."
* Fills a gap in the market by coupling theoretical grounding with
real-life examples that show application in practice. * Each
chapter concludes with two case studies from international Higher
Education institutions alongside reflective questions to provoke
further thought. * Suitable for a broad audience, from students
studying services marketing and specific higher education
management modules, to practitioners working in administrative
roles within universities. * A particularly timely and "hot topic"
title, as universities look to promote their brand and drive
revenue in the (optimistically) post-pandemic world.
This volume collects almost two decades of joint work of Sergiu
Hart and Andreu Mas-Colell on game dynamics and equilibria. The
starting point was the introduction of the adaptive strategy called
regret-matching, which on the one hand is simple and natural, and
on the other is shown to lead to correlated equilibria. This
initial finding - boundedly rational behavior that yields fully
rational outcomes in the long run - generated a large body of work
on the dynamics of simple adaptive strategies. In particular, a
natural condition on dynamics was identified: uncoupledness,
whereby decision-makers do not know each other's payoffs and
utilities (so, while chosen actions may be observable, the
motivations are not). This condition turns out to severely limit
the equilibria that can be reached. Interestingly, there are
connections to the behavioral and neurobiological sciences and also
to computer science and engineering (e.g., via notions of
"regret").Simple Adaptive Strategies is self-contained and unified
in its presentation. Together with the formal treatment of
concepts, theorems, and proofs, significant space is devoted to
informal explanations and illuminating examples. It may be used for
advanced graduate courses - in game theory, economics, mathematics,
computer science, engineering - and for further research.
The mid-twentieth century saw a change in paradigms of art history:
iconology. The main claim of this novel trend in art history was
that renowned Renaissance artists (such as Botticelli, Leonardo, or
Michelangelo) created imaginative syntheses between their art and
contemporary cosmology, philosophy, theology, and magic. The
Neoplatonism in the books by Marsilio Ficino and Giovanni Pico
della Mirandola became widely acknowledged for its lasting
influence on art. It thus became common knowledge that Renaissance
artists were not exclusively concerned with problems intrinsic to
their work but that their artifacts encompassed a much larger
intellectual and cultural horizon. This volume brings together
historians concerned with the history of their own discipline - and
also those whose research is on the art and culture of the Italian
Renaissance itself - with historians from a wide variety of
specialist fields, in order to engage with the contested field of
iconology. The book will be of interest to scholars working in art
history, Renaissance history, Renaissance studies, historiography,
philosophy, theology, gender studies, and literature.
A panorama of Russian Christian spirituality, richly illustrated
with passages from formative works.
This book examines the effectiveness and consistency of EU
democracy promotion in its Eastern neighbourhood between 1991 and
2014. It concludes that the EU's democratization role in this
region was, not surprisingly, weak within this time period.
However, this weak role only took shape under four domestic and
transnational conditions: (a) a higher cost-benefit balance of rule
transfer, (b) a lower structural difficulty a given country would
need to overcome on its way towards a democratic regime, (c)
increased levels of authority distribution across branches of
power, and (d) a higher extent of democratic diffusion resulting
from regional interactions. In those countries where these domestic
and transnational conditions were present, as in Moldova, Ukraine,
and Georgia, the EU's democratizing influence was in causal terms
only the tip of the iceberg. Most variation in regime dynamics
remains to be explained by domestic and transnational contexts.
Issues relating to the emergence, persistence, and stability of
cooperation among social agents of every type are widely recognized
to be of paramount importance. They are also analytically difficult
and intellectually challenging. This book, arising from a NATO
Advanced Study Institute held at SUNY in 1994, is an up-to-date
presentation of the contribution of game theory to the subject. The
contributors are leading specialists who focus on the problem from
the many different angles of game theory, including axiomatic
bargaining theory, the Nash program of non-cooperative foundations,
game with complete information, repeated and sequential games,
bounded rationality methods, evolutionary theory, experimental
approaches, and others. Together they offer significant progress in
understanding cooperation.
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Discovery Miles 4 590
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