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This book looks at how the multiplicity of formal and informal
normative systems that actualize the post-disaster recovery goals
of the country's Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Act of 2010
has resulted in the inadequate housing and relocation of Typhoon
Ketsana victims in the Philippines. Using the sociological and
normative pluralist perspectives and the case study method, it
evaluates the level of conformity of the components of the housing
project according to international conventions and legal standards.
It highlights the negative unintended consequences caused by the
complex normative regimes of various competing stakeholders, rigid
real estate regulation, and the unscrupulous involvement of
powerful and 'corrupt' real estate developers and housing groups as
largely contributing to the project's deviation from the law's
proactive objectives. This book attempts to promote the socio-legal
perspectives which have long been overlooked in disaster research.
Finally, it invites policymakers to enact a comprehensive disaster
law and create a one-stop disaster management agency to improve the
long-term rehabilitation of disaster victims in developing
countries such as the Philippines.
This book addresses the persistence of the optical media piracy
trade in the Philippines and Vietnam. It goes beyond arguments of
defective law enforcement and copyright legal systems by applying
sociological perspectives to examine the socio-economic forces
behind the advent of piracy in the region. Using documentary and
ethnographic data, in addition to resistance and ecological
theories in sociology of law and technology as the overall
theoretical framework, the book investigates factors that
contribute to this phenomenon and factors that impede the full
formalization of the optical media trade in the two countries.
These factors include the government's attitude towards the
informal sector and strong resistance to tougher IPR protection,
unstable and sometimes conflicting policies on technologies,
burdensome business registration process and weak enforcement of
business regulations, bureaucratic corruption and loopholes in law
enforcement system as well as trade ties with China. In addition to
that, the book highlights the social background of the actors
behind the illegal business of counterfeit CDs and DVDs, thereby
explaining the reasons they continue to persist in this type of
trade. It invites policymakers, law enforcers, advocates of
anti-piracy groups, and the general public to use a more holistic
lens in understanding the persistence of copyright piracy in
developing countries, shifting the blame from the moral defect of
the traders to the current problematic copyright policy and
enforcement structure, and the difficulty of crafting effective
anti-piracy measures in a constantly evolving and advancing
technological environment.
This book introduces Catholic social teaching (CST) and its
teaching on the common good to the reader and applies them in the
realm of public health to critically analyze the major global
issues of COVID-19 that undermine public interest. It uses the
sociotheological approach that combines the moral principles of CST
and the holistic analysis of modern sociology and also utilizes the
secondary literature as the main source of textual data.
Specifically, it investigates the corporate moral irresponsibility
and some unethical business practices of Big Pharma in the sale and
distribution of its anti-COVID vaccines and medicines, the
injustice in the inequitable global vaccine distribution, the
weakening of the United States Congress's legislative regulation
against the pharmaceutical industry's overpricing and profiteering,
the inadequacy of the World Health Organization's (WHO) law
enforcement system against corruption, and the lack of social
monitoring in the current public health surveillance system to
safeguard the public good from corporate fraud and white-collar
crime. This book highlights the contribution of sociology in
providing the empirical foundation of CST's moral analysis and in
crafting appropriate Catholic social action during the pandemic. It
is hoped that through this book, secular scholars, social
scientists, religious leaders, moral theologians, religious
educators, and Catholic lay leaders would be more appreciative of
the sociotheological approach to understanding religion and
COVID-19. "This book brings into dialogue two bodies of literature:
documents of Catholic social teaching, and modern sociology and its
core thinkers and texts...The author does especially well to
describe how taking 'the sociotheological turn'...will benefit the
credibility and dissemination of Catholic social thought." - Rev.
Fr. Thomas Massaro, S.J., Professor of Moral Theology, Jesuit
School of Theology, Santa Clara University, Berkeley, California.
This book offers an analysis of the sociological, historical, and
cultural factors that lie behind mandatory clerical celibacy in the
Roman Catholic Church and examines the negative impact of celibacy
on the Catholic priesthood in our contemporary age. Drawing on
sociological theory and secondary qualitative data, together with
Church documents, it contends that married priesthood has always
existed in some form in the Catholic Church and that mandatory
universal celibacy is the product of cultural and sociological
contingencies, rather than sound doctrine. With attention to a
range of problems associated with priestly celibacy, including
sexual abuse, clerical shortages, loneliness, and spiritual sloth,
In Defense of Married Priesthood argues that the Roman Catholic
Church should permit marriage to the priesthood in order to respond
to the challenges of our age. Presenting a sociologically informed
alternative to the popular theological perspectives on clerical
celibacy, this book defends the notion of the married priesthood as
legitimate means of living the vocation of Catholic
priesthood—one which is eminently fitting for the contemporary
world. It will therefore appeal to scholars and students of
religion, theology, and sociology.
This book offers an analysis of the sociological, historical, and
cultural factors that lie behind mandatory clerical celibacy in the
Roman Catholic Church and examines the negative impact of celibacy
on the Catholic priesthood in our contemporary age. Drawing on
sociological theory and secondary qualitative data, together with
Church documents, it contends that married priesthood has always
existed in some form in the Catholic Church and that mandatory
universal celibacy is the product of cultural and sociological
contingencies, rather than sound doctrine. With attention to a
range of problems associated with priestly celibacy, including
sexual abuse, clerical shortages, loneliness, and spiritual sloth,
In Defense of Married Priesthood argues that the Roman Catholic
Church should permit marriage to the priesthood in order to respond
to the challenges of our age. Presenting a sociologically informed
alternative to the popular theological perspectives on clerical
celibacy, this book defends the notion of the married priesthood as
legitimate means of living the vocation of Catholic
priesthood—one which is eminently fitting for the contemporary
world. It will therefore appeal to scholars and students of
religion, theology, and sociology.
This book addresses the persistence of the optical media piracy
trade in the Philippines and Vietnam. It goes beyond arguments of
defective law enforcement and copyright legal systems by applying
sociological perspectives to examine the socio-economic forces
behind the advent of piracy in the region. Using documentary and
ethnographic data, in addition to resistance and ecological
theories in sociology of law and technology as the overall
theoretical framework, the book investigates factors that
contribute to this phenomenon and factors that impede the full
formalization of the optical media trade in the two countries.
These factors include the government's attitude towards the
informal sector and strong resistance to tougher IPR protection,
unstable and sometimes conflicting policies on technologies,
burdensome business registration process and weak enforcement of
business regulations, bureaucratic corruption and loopholes in law
enforcement system as well as trade ties with China. In addition to
that, the book highlights the social background of the actors
behind the illegal business of counterfeit CDs and DVDs, thereby
explaining the reasons they continue to persist in this type of
trade. It invites policymakers, law enforcers, advocates of
anti-piracy groups, and the general public to use a more holistic
lens in understanding the persistence of copyright piracy in
developing countries, shifting the blame from the moral defect of
the traders to the current problematic copyright policy and
enforcement structure, and the difficulty of crafting effective
anti-piracy measures in a constantly evolving and advancing
technological environment.
This book looks at how the multiplicity of formal and informal
normative systems that actualize the post-disaster recovery goals
of the country's Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Act of 2010
has resulted in the inadequate housing and relocation of Typhoon
Ketsana victims in the Philippines. Using the sociological and
normative pluralist perspectives and the case study method, it
evaluates the level of conformity of the components of the housing
project according to international conventions and legal standards.
It highlights the negative unintended consequences caused by the
complex normative regimes of various competing stakeholders, rigid
real estate regulation, and the unscrupulous involvement of
powerful and 'corrupt' real estate developers and housing groups as
largely contributing to the project's deviation from the law's
proactive objectives. This book attempts to promote the socio-legal
perspectives which have long been overlooked in disaster research.
Finally, it invites policymakers to enact a comprehensive disaster
law and create a one-stop disaster management agency to improve the
long-term rehabilitation of disaster victims in developing
countries such as the Philippines.
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