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Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Islamic Civilization And (Western) Modernity, Peter O'Brien
Islamic Civilization And (Western) Modernity, Peter O'Brien
Political Science Faculty Research
Much historiography of the last three decades has undermined the sway of Eurocentrism. Though unabashedly Eurocentric histories still become bestsellers,1 revisionists have shown that the ideas and developments that spawned modernity hardly sprang sui generis from European soil. In their historic re-awakening starting at the end of the Middle Ages that ushered in the Renaissance, Reformation, Scientific Revolution and Enlightenment, Europeans borrowed and augmented a vast array of ideas, institutions, and practices particularly from Islamic, but also Indian and Chinese, civilization.2
This article contends that such revisionism, itself now putative, does not probe searchingly enough the inter-civilizational encounter …
Immigration To Germany: Past And Present Experiences, Peter O'Brien
Immigration To Germany: Past And Present Experiences, Peter O'Brien
Political Science Faculty Research
Germany long stood as the epitome of the ethno-nationalist approach to immigration. However, passage of the new Citizenship Law in 2000, which introduced jus soli, seemed to signal a sea change in the direction of a postnational outlook. This paper warns against seeing in the new legislation an emerging normative consensus around the kind of liberal cosmopolitanism advocated by the likes of Jürgen Habermas, Ulrich Beck or Will Kymlicka. I document the persistent allure and influence of nationalism and point to the growing appeal and sway of proposals and policies informed by a postmodern normative outlook. Germany’s normative landscape, …
Reproductive Rights In Latin America: A Rights-Based Approach To Development, Katherine Leonard
Reproductive Rights In Latin America: A Rights-Based Approach To Development, Katherine Leonard
Undergraduate Student Research Awards
No abstract provided.
La Grande Mortalità: Florence And The Black Death, Rachel Podd
La Grande Mortalità: Florence And The Black Death, Rachel Podd
Undergraduate Student Research Awards
The epidemic which devastated Medieval Europe, known as the Black Death, struck particularly hard among urban populations, including the Italian city of Florence. A major center of art, religion, and politics, the city that existed after the plague abated in 1350 was far from the city of 1347. Through careful analysis of primary sources, chief among them Il Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio and the Chronice of the Villani Brothers, the scholar can deduce several major trends caused by la grande mortalita. Deeper divisions developed between the rich and the poor, even as status symbols became less indicative of class. …
The Game Of Life: Designing A Gamification System To Increase Current Volunteer Participation And Retention In Volunteer-Based Nonprofit Organizations, Ya Chiang Fu
Undergraduate Student Research Awards
No abstract provided.
Public Policy And Smoking Prevalence In High Schools, Jerel Xavier San Gabriel
Public Policy And Smoking Prevalence In High Schools, Jerel Xavier San Gabriel
Undergraduate Student Research Awards
No abstract provided.