Projecto e património edificado em São Paulo. Três casos como práticas de mudança.
Carolina Miguel dos Santos Barreiros
2013-11-06
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The purpose of this study was to provide insights regarding the ebb and flow of hope and anxiety within the Black community during the historic presidential campaign and election of 2008, and the impact of those phenomena on the Black community’s internal leadership. There is a great deal of information about the Black struggle in the United States and the various movements that have given voice to the Black cause, but the personal views of Black leaders at the local level and how the presidential candidacy of Barack Obama and his subsequent election have impacted them, their sense of responsibility, their personal growth, and the manner in which he has perhaps characterized and personified their leadership challenges was virtually unchronicaled. ^ To that end, seven Black participants (four men and three women ranging in age from 30...
A review of David M. Halperin, How to be Gay (Harvard University Press, 2012).
This article offers a discussion of Margaret Somerville's Body/Landscape Journals.
The Museum of New Zealand–Te Papa Tongarewa has proved a complex cultural site that has generated much public debate and a growing academic literature. This article departs from critical approaches that resolve the analysis of this museum by pointing up its programmatic inconsistencies, internal contradictions, representational inadequacies or its institutional paradoxes. Rather than establishing Te Papa as an object for reform the author reads it as an archive for reflection on the cultural predicament of an antipodean modernity.
A review of David M. Halperin, How to be Gay (Harvard University Press, 2012).
The study of the military by social scientists became increasingly interdisciplinary after WWII. The relationship of the military to society and the uniqueness thereof derived from its roles, functions and structure are debated from different perspectives. Institutional changes occurred over time and one of the first attempts of theorizing these changes has been by Charles Moskos (2000:15) who categorized changing trends into three historical periods, the “Modern”, the “Late modern” and the “Post-Modern” periods. This sociological theoretical model is an ideal-typical development construct of transformation and civil-military relations. A list of variables in each period depicts armed force characteristics changing to adapt to trends in civil-military relations, which can be applied to explain relevant military issues and changes in th...
