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Academic Journals
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- 1From:Journal of Southern History (Vol. 87, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedIn late 1891 a debate erupted after the North American Review published an article criticizing Jews and their supposed lack of military service. The article, attributed to a U.S. Army veteran named J. M. Rogers, decried...
- 2From:Stanford Law Review (Vol. 74, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedPolitical resistance from industry has hindered climate legislation in the United States. Lobbying is one of the most important ways in which firms exert influence in Congress and other rulemaking bodies. Firms involved...
- 3From:Journal of Ethics & Social Philosophy (Vol. 23, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedWHENEVER A judges that [PHI]-ing is morally wrong and B judges that [PHI]-ing is not morally wrong, they disagree. At least, this is an intuition y Y that most of us share. It also seems quite clear that (again,...
- 4From:ETC.: A Review of General Semantics (Vol. 78, Issue 3-4) Peer-ReviewedSince the U.S.-led invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, a number of critics have accused the United States of forsaking a tradition of cooperative diplomacy by overthrowing foreign governments. But America has had a long...
- 5From:TYL (Vol. 26, Issue 2)As a new attorney, you may receive assignments from your supervising attorney like: * find a case that stands for this legal argument, * draft the section of the brief arguing that the court has no jurisdiction, or...
- 6From:Independent Review (Vol. 26, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedIn A Theory of Justice ([1971] 1999), John Rawls argues that moral desert should have a minimal role in accounts of distributional justice. In "A Theory of Justice with Claims of Desert," Alexander Rawls argues via an...
- 7From:Canadian Review of Sociology (Vol. 59, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedScholars have often characterized the city as the epicenter of social inequality. The city has largely been argued to be the product of capitalistic endeavors resulting in deep pockets of conflicting class interests and...
- 8From:Velvet Light Trap (Issue 89) Peer-ReviewedThis article considers how performances at the Video Music Awards (VMAs) have been central to constructing the cultural brand of MTV by fusing debates around nationalism, anticensorship, and consumer activism. When the...
- 9From:Synesis (Vol. 14, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedUma teoria ampla da democracia deliberativa pressupõe uma teoria do dissenso como uma de suas ideias nucleares. Neste trabalho, pergunta-se qual o papel do dissenso nas democracias contemporâneas e como ele pode ser...
- 10From:Parameters (Vol. 51, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedArmy General Matthew Ridgway's actions throughout his career provide a valuable example of the appropriate time and place for serious dissent by military leaders. Ridgway demonstrated the importance of selectively and...
- 11From:Journal of Ethics & Social Philosophy (Vol. 20, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedIT is A COMMON THOUGHT that authoritative law is necessary because we disagree about justice. This idea often rests on law's purported instrumental value, on its ability to get us, imperfect and biased agents, closest to...
- 12From:Mathematical Biosciences and Engineering (Vol. 18, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedHealthcare systems constitute a significant portion of smart cities infrastructure. The aim of smart healthcare is two folds. The internal healthcare system has a sole focus on monitoring vital parameters of patients....
- 13From:Wagadu (Vol. 24) Peer-ReviewedWhile authoritarian states promoting neoliberal forms of governance have taken advantage of COVID-19 to weaken the foundations of civil society, there has also been a significant rise in contemporary struggles for a more...
- 14From:Afro-Americans in New York Life and History (Vol. 42, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedOn May 26, 1851, Daniel Webster spoke from the balcony of Frazee Hall in Syracuse, New York. He had come to Syracuse, a city which had hosted a number of anti-slavery conventions, as part of an effort to promote...
- 15From:Journal of International Women's Studies (Vol. 24, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedWhile authoritarian states promoting neoliberal forms of governance have taken advantage of COVID-19 to weaken the foundations of civil society, there has also been a significant rise in contemporary struggles for a more...
- 16From:Harvard Law Review (Vol. 134, Issue 5)"What I want to say in this letter," wrote the exasperated Viceroy of India in a telegram to the London-based Secretary of State for India, "is that the time for palliatives is past, ... and that, if public opinion--and...
- 17From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 16, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedScholars have offered multiple theoretical resolutions to explain inconsistent findings about the relationship of state repression and protests, but this repression-dissent puzzle remains unsolved. We simulate the spread...
- 18From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 16, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedSource representations play a role both in the formation of individual beliefs as well as in the social transmission of such beliefs. Both of these functions suggest that source information should be particularly useful...
- 19From:International journal of communication (Online)Peer-ReviewedSocial media like Twitter have been widely adopted by advocacy organizations to communicate dissent and mobilize consensus during recent bouts of collective action. Viewing organizational discourse on Twitter as a...
- 20From:Journal of Comparative and International Higher Education (Vol. 12, Issue 6S1) Peer-ReviewedDespite having one of the largest and fastest-growing post-secondary sectors in the world, there has been increasing protest against the lack of academic freedom within HEIs in India in the past decade. This research...