Results for 'Dutch homo-emancipation policy'

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  1. The Dutch Homo-Emancipation Policy and its Silencing Effects on Queer Muslims.Suhraiya Jivraj & Anisa de Jong - 2011 - Feminist Legal Studies 19 (2):143-158.
    The recent Dutch homo-emancipation policy has identified religious communities, particularly within migrant populations, as a core target group in which to make homosexuality more ‘speakable’. In this article we examine the paradoxical silencing tendencies of this ‘speaking out’ policy on queer Muslim organisations in the Netherlands. We undertake this analysis as the Dutch government is perhaps unique in developing an explicit ‘homo-emancipationpolicy and is often looked to as the model for (...)
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  2.  19
    The Dutch Homo-Emancipation Policy and its Silencing Effects on Queer Muslims.Suhraiya Jivraj & Anisa Jong - 2011 - Feminist Legal Studies 19 (2):143-158.
    The recent Dutch homo-emancipation policy has identified religious communities, particularly within migrant populations, as a core target group in which to make homosexuality more ‘speakable’. In this article we examine the paradoxical silencing tendencies of this ‘speaking out’ policy on queer Muslim organisations in the Netherlands. We undertake this analysis as the Dutch government is perhaps unique in developing an explicit ‘homo-emancipationpolicy and is often looked to as the model for (...)
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  3.  18
    A proper wife, a proper marriage: Constructions of ‘us’ and ‘them’ in Dutch family migration policy.Betty de Hart & Saskia Bonjour - 2013 - European Journal of Women's Studies 20 (1):61-76.
    Migration policy is a product and producer of identities and values. This article argues that discourses and policies on family reunification participate in the politics of belonging, and that gender and family norms play a crucial role in this production of collective identities, i.e. in defining who ‘we’ are and what distinguishes ‘us’ from ‘the others’. Tracing the development of political debates and policy-making about ‘fraudulent’ and ‘forced’ marriages in the Netherlands since the 1970s, the authors examine how (...)
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  4.  27
    Tolerance: Experiments with Freedom in the Netherlands.Cees Maris - 2018 - Cham: Springer Verlag.
    This book presents a collection of philosophical essays on freedom and tolerance in the Netherlands. It explores liberal freedom and its limits in areas such as freedom of speech, public reason, sexual morality, euthanasia, drugs policy, and minority rights. The book takes Dutch practices as exemplary test cases for the principled discussions on these subjects from the perspective of political liberalism. Indeed, the Netherlands may be viewed as a social laboratory in human tolerance. During the Cultural Revolution of (...)
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  5.  59
    Rethinking Emancipation, Rethinking Education.Carl Anders Säfström - 2011 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 30 (2):199-209.
    In this paper I discuss the possibility of the idea of emancipation within an educational philosophy that does not accept schooling as its first premise. The first part of the paper will take Sweden as an example of an educational state defined through educational policies such as life long learning, accountability and evidence-based research, and argue that these words are only meaningful within the myth of schooling and not in a language of education/emancipation. The second part of the (...)
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  6.  10
    The Dutch disease: the role of industrial policy for industrial transformation - the case of the jute industry.Carlo Morelli - 2014 - International Journal of Management Concepts and Philosophy 8 (2/3):156.
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  7.  14
    Evaluating Interactive Policy Making on Biotechnology: The Case of the Dutch Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport.Joske F. G. Bunders, Anneloes Roelofsen, Tjard de Cock Buning & Jacqueline E. W. Broerse - 2009 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 29 (6):447-463.
    Public engagement is increasingly advocated and applied in the development and implementation of technological innovations. However, initiatives so far are rarely considered effective. There is a need for more methodological rigor and insight into conducive conditions. The authors developed an evaluative framework and assessed accordingly the effectiveness of a project of the Dutch Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport in which the application of interactive policy making was piloted in medical biotechnology, among others, to increase the legitimacy and (...)
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  8.  27
    Dirk van Miert, The Emancipation of Biblical Philology in the Dutch Republic, 1590–1670.Alexandru Liciu - 2019 - Journal of Early Modern Studies 8 (2):153-157.
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  9. Dutch decay : the dismantling of the women's policy network in the Netherlands.Joyce Outshoorn & Jantine Oldersma - 2007 - In Joyce Outshoorn & Johanna Kantola, Changing state feminism. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
  10. The school policy of the Dutch Republic in the light of the views of Comenius.Pauline van Vliet - 1987 - Acta Comeniana 7:77-89.
  11.  36
    A military/intelligence operational perspective on the American Psychological Association’s weaponization of psychology post-9/11.Jean Maria Arrigo, Lawrence P. Rockwood, Jack O’Brien, Dutch Franz, David DeBatto & John Kiriakou - 2022 - History of the Human Sciences 35 (5):51-79.
    We examine the role of the American Psychological Association (APA) in the weaponization of American psychology post-9/11. In 2004, psychologists’ involvement in the detention and interrogation of terrorist suspects generated controversy over psychological ethics in national security (PENS). Two signal events inflamed the controversy. The 2005 APA PENS Report legitimized clinical psychology consultation in support of military/intelligence operations with detained terrorist suspects. An independent review, the 2015 Hoffman Report, found APA collusion with the US Department of Defense in producing the (...)
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  12.  26
    Dialectics of Technical Emancipation—Considerations on a Reflexive, Sustainable Technology Development.Georg Jochum - 2021 - NanoEthics 15 (1):29-41.
    The modern idea of emancipation is linked to the goal of overcoming dependencies and domination. However, as argued in the article, negative dialectics of emancipation must also be problematized. The project of emancipation, as it was formulated in the Age of Enlightenment, was often particular and was associated with the establishment of new forms of domination. Especially the project of liberation from the constraints of nature through technical development led to the domination of nature. In view of (...)
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  13.  6
    From Absolute Invisibility to Extreme Visibility: Emancipation Trajectory of Migrant Women in the Netherlands.Halleh Ghorashi - 2010 - Feminist Review 94 (1):75-92.
    After years of invisibility, the position of migrant women from Islamic countries now forms the core of the Dutch discourse on integration and emancipation. This article presents the downside of this visibility by showing that it is situated within a growing culturalist discourse. In addition to being culturalist, this discourse focuses on the shortcomings of migrants and is flavoured with a touch of new realism in its argument that it is a right to break the taboos of migrants. (...)
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  14.  40
    Publishing Policies and Family Strategies: The Fortunes of a Dutch Publishing House in the 18th and Early 19th Centuries. [REVIEW]Martyn Lyons - 2016 - The European Legacy 21 (4):435-436.
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  15.  67
    The ageing of Dutch fertility: socio-medical and policy implications.G. C. Beets, N. van Nimwegen, E. R. te Velde, C. M. Worthman, C. L. Jenkins, J. F. Stallings, D. Lai, E. Bonilla, A. Rodriguez & M. King - 1993 - Journal of Biosocial Science 25 (4):425-43.
    SummaryIntense, sustained nursing lengthens inter-birth intervals and is causally linked with low natural fertility. However, in traditional settings, the effects of such nursing on fertility are difficult to disentangle from those of nutrition. Results from an prospective, direct observational study of reproductive function in well-nourished Amele women who nurse intensively and persistently but who also have high fertility are here presented. Endocrine measures show that ovarian activity resumes by median 11·0 months postpartum. Median duration of postpartum amenorrhoea is 11·3 months, (...)
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  16.  41
    The paradox of emancipation: Populism, democracy and the soul of the Left.Albena Azmanova - 2019 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 45 (9-10):1186-1207.
    What is the connection between the surge of populism and the deflation of electoral support to traditional left-leaning ideological positions? How can we explain the downfall of the Left in conditions that should be propelling it to power? In its reaction both to the neo-liberal hegemony and to the rise of populism, I claim that the Left is afflicted by what Nietzsche called ‘a democratic prejudice’ – the reflex of reading history as the advent of democracy and its crisis. As (...)
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  17.  50
    Concepts of Nature as Communicative Devices: The Case of Dutch Nature Policy.Jozef Keulartz, Henny Van Der Windt & Jacques Swart - 2004 - Environmental Values 13 (1):81-99.
    The recent widespread shift in governance from the state to the market and to civil society, in combination with the simultaneous shift from the national level to supra-national and sub-national levels has led to a significant increase in the numbers of public and private players in nature policy. This in turn has increased the need for a common vocabulary to articulate and communicate views and values concerning nature among various actors acting on different administrative levels. In this article, we (...)
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  18.  33
    Development and emancipation.Bernd Carsten Stahl, Neil McBride & Ibrahim Elbeltagi - 2010 - Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society 8 (1):85-107.
    PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to investigate the emancipatory promises and realities of information and communication technology in Egypt.Design/methodology/approachThe combination of Habermasian and Foucauldian ideas implemented by a critical discourse analysis of the Egyptian Information Society Policy and interviews with employees of local decision support systems employees. Promises and rhetoric are contrasted with findings and questioned with regards to their validity.FindingsOn the policy level, analysis shows that the emancipating rhetoric of ICT is not followed through. ICT is (...)
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  19. The coevolutionary relation between Dutch mainport policies and the development of the seaport Rotterdam.Jurian Edelenbos, Lasse Gerrits & Marcel Van Gils - 2008 - Emergence: Complexity and Organization 10 (2):49-60.
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  20.  27
    Justice and Sustainability Tensions in Agriculture: Wicked Problems in the Case of Dutch Manure Policy.Mark Ryan & Anne-Charlotte Hoes - forthcoming - Ethics, Policy and Environment.
    In recent years, there has been tension between farmers and the Dutch government regarding sustainability policy (in the efforts to reduce the harm caused by manure surplus) and how implementing this policy affects farmers (in the form of justice concerns). We interviewed Dutch farmers to uncover how they view manure policy. We identified four types of injustices: procedural, contributive, distributive, and intergenerational. We propose that a multi-tiered approach is required to overcome these kinds of ‘wicked (...)
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  21.  65
    Do mothers have the right to bring up their own children? How facts do not determine (Dutch) government policy.Ellen Allewijn - 2010 - Ethics and Education 5 (2):147-157.
    The Dutch government has a double moral message for Dutch parents. On the one hand, they expect mothers to work more hours outside the home; on the other hand, they expect parents to perform better in their parental tasks. New research shows again that in spite of all stimulation measures, Dutch women with children prefer their part-time jobs, and parents prefer not to leave their children to the responsibility of day care all week. To what extent is (...)
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  22.  10
    Violence and Emancipation in Colonial Ideology: Hong Kong and British Malaya.Rohan Price - 2019 - Hong Kong: City University Press of Hong Kong.
    Are there ethics justifying anti-colonial violence? How and why did the violence and visions of nationalist movements become incorporated by colonial and neo-colonial rule? Using the insurrection by the Malayan Communist Party (1948–1960) as an example, this book argues that resorting to violence sped up the decolonisation of British Malaya by forcing its colonial administration to invent Malay nationalism and pursue ameliorative social policy among the Chinese diaspora community in a manner clearly derived from the Party’s platform. Yet this (...)
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  23.  74
    De-moralization as emancipation: Liberty, progress, and the evolution of invalid moral norms.Allen Buchanan & Russell Powell - 2017 - Social Philosophy and Policy 34 (2):108-135.
    Abstract:Liberal thinkers of the Enlightenment understood that surplus moral constraints, imposed by invalid moral norms, are a serious limitation on liberty. They also recognized that overcoming surplus moral constraints — what we call proper de-moralization — is an important dimension of moral progress. Contemporary philosophical theorists of liberty have largely neglected the threat that surplus moral constraints pose to liberty and the importance of proper de-moralization for human emancipation. This essay examines the phenomena of surplus moral constraints and proper (...)
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  24.  20
    The dynamics of pesantren leadership from the dutch ethical policy to the reformation periods.Auliya Ridwan - 2020 - Epistemé: Jurnal Pengembangan Ilmu Keislaman 15 (2):365-400.
    In its early periods, pesantren as a type of Islamic educational institution focused merely on religious teachings. Socio-political pressures and the need to carry out Islamic outreach have pushed kiai as pesantren leaders to negotiate their idealism according to the circumstances in different historical periods. Historical accounts from the Dutch colonial period to Indonesian independence show that kiai leadership becomes the decisive factor as well as the legitimation for pesantren to take certain actions during precarious situations. To examine the (...)
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  25.  27
    How Welfare Policies Can Change Trust – A Social Experiment Assessing the Impact of Social Assistance Policy on Political and Social Trust.Peer Scheepers, Maurice Gesthuizen, Niels Spierings & János Betkó - 2022 - Basic Income Studies 17 (2):155-187.
    While there is a substantive literature on the link between welfare states and individuals’ trust, little is known about the micro-linkage of the conditionality of welfare as a driver of trust. This study presents a unique randomized social experiment investigating this link. Recipients of the regular Dutch social assistance policy are compared to recipients of two alternative schemes inspired by the basic income and based on a more trusting and unconditional approach, testing the main reciprocity argument in the (...)
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  26. Demand-Driven Care and Hospital Choice. Dutch Health Policy Toward Demand-Driven Care: Results from a Survey into Hospital Choice. [REVIEW]Christiaan J. Lako & Pauline Rosenau - 2008 - Health Care Analysis 17 (1):20-35.
    In the Netherlands, current policy opinion emphasizes demand-driven health care. Central to this model is the view, advocated by some Dutch health policy makers, that patients should be encouraged to be aware of and make use of health quality and health outcomes information in making personal health care provider choices. The success of the new health care system in the Netherlands is premised on this being the case. After a literature review and description of the new (...) health care system, the adequacy of this demand-driven health policy is tested. The data from a July 2005, self-administered questionnaire survey of 409 patients (response rate of 94%) as to how they choose a hospital are presented. Results indicate that most patients did not choose by actively employing available quality and outcome information. They were, rather, referred by their general practitioner. Hospital choice is highly related to the importance a patient attaches to his or her physician’s opinion about a hospital. Some patients indicated that their hospital choice was affected by the reputation of the hospital, by the distance they lived from the hospital, etc. but physician’s advice was, by far, the most important factor. Policy consequences are important; the assumptions underlying the demand-driven model of patient health provider choice are inadequate to explain the pattern of observed responses. An alternative, more adequate model is required, one that takes into account the patient’s confidence in physician referral and advice. (shrink)
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  27.  5
    15 The role of CPB in Dutch economic policy.Rocus van Opstal & Jacqueline Timmerhuis - 2006 - In Tremmel J., The Handbook of Intergenerational Justice. Edward Elgar.
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  28.  13
    Fallacies of Virtualization: A Case Study of Farming, Manure, Landscapes, and Dutch Rural Policy.Bettina B. Bock & Wiebren J. Boonstra - 2009 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 34 (4):427-448.
    The recent rapprochement between Science and Technology Studies and Political Science is induced by the broadened understanding of political action. The debate concerning the nature of ``the political'' produces an important question concerning the possibilities of an issue- or object-oriented focus for understanding political action. The purpose of this article is to contribute to this debate through an analysis of how relations between material and social entities are continuously recontextualized and decontextualized in social and political interaction. The authors discuss established (...)
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  29. Euthanasia, Ethics and Public Policy. An Argument Against Legislation.G. A. M. Widdershoven - 2005 - Journal of Medical Ethics 31 (1):e6-e6.
    In 2002 the Netherlands and Belgium both adopted a law on euthanasia. In the Netherlands the law was a codification of a longstanding practice of condoning euthanasia. In Belgium it was a political novelty, without extended prior legal or medical discussion. The developments in the Netherlands and in Belgium will certainly give rise to debates in other countries. The Dutch example has already elicited international discussion. The Belgian policy is interesting because it shows that legalisation of euthanasia can (...)
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  30.  17
    Illiberalism and the democratic paradox: The infernal dialectic of neoliberal emancipation.Erik Swyngedouw - 2022 - European Journal of Social Theory 25 (1):53-74.
    The main trust of this article unfolds around the impasse of democratic politics today, marked by the fading belief in the presumably superior architecture of liberal democratic institutions to nurture emancipation on the one hand, and the seemingly inexorable rise of a variety of populist political movements on the other. The first part of the article focuses on the lure of autocratic populism. The second part considers how transforming neoliberal governance arrangements pioneered post-truth autocratic politics/policies in articulation with the (...)
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  31.  14
    Reconfiguring Policy and Clinical Practice: How Databases Have Transformed the Regulation of Pharmaceutical Care?Antoinette de Bont, Roland Bal & Maartje G. H. Niezen - 2013 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 38 (1):44-66.
    This article’s aim is to understand if and how the efforts to accumulate and organize clinical data transformed the regulation of pharmaceutical care. The authors analyze how the employment of databases by collectives of physicians and researchers shape both clinical and policy practice—and thereby reshape the relation between clinical work and policy. Since the late 1990s, Dutch government has supported the development of clinical databases for specific expensive medicines to gain oversight about actual medicine use. To be (...)
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  32.  31
    Prostitution Policy in Europe: A Time of Change?Helen Ward, Sophie Day & Judith Kilvington - 2001 - Feminist Review 67 (1):78-93.
    There has been considerable recent debate about prostitution in Europe that reflects concerns about health, employment and human rights. Legal changes are being introduced in many countries. We focus on two examples in order to discuss the likely implications. A new law in The Netherlands is normalizing aspects of the sex industry through decriminalizing both workers and businesses. In Sweden, on the other hand, prostitution is considered to be a social problem, and a new law criminalizes the purchasers of sexual (...)
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  33.  74
    Increasing Individual Responsibility in Dutch Health Care: Is Solidarity Losing Ground?R. Ter Meulen & H. Maarse - 2008 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 33 (3):262-279.
    This article presents various developments in Dutch health care policy toward a greater role for individual financial responsibility, such as cost-control measures, priority setting, rationing, and market reform. Instead of the collective responsibility that is characteristic of previous times, one can observe in government policies an increased emphasis on the need for individuals to take care of one’s own health and health care needs. Moreover, surveys point to decreasing levels of public support for “unlimited” solidarity and “irresponsible” health (...)
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  34.  39
    Critical realism and its prospects for African development research and policy.James M. Njihia - 2011 - Thought and Practice: A Journal of the Philosophical Association of Kenya 3 (1):61-85.
    This paper outlines critical realism, a relatively new philosophy of science, in an attempt to increase awareness of it amongst African researchers. The paper argues that this school of thought has important implications for framing social science research and development policy in developing countries. Critical realism is a radical critique of the Western philosophy, especially positivism that is closely associated with rational choice theory and Western modernity. It has four discernible progressive phases, each of which is a complete philosophical (...)
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  35.  28
    The presence of Responsible Research and Innovation in the perspectives of Dutch policy officers regarding innovation with quantum technology.Ferdinand Griesdoorn, Maarten Kroesen, Pieter Vermaas & Ibo van de Poel - 2023 - Journal of Responsible Technology 16 (C):100071.
  36.  34
    Not all animals are equal differences in moral foundations for the dutch veterinary policy on livestock and animals in nature reservations.Katinka Waelbers, Frans Stafleu & Frans W. A. Brom - 2004 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 17 (6):497-515.
    The Netherlands is a small country with many people and much livestock. As a result, animals in nature reservations are often living near cattle farms. Therefore, people from the agricultural practices are afraid that wild animals will infect domestic livestock with diseases like Swine Fever and Foot and Mouth Disease. To protect agriculture (considered as an important economic practice), very strict regulations have been made for minimizing this risk. In this way, the practice of animal farming has been dominating the (...)
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  37.  10
    The Making of a Science Policy: A Historical Study of the Institutional and Conceptual Background to Dutch Science Policy in a West-European Perspective. Frits Henry Brookman.Harold Orlans - 1981 - Isis 72 (3):497-498.
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  38.  33
    Knowledge production and the science-policy relation in Dutch soil policy: results from a survey on perceived roles of organisations.A. F. M. M. Souren, R. S. Poppen, P. Groenewegen & N. M. Van Straalen - unknown
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  39.  40
    Indigenous knowledge, emancipation and Alienation.Thomas Heyd - 1995 - Knowledge, Technology & Policy 8 (1):63-73.
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  40.  51
    Policy discourses on mosques in the netherlands 1980–2002: Contested constructions. [REVIEW]Marcel Maussen - 2004 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 7 (2):147-162.
    The establishment of mosques is an incentive for public discussions on Islam and the presence of Muslims in Western European societies. This article critically reconstructs Public Policy discourses on mosque establishment in the Dutch city of Rotterdam. It shows how urban-planning discourses, and their specific frames, which came to dominate mosque establishment as a policy issue in Rotterdam from the 1980s onwards, created their own set of meanings. The article analyses these discourses in terms of their enabling (...)
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  41.  20
    Enlightenment Contested: Philosophy, Modernity, and the Emancipation of Man 1670-1752.Jonathan Israel - 2006 - Oxford: Oxford University Press UK.
    Jonathan Israel presents the first major reassessment of the Western Enlightenment for a generation. Continuing the story he began in the best-selling Radical Enlightenment, and now focusing his attention on the first half of the eighteenth century, he returns to the original sources to offer a groundbreaking new perspective on the nature and development of the most important currents in modern thought. Israel traces many of the core principles of Western modernity to their roots in the social, political, and philosophical (...)
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  42.  27
    Pushing the Radical Nature Development Policy Concept in the Netherlands: An Agency Perspective.Simon Verduijn, Huub Ploegmakers, Sander Meijerink & Pieter Leroy - 2015 - Environmental Values 24 (1):55-77.
    In the 1990s, Dutch nature policy adopted a new policy concept, ‘nature development', whereas, until then, ‘nature preservation’ had largely dominated both the discourses and practices of nature policy-making. Nature development can be regarded as the Dutch counterpart of concepts such as ecological restoration, emerging simultaneously in other national nature policies. This paper argues that the rise of the nature development concept in the Netherlands is mainly due to the entrepreneurial strategies of a relatively small (...)
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  43.  79
    Autonomy, Human Dignity, and the Right to Healthcare: A Dutch Perspective.Martin Buijsen - 2010 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 19 (3):321-328.
    Dutch medical ethics policy is renowned for being highly liberal, due largely to the Dutch law on euthanasia. The Netherlands is one of the very few countries in which euthanasia performed by physicians and physician-assisted suicide has been legalized. Acts of euthanasia and PAS go unpunished, provided certain conditions are fulfilled.
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  44.  31
    Food and Agricultural Systems for the Future: Science, Emancipation and Human Flourishing.Hugh Lacey - 2015 - Journal of Critical Realism 14 (3):272-286.
    It has been proposed that the policies and practices of food sovereignty, unlike those of today's hegemonic food/agricultural system, provide the means for satisfying and safeguarding the right to food security for everyone everywhere. My principal objective in this article, which gains its significance in the light of an explanatory critique of the current system, is to explore how scientific research — using what kinds of methodologies, and building on experiences of what and of whom? — can constructively inform these (...)
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  45. A Dutch book for group decision-making?Luc Bovens & Wlodek Rabinowicz - 2008 - In Benedikt Löwe, Eric Pacuit & Jan-Willem Romeijn, Foundations of the Formal Sciences Vi: Probabilistic Reasoning and Reasoning With Probabilities. Studies in Logic. College Publication. pp. 91-101.
    The Puzzle of the Hats is a betting arrangement which seems to show that a Dutch book can be made against a group of rational players with common priors who act in the common interest and have full trust in the other players’ rationality. But we show that appearances are misleading—no such Dutch book can be made. There are four morals. First, what can be learned from the puzzle is that there is a class of situations in which (...)
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  46.  15
    Government communication about policy intentions: Unwanted propaganda or democratic inevitability? Surveys among government communication professionals and journalists in Belgium and the Netherlands.Keith Roe, Peter Neijens, Rozane De Cock & Dave Gelders - 2007 - Communications 32 (3):363-377.
    Recent developments in politics, the media, and society have stressed the rising importance of public communication from the government about policies not yet been adopted by Parliament. Government communication professionals and journalists are key figures in this process but conflicting interests mark a tense relationship. Up until now, few empirical studies have been conducted to shed light on the opinions of both professions concerning ‘Communication about Not yet Adopted Policy’. We studied the issue in both the Netherlands and Belgium (...)
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  47. (1 other version)Euthanasia, ethics, and public policy: an argument against legalisation.John Keown - 2002 - New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
    Whether the law should permit voluntary euthanasia or physician-assisted suicide is one of the most vital questions facing all modern societies. Internationally, the main obstacle to legalisation has proved to be the objection that, even if they were morally acceptable in certain 'hard cases', voluntary euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide could not be effectively controlled; society would slide down a 'slippery slope' to the killing of patients who did not make a free and informed request, or for whom palliative care would (...)
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  48. What was U.S. policy toward Indonesia.Noam Chomsky & Michael Albert - unknown
    In the aftermath of World War II, U.S. policy toward the Asian colonies of the European powers followed a simple rule: where the nationalists in a territory were leftist (as in Vietnam), Washington would support the reimposition of European colonial rule, while in those places where the nationalist movement was safely nonleftist (India, for example), Washington would support their independence as a way to remove them from the exclusive jurisdiction of a rival power. At first, Indonesian nationalists were not (...)
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  49.  69
    The Place of Care: The Relevance of the Feminist Ethic of Care for Social Policy.Selma Sevenhuijsen - 2003 - Feminist Theory 4 (2):179-197.
    In this article the relevance of the feminist ethic of care for current Dutch social policies is elaborated. It starts from the observation that Dutch society is witnessing two intertwined processes: the relocation of politics and the relocation of care. Together these processes result in the need for new normative frameworks for social policy. Care has to become part of the practices of active citizenship, which should be based on notions of relationality and interdependence. Basic moral concepts (...)
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  50.  50
    Civil Society Organizations and Care of the Self: An Ethnographic Case Study on Emancipation and Participation in Drug Treatment.Riikka Perälä - 2015 - Foucault Studies 20:96-115.
    Foucauldian analyses of civil society depart from classical approaches in that they don´t consider civil society to be a site of societal change or resistance as classical analyses do, but rather one of society’s multiple locations where so-called governmentality hits the ground. Although Foucauldian investigations have provided the prevailing discussion with a necessary departure from excessively idealistic images of civil society organizations as sites of resistance and societal transformation, what may have resulted in turn are overly pessimistic analyses that have (...)
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