... and schools omit and distort the Afro-Brazilian struggle for liberation. Clientism is a Method that the White Society in Brazil Uses to Oppress Black People Euro-Brazilians use a paternalistic system of clientism in which they place Afro- ...
This volume is the definite statement on the current state of political science as a discipline in Western Europe. Detailfour chapters portray European developments.
Dynes , Wayne R. “ Introduction to Gay Male Literature . ” Gay and Lesbian Literature . Ed . S. Malinowski . Detroit : St. James Press , 1994. xiii - xv . Enríquez , José Ramón , ed . El homosexual ante la sociedad enferma .
This book illustrates that even though the same television format is used in countries all over the globe, practices of adaptation can still result in the creation of unique local cultural products.
Thus was born the global movement of evidence-based policy (Marston and Watts, 2003; Nutley et al., 2003; Sanderson, 2009, 2011). Decades later, the idea of evidence-based policy remains potent, if only because it implies a less ...
The task of the present study has been to scrutinize the assertion that the mass media is conducive in spreading a common culture, ... They were overly optimistic about the media's role in creating a national identity.
... show's host, whereas the satellite channels adopted an open forum-approach ... government issued a decree in 2001 allowing private ownership of television ... the superstar Tamer Hosny's song in support of the military promoting the ...
Korean Popular Culture of the Twenty-First Century Kyung Hyun Kim. learned that it is almost always better to ... One of my graduate students, Sue Kim Asokan, helped me compile the bibliography. I wrote my first book, also published by ...
The essays in this collection often contradict this assumption, demonstrating that the contest has actually been a significant force and forecaster for social, cultural and political transformations in postwar Europe.
. . Termed a "political king-maker" by Newsweek, and "the Dan Rather of infotainment" by Vanity Fair, Jon Stewart, along with the writers of The Daily Show, combines his riotous wit and razor-sharp insight in this hilarious book.