Results 11 to 20 of about 108 (89)
Precision Medicine: Historiography of Life Sciences and the Geneticization of the Clinics. [PDF]
Abstract In 2013, Hans Jörg Rheinberger proposed that Mendelian genetics and molecular biology were “scientific ideologies,” that is, for him they are systems of thought whose objects are hyperbolic; they are not, or not yet, in the realm of and not, or not yet, under the control of that system.
Löwy I.
europepmc +2 more sources
Mind the gap: The nation form and the Kohn dichotomy
Abstract The dichotomy between civic Western nationalism and ethnic non‐Western nationalism (also known as “the Kohn dichotomy” after the historian of nationalism Hans Kohn) remains one of the most influential frameworks for understanding nationalism.
Jaakko Heiskanen
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RECONCEIVING THE PRACTICE OF HISTORY: FROM REPRESENTATION TO TRANSLATION
ABSTRACT Arguing that history is not the application of a rigorous method to sources bequeathed to us from the past but rather a practice of coding that constructs “the past” in particular ways, this article seeks to delineate the key elements of this coding.
Sanjay Seth
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The ‘borderlands’ of the science–policy interface
Abstract In this commentary, using the UK as our example, we focus on what we describe as the borderlands of the science–policy interface (SPI) and use two case studies to sketch out where we think there are further opportunities for geographers and others interested in advocating and engaging.
Gary Kass, Alice M Milner, Klaus Dodds
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This essay explores how lithographic printing connected colonial society in India to global developments in the making of middle‐class culture. It focuses on two print portrait series that the artist Colesworthy Grant (1813–80) released in illustrated periodicals: Lithographic Sketches of the Public Characters of Calcutta; and A Series of Miscellaneous
Tom Young
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Abstract We evaluate the complexity of temporary migration schemes in contrast to the longstanding approach to immigration as a key aspect of nation‐building in settler societies. Until the early 1990s, predominantly one‐way, permanent immigration schemes were preferred in settler societies such as Australia.
Claudia Tazreiter, Andrew Burridge
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Abstract To date, analyses of ‘cultural racism’ or ‘neoracism’ have largely been oriented towards Western countries, where the pattern of discrimination at issue remains linked to perceptions of phenotypical characteristics. In India, by contrast, there are no physical markers of difference between Muslims and other social groups.
Sonia Sikka
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Dearly Beloved or Unrequited? To Be ‘Black’ in Art's Histories
Guided by Stuart Hall's essay ‘Black Diaspora Artists in Britain: Three “Moments” in Post‐War History’ (2006), this special issue looks closely at the multi‐faceted genealogies of Black British modernism since the arrival of the ‘Windrush generation’. It brings together a range of essays in different formats by artists and art historians on topics and ...
Sonia Boyce, Dorothy Price
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International Migration, Volume 61, Issue 5, Page 318-322, October 2023.
Philippe M. Frowd +2 more
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Igualibertad y paridad participativa: elementos básicos para democratizar la democracia
En este artículo se propone un desarrollo esquemático del concepto de paridad participativa de Nancy Fraser como elemento complementario a la propuesta de democratizar la democracia de Étienne Balibar que se inscribe en la dialéctica de la igualibertad ...
David Alejandro Valencia
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