A geopolitical turning point? Enlargement discourse after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. [PDF]
Hunter T, Wunsch N, Bélanger ME.
europepmc +1 more source
Eavesdropping as Rhetorical Tactic: History, Whiteness, and Rhetoric [PDF]
Ratcliffe, Krista
core +1 more source
ABSTRACT This study employs a scalar politics framework to unpack how participatory rhetoric operates statecraft in a post‐authoritarian context, thereby illuminating hybrid‐regime behavior along a continuum of environmental governance. An examination of the environmental governance of an ecotourism project in South Korea is performed using ...
Souyeon Nam
wiley +1 more source
Variable co-adaptation: exploring the emergence of teacher-student interaction patterns in award-winning EFL classes through the CDST lens. [PDF]
Chen B, Zhang W, Xie Y.
europepmc +1 more source
For the Few, Not the Many: Tracing the Residualist and Compensatory Nature of British Energy Support
ABSTRACT Drawing on extensive documentary analysis, this article traces the evolution of British energy policy support since World War II. It analyses shifts in policy design through two interpretive lenses: eligibility (residualist vs. universalist) and function (compensatory vs. preventive).
T. M. Croon +4 more
wiley +1 more source
'They are lovely men': Compassionate exclusion used to justify a protest outside asylum seeker accommodation. [PDF]
Nightingale A, Jay S.
europepmc +1 more source
Sidelining Mitigation: Climate Delay Discourses Among Municipal Legislators in Southeastern Brazil
ABSTRACT This study investigates how municipal legislators frame climate mitigation and how these framings shift responsibility, narrow the perceived scope of municipal authority, and reduce the urgency or feasibility of local action. We analyzed 31 interviews with city councilors serving on Permanent Environmental Committees across municipalities in ...
Tainá Yumi Patriani
wiley +1 more source
Large language models as cognitive shortcuts: a systems-theoretic reframing beyond bullshit. [PDF]
Sariyar M.
europepmc +1 more source
ABSTRACT Affective polarisation, a growing hostility toward political outgroups, is a phenomenon rooted in social identity. Social identity threat—the expectation of experiencing some form of denigration based on a self‐relevant group identity—is thought to be a major driver of affective polarisation.
Brandon McMurtrie +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Argumentative style of parent-child interactions: A case study. [PDF]
Yang XJ, Shen-Tu CC.
europepmc +1 more source

