405 research outputs found

    The global food chain

    No full text
    Jonathon Porritt is Founder Director of Forum for the Future www.forumforthefuture.org.uk; Chairman of the UK Sustainable Development Commission www.sd-commission.org.uk; and author of Capitalism as if the World Matters (Earthscan, 2007)

    The production of neoliberal subjectivities: constellations of domination and resistance

    No full text
    The last 50 years have been marked by many remarkable events, historic shifts and technological breakthroughs that have challenged societies and driven change. Over the course of this period a revolution – sometimes quiet, other times violent and vicious – has also taken place. The rich ecology of our economic, political and social systems have become imbricated and enmeshed by a particular outlook; an outlook that has reshaped behaviours and expectations across scales – from the global to the most intimate of spaces. Neoliberalism, whether rolled out through the establishment of institutions to further the project, or rolled back via de-regulatory measures (Peck, 2010), has penetrated the worlds in which we live. There is the roll call of familiar names: economists, beginning with Friedrich von Hayek and Milton Friedman through to leaders who uncompromisingly pushed the ideas, making them ‘fit’ with reality: Augusto Pinochet, Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan. Yet, it is not the macro-level policies and change that this volume is concerned with. It is the absorption of neoliberal thought and the co-constituting processes that have contributed to a common-sense acceptance of neoliberal policies, not just through the subsequent actions of elite interests, but through the interiorisation of neoliberalism into our very beings. Thus, the development, production and reproduction of neoliberal subjectivity is a key point of interest herein. And intertwined with this subjectivity, at the edges of hegemonic processes, lie grey areas of domination and resistance. These constellations allow the exploration of identity in the face of this expansionary neoliberal project. And it is here, at the edges of identity of neoliberal subjectivity, that we situate our study

    Urban transformations in Phnom Penh: creative collectives, the white building and the production of space

    No full text
    In this chapter we explore the evolving role of art and storytelling programmes in an inner-city building in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, known as the White Building.1 This work rep-resents a tentative exploration into a community of people and their history – their cultural work and their identity. We chart the history of the Building from the late 1950s, before focussing on art and storytelling programmes from 2008 to the present. The underpinning concept of the programmes under analysis has been around establishing a vision for communal transfor-mation and then acting on that vision through an iterative process of action and reform. Within this setting, art and story-telling practices have become a way of articulating pluralistic modes of struggle in a post-conflict society that is dealing with the onset of a new neoliberal order of accumulation and dis-possession. Importantly, these practices look both to the past and to the future. Our interests in these practices lie, in part, through applying a Lefebvrian lens to problematize the contes-ted and dominated nature of the space within which these emergent forms of expression take place. We argue the possi-bility that the dominant discursive acts of the more powerful can be challenged through the expression of the ‘lived’ and the elevation of everyday life. Furthermore, we argue that the very perception of the space and the sense of place can be (re)produced through these alternative interactions. Indeed, it is hoped – if the emerging White Building community can hold off govern-ment interests and property developers – that current and future programmes play a role in transmitting an inclusive vision of a subaltern community as a form of resistance that comes from, but extends beyond the everyday (see Davies, 2016)

    A conceptual review of interprofessional expertise in child safeguarding

    No full text
    It is increasingly accepted that practitioners across a range of professional fields must work together in order to promote children's welfare and protect them from harm. However, it has also become apparent that interprofessional working is a challenging area of practice that cannot simply be prescribed through protocols and procedures, nor acquired as a set of technical competences. This article develops the concept of interprofessional expertise in order to explain how practitioners become more proficient at working with others to manage complex child welfare issues. Key principles are outlined with reference to relevant theoretical frameworks, including models of skill acquisition. The article concludes by discussing some potential implications for future research and contemporary developments in child safeguarding practice

    Allylic C—H activation to access anti-1,3-amino alcohol motifs

    No full text
    1,3-Amino alcohols are common motifs in a variety of biologically active molecules including antivirals, antibiotics, antifungals, and various alkaloids. Due to their prevalence and utility as synthetic intermediates, a variety of methods have been developed to access these motifs in a diastereoselective fashion, which are outlined in detail herein. This thesis documents a novel approach to access anti-1,3-amino alcohols through an intramolecular palladium (II)/sulfoxide-oxazoline catalyzed C—H functionalization between a terminal olefin and an N-tosyl carbamate, generating anti-1,3-oxazinanones. These motifs can be further elaborated upon, making this method ideal for the late stage diversification of complex molecules and pharmaceuticals. This new method can be carried out in the presence of reactive functionality that is not well tolerated by existing methods.Submission published under a 24 month embargo labeled 'Closed Access', the embargo will last until 2020-05-01The student, Jonathon Young, accepted the attached license on 2018-04-25 at 09:29.The student, Jonathon Young, submitted this Thesis for approval on 2018-04-25 at 09:40.This Thesis was approved for publication on 2018-04-25 at 14:08.DSpace SAF Submission Ingestion Package generated from Vireo submission #12470 on 2018-08-31 at 17:30:26Made available in DSpace on 2018-09-04T20:47:30Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2 YOUNG-THESIS-2018.pdf: 17381393 bytes, checksum: e7e97dc99ab1ce290a64d3a5a9836002 (MD5) LICENSE.txt: 4211 bytes, checksum: 6e0b64d3ab5cba30177cd6924932d927 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2018-04-25Embargo set by: Seth Robbins for item 107460 Lift date: 2020-09-04T20:47:38Z Reason: Author requested closed access (OA after 2yrs) in Vireo ETD systemEmbargo set by: Seth Robbins for item 107460 Lift date: 2020-09-04T20:50:11Z Reason: Author requested closed access (OA after 2yrs) in Vireo ETD systemLimited Restriction Lifted for Item 107460 on 2020-09-05T09:15:26Z

    Data and script for Van Berkel et al: Can starlings use a reliable cue of future food deprivation to adaptively modify foraging and fat reserves?

    No full text
    Supporting materials for: Can starlings use a reliable cue of future food deprivation to adaptively modify foraging and fat reserves? Menno van Berkela, Melissa Batesona, Daniel Nettlea and Jonathon Dunna* aCentre for Behaviour and Evolution & Institute of Neuroscience, Newcastle University, Newcastle, UK *Author for correspondence (email: [email protected]; telephone: (+44)7730015855; postal address: Institute of Neuroscience, Henry Wellcome Building, The Medical School, Framlington Place, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK, NE2 4HH). R script and 3 .csv files.</p

    Edges of Identity: The Production of Neoliberal Subjectivities

    No full text
    In recent decades neoliberalism has emerged as the ruling economic, political and cultural ideology of our time. Originally construed as an economic philosophy, neoliberalism is better understood today as a broad world view that emphasises free-market policies, deregulation, individualism, self-management and personal resilience at the expense of more collective, social-democratic policies and principles. Neoliberalism is a pervasive ideology that has shaped our lives for more than 40 years, from the wide-ranging organisational structures of our global economy to our most intimate bodily practices. In this engaging and accessible volume, Jonathon Louth and Martin Potter bring together researchers working in and across Europe, Asia, Australia and North America to elucidate on the manifold ways in which neoliberalism produces our subjectivities. Taking in nations and citizenship, urban transformation, gender, work, (dis)ability, sexual performance and cognitive function, this volume demonstrates the astonishing scope of neoliberalism to inform and delimit our identities on both macro and micro levels of social and personal life. Combining thoughtful theoretical accounts with fascinating fieldwork and spanning areas of inquiry including the UK, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Pakistan, Cambodia, Japan and Australia, Edges of Identity provides a remarkable collection of global perspectives on the impact of neoliberalism in contemporary international contexts. This tenth volume in the Issues in the Social Sciences series is an absorbing introduction to the practical affects and lived realities of neoliberal ideology that will appeal both to readers encountering neoliberalism for the first time and expert scholars in the Social Sciences and Humanities
    corecore