1,721,184 research outputs found
Fred Halliday, Rethinking international relations
Laroche Josepha. Fred Halliday, Rethinking international relations. In: Revue française de science politique, 46ᵉ année, n°1, 1996. pp. 156-160
Fred Halliday. L'URSS et le monde arabe
Desert. Fred Halliday. L'URSS et le monde arabe. In: Politique étrangère, n°4 - 1982 - 47ᵉannée. p. 1069
Fred Halliday: engagements, languages, myths and solidarities
Numerous are the legacies bequeathed by the life and work of Fred Halliday. His words, broadcast and published in half a dozen languages, had a greater impact on the understanding of international issues than most public intellectuals of his generation. The breadth of his influence can be partially gleaned from the formal obituaries, testimonies, commentaries and initial academic analyses — as well as several posthumous works of his own — which have been published since his death at the age of 64 in Barcelona on 26 April 2010
Fred Halliday: Achievements, Ambivalences and Openings
Fred Halliday was one of the most important scholars of his generation. This article examines Halliday’s intellectual influences, assesses his contribution to International Relations (IR) and probes the broader challenges which his work raises. Halliday had a direct impact on IR through his interventions in historical sociology, revolutions and gender studies, and through his capacity to intertwine analytical, normative and political registers. More indirectly, Halliday promoted a form of critical, engaged scholarship which stands as a model for the idea of academic life as a vocation. As such, his example has much to offer current students and scholars of IR. </jats:p
Fred Halliday, Britain’s First Muslims: Portrait of an Arab Community
Britain’s First Muslims est la réédition, sous un nouveau titre et avec une nouvelle introduction, du livre intitulé Arabs in Exile: Yemeni Migrants in Urban Britain que Fred Halliday publia en 1992. Contrairement à ce que pourrait laisser penser ce changement de titre, il ne s’agit nullement d’une manœuvre éditoriale destinée à tirer profit de la généralisation constatée par l’auteur (p. xi) des termes de « communauté musulmane de Grande Bretagne » ou de « musulmans britanniques » dans le la..
Tributo a Fred Halliday
Fred Halliday, a British scholar who died in April 2010, was one of the big names in international studies over the past four decades, especially as a lecturer at the London School of Economics (LSE) from 1985 to 2008. He was part of a select group of scholars who adopted a critical theoretical perspective in the study of International Relations and maintained a politically engaged stance. Halliday was born in Dublin, Ireland, in 1946, studied at Oxford and graduated in Oriental Studies from the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) at the University of London.Fred Halliday, acadêmico britânico falecido em abril de 2010, foi um dos grandes nomes dos estudos internacionais ao longo das últimas quatro décadas, especialmente como docente da London School of Economics (LSE) de 1985 a 2008. Fez parte de um seleto grupo de estudiosos que adotaram uma perspectiva teórica critica no estudo das Relações Internacionais e mantiveram uma postura engajada politicamente. Halliday nasceu em Dublin, Irlanda, em 1946, estudou em Oxford e graduou-se em Estudos Orientais pela School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) da Universidade de Londres
Fred Halliday, Islam and the Myth of Confrontation , Religion and Politics in the Middle East. I.B. Tauris, London, 1996
Luizard Pierre-Jean. Fred Halliday, Islam and the Myth of Confrontation , Religion and Politics in the Middle East. I.B. Tauris, London, 1996. In: Bulletin critique des annales islamologiques, n°14, 1998. pp. 121-122
Fred Halliday, Caamaño in London. The Exile of Latin American Revolutionary
Professeur de relations internationales à la London School of Economics, Fred Halliday est décédé en avril 2010 et c’est donc à titre posthume que son dernier ouvrage vient d’être publié. Il traite de l’exil à Londres, de janvier 1966 à l’automne 1967, du colonel Francisco Caamaño Deñó, élu président de la République dominicaine en mai 1965. La genèse de ce livre est largement consubstantielle au court exil de l’officier « constitutionnaliste » en Angleterre : ce fut en mars 1966 que le révol..
Book review: travelling westwards with closed minds
Fred Halliday reviews an historical study of Muslim approached to Europe and questions some of its conclusions [author reviews: Bernard Lewis, "The Muslim discovery of Europe"]
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