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This chapter considers the relevance of postcolonialism to the discipline of ‘international relations’ (IR). It argues that postcolonialism advances a powerful critique of traditional approaches to IR (see chapters on realism and liberalism) since it calls into question the discipline’s foundational ontological and epistemological assumptions. In particular, it challenges the dominant assumption that states are the basic units of IR and that we should examine the relations between these units in the context of an anarchical system. Postcolonialism refocuses our attention on the constitutive role played by colonialism in the creation of the modern world and sees international relations as hierarchical rather than anarchical. It sees academic disciplines such as IR – and Western rationalist, humanist and universalist modes of thinking in general – as complicit in reproducing colonial power relations and seeks normatively to resist practices of colonialism in its material and ideational forms, whether political, economic or cultural.
Psychiatry has never been without vociferous critics. Anti-psychiatry raised legitimate, albeit irritating, concerns about psychiatric practice. Clinical psychologists in Britain now outnumber psychiatrists, with an enormously expanded clinical remit. Lead psychologists are now as experienced as consultant psychiatrist and vie for leadership. To pretend that all is well in the world of professional mental health practice and relationship is dangerous.
Chapter 2 explores how the economics literature is anything but conclusive on public banking. Reliant on fixed yet polarised tenets of public versus private ownership, its scholars offer contrasting evidence on and contending theories of public banks in economic development. This division within economics occurs along ideological lines. For heterodox ‘development’ views, there is good theory and evidence for public banks. For orthodox ‘political’ ones, the opposite. The aim of this chapter is not to resolve these antinomies but to illustrate them in order to move past them. The economics literature is too preoccupied with fixed notions of public and private ownership and this impedes understanding of how and why public banks evolve. By contrast, I argue for a dynamic political economy view of public banks. In this view, what public banks are depends instead on how social forces in class-divided societies make and remake them over time. That is, contested institutional functions give meaning to the public ownership form.
In this chapter, I demonstrate the problem to which the rest of this book proposes a solution: namely, the need for more careful deontic reasoning. I will focus on certain distinctive habits of reasoning that have often recurred in ICL, which have a tendency to undermine compliance with deontic principles.
All legal systems sometimes generate doctrines that appear to conflict with stated principles. However, in national systems, the clash tends to be openly between liberal principles and ‘law and order’ considerations. I argue that ICL discourse often features an additional and interesting dynamic. In ICL, the distortions often result from habits of reasoning that are progressive and appropriate in human rights law and humanitarian law, but which become problematic when transplanted without adequate reflection to a criminal law system. I highlight three kinds of such reasoning: interpretive assumptions, substantive and structural assumptions, and ideological assumptions. These habits of reasoning were more prevalent in the early days of the renaissance of ICL than they are today. It is still valuable to discern and dissect these habits of reasoning, because their legacy continues, because they still recur today, and because they help show the value of attending to reasoning.
If political sociology centers on relations between the state and civil society, then it is fair to say that those relations are now marked increasingly by state repression and racial and ethnic violence. The turn of the twenty-first century witnessed the rapid rise of antiglobalization protests around the world followed by even larger antiwar demonstrations as the United States prepared to invade Iraq. Yet these movements faced intense crackdowns from increasingly militarized police and state security forces. Similarly, the 2010s saw deadly clashes between police forces and authoritarian regimes on the one hand, and popular movements such as the Arab Spring, Occupy, and Black Lives Matter on the other. Ethnic nationalism is now in the ascendant and with it has come a permissive attitude toward official and unofficial violence.
In keeping with the nature of the Cambridge Critical Concepts series, the introduction establishes decadence as a concept. We show how the concept emerges from a combination of etymology and history, and how decadence cuts across and calls into question traditional literary categories, such as genre and periodization. We articulate the relevance of decadence to recent literary interests, such as gender politics and queer theory. Finally, we explain the rationale for the organization of the volume as an effort to ‘scale up’ and reset the parameters of decadence as a concept; preview the individual contributions to the collection; and clarify the structure of the volume: the origins of the concept of decadence, its development through nineteenth-century fields, and its application to various twentieth-century disciplines and literary modalities. The introduction concludes with commentary on the contemporary resonance of decadence today.
Contemporary global challenges require practitioners to confidently analyse the dominant discourses and develop frameworks and strategies for future change. Engaging with Social Work equips students with a critical perspective and develops their understanding of social work and human services practice, with an emphasis on the principles of social justice and human rights. This fully revised second edition includes a new chapter on the emerging challenges and opportunities for social work, covering rising global inequality, re-invigorated possibilities for addressing violence against women, and threats to the planet. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander perspectives are integrated throughout the text to provide a more in-depth understanding. Reflective exercises, key definitions, case studies and unique practitioners' perspectives are integrated into each chapter to support learning. Engaging with Social Work provides an accessible, research-informed and rigorous introduction to complex concepts, theories and analyses, and develops a solid skill-set to prepare students for professional practice.
Consider a d-type (d<∞) Galton–Watson branching process, conditioned on the event that there are at least k≥2 individuals in the nth generation, pick k individuals at random from the nth generation and trace their lines of descent backward in time till they meet. In this paper, the limit behaviors of the distributions of the generation number of the most recent common ancestor of any k chosen individuals and of the whole population are studied for both critical and subcritical cases. Also, we investigate the limit distribution of the joint distribution of the generation number and their types.
In a Galton-Watson branching process that is not extinct by the nth generation and has at least two individuals, pick two individuals at random by simple random sampling without replacement. Trace their lines of descent back in time till they meet. Call that generation Xn a pairwise coalescence time. Similarly, let Yn
denote the coalescence time for the whole population of the nth generation conditioned on the event that it is not extinct. In this paper the distributions of Xn and Yn, and their limit behaviors as n → ∞ are discussed for both the critical and subcritical cases.
To determine the long-term results in patients with critical aortic stenosis who survive initial intervention, and to identify factors which predict prognosis, we studied patients who underwent intervention between 1979 and 1992 for critical aortic stenosis treated within the first three months of life. Patients with a hypoplastic left ventricle or mitral stenosis who were not considered for a biventricular repair were excluded. Follow-up examination included cross-sectional and Doppler echocardiography. All initial and subsequent patient data were reviewed. Of the 64 patients with critical aortic stenosis, 41 (64%) survived more than one month after initial intervention (surgical valvotomy in 39, balloon valvoplasty in two). These survivors constitute the study group. Mild or moderate residual aortic stenosis or regurgitation without further intervention was found in 28 patients at a median duration of 3.1 years (range 0.2–15.0 years). A poor result with re-intervention (n=6) or death (n=7) occurred in 13 patients. The diameter of the aortic valve at presentation was smaller (p<0.02) in patients with a poor result (median 5.5; range 5–15 mm), than in those with a satisfactory result (median 8.0; range 5–10 mm). Significant residual aortic stenosis was present from the time of initial intervention in nine of the 13 patients (69%) with a poor result. No difference was found in the incidence of a duct-dependent systemic circulation, associated cardiac lesions, mechanical ventilation, acidosis or the use of inotropes preoperatively between patients with a satisfactory or a poor late outcome. Of patients with critical aortic stenosis, 64% survived for more than a month after initial intervention. A small aortic valvar diameter at presentation ( 6 mm) and residual stenosis after initial intervention were important determinants of long-term prognosis.
Some critically ill patients have dramatic recollections of the
intensive care unit (ICU), whereas 23–50% have little or no
recollection of their ICU stay. In addition, cognitive impairments are
common following critical illness and ICU treatment. Little is known
regarding the relationship between cognitive sequelae and ICU recall. We
assessed recall of the ICU and its relationship to cognitive functioning
at hospital discharge and 1 and 2 years after discharge in 70 consecutive
acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) patients. Seventeen patients
(24%) had no recall of the ICU. Patients without ICU recall had increased
rates of cognitive sequelae at hospital discharge and 1-year follow-up
compared with the ICU recall group. Patients without ICU recall had a
greater magnitude of cognitive impairments at hospital discharge, but not
at 1- or 2-year follow-up. Profile analysis showed significant group
differences in general intellectual functioning, executive function,
processing speed, and spatial skills at hospital discharge, but not at 1-
or 2-year follow-up. Estimated premorbid intelligence scores were
inversely related to the magnitude of cognitive sequelae, suggesting
greater “cognitive reserve” in patients with fewer cognitive
decrements. (JINS, 2007, 13, 595–605.)
This paper is concerned with the critical nonlinear Gross–Pitaevskii equation, which describes the attractive Bose–Einstein condensate under a magnetic trap. We derive a sharp threshold between the global existence and the blowing-up of the system. Furthermore, we answer the question: how small are the initial data, such that the system has global solutions for the nonlinear critical power $p=1+(4/N)$?