Geography N20 Week 1 – 7/9/2015
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“State of Civil Society Report: 2015
the year in review State of Civil Society report 2015: THE YEAR IN REVIEW ...these stories tell us that only civil introduction society, in its broadest sense, is taking a It has been another year of hard work and high achievement for civil society. The story of the year since the stance against the 2014 State of Civil Society Report was published has partly been one of a continuing series of attacks on civil concentration of society in the many countries where, when civil society asks difficult questions about power, the powerful seek to silence it. But is has also been a story of impressive and sustained civil society response, in a world that has power in the hands of become more turbulent and contested. a tiny, global, super- rich elite, and against As we show below, civil society faces challenges - of lack of space, under-resourcing and limited access to the attempts of many decision-makers. Civil society also needs continually to prove its connection with and relevance to citizens, political leaders and and it needs to demonstrate its ability to stay ahead of trends and innovate. When civil society groups do not corporate interests do these, they fail. But so often, we see civil society leading the response to crisis, taking on difficult issues, contributing to change, and winning arguments for social justice. to undermine human rights and This year in review section of the 2015 CIVICUS State of Civil Society Report is complemented by our report’s the value of people’s special thematic section on the resourcing for civil society, and the 27 guest contributions, from civil society participation. -
An Indian Summer: Corruption, Class, and the Lokpal Protests
Article Journal of Consumer Culture 2015, Vol. 15(2) 221–247 ! The Author(s) 2013 An Indian summer: Reprints and permissions: sagepub.co.uk/journalsPermissions.nav Corruption, class, and DOI: 10.1177/1469540513498614 the Lokpal protests joc.sagepub.com Aalok Khandekar Department of Technology and Society Studies, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, Maastricht University, The Netherlands Deepa S Reddy Anthropology and Cross-Cultural Studies, University of Houston-Clear Lake, USA and Human Factors International Abstract In the summer of 2011, in the wake of some of India’s worst corruption scandals, a civil society group calling itself India Against Corruption was mobilizing unprecedented nation- wide support for the passage of a strong Jan Lokpal (Citizen’s Ombudsman) Bill by the Indian Parliament. The movement was, on its face, unusual: its figurehead, the 75-year- old Gandhian, Anna Hazare, was apparently rallying urban, middle-class professionals and youth in great numbers—a group otherwise notorious for its political apathy. The scale of the protests, of the scandals spurring them, and the intensity of media attention generated nothing short of a spectacle: the sense, if not the reality, of a united India Against Corruption. Against this background, we ask: what shared imagination of cor- ruption and political dysfunction, and what political ends are projected in the Lokpal protests? What are the class practices gathered under the ‘‘middle-class’’ rubric, and how do these characterize the unusual politics of summer 2011? Wholly permeated by routine habits of consumption, we argue that the Lokpal protests are fundamentally structured by the impulse to remake social relations in the image of products and ‘‘India’’ itself into a trusted brand. -
Willie Nelson Talks Music Legends Same Producers As “300,” Is Just As Bloody but Not Documentary Highlights As Big of a Hit with Some Audiences
WE’RE THERE WHEN YOU CAN’T BE NELSON from Page 1 TheWEDNESDAY | NOVEMBER Baylor 16, 2011 Lariatwww.baylorlariat.com SPORTS Page 5 NEWS Page 3 A&E Page 4 A sweet reunion Baylor green is gold It’s no secret Baylor and the San Diego State Aztecs An initiative by the sustainability Clint Eastwood’s “J. Edgar,” follows the met Tuesday in the team’s first NIT department aims to make organization life of an FBI secret-keeper, from his semifinals together since 2009 meetings more environmentally friendly career highs to personal lows Vol. 112 No. 43 © 2011, Baylor University In Print >> 3-D flop “Immortals,” from the Willie Nelson talks music legends same producers as “300,” is just as bloody but not Documentary highlights as big of a hit with some audiences. Tommy Duncan’s career page 4 By Mandy Power Tommy Duncan fan club, with the Contributor idea for the documentary. “I had recently started work- >> An end in sight Willie Nelson is a famous ing at Baylor and thought this The Lariat Super League is musician in his own right, but would be a great opportunity for still going strong, with five the country star says his career my students to have a real-world teams coming close to the wouldn’t be the same without the experience,” Callaway said. playoffs this week. influence of old friend and west- The documentary highlights ern swing legend Tommy Dun- Duncan’s career as the lead singer can. for the band Bob Wills and the Page 5 Three students and a Baylor Texas Playboys. -
Patrol Guide § 212-72
EXHIBIT K AOR307 An Investigation of NYPD’s Compliance with Rules Governing Investigations of Political Activity New York City Department of Investigation Office of the Inspector General for the NYPD (OIG-NYPD) Mark G. Peters Commissioner Philip K. Eure Inspector General for the NYPD August 23, 2016 AOR308 AN INVESTIGATION OF NYPD’S COMPLIANCE WITH RULES GOVERNING AUGUST 2016 INVESTIGATIONS OF POLITICAL ACTIVITY Table of Contents Overview ............................................................................................................................... 1 Executive Summary ............................................................................................................... 3 Introduction ........................................................................................................................ 11 I. NYPD Investigations of Political Activity: Handschu and Patrol Guide § 212-72 ....... 11 II. OIG-NYPD Investigation .............................................................................................. 12 Methodology and Access ..................................................................................................... 13 I. Treatment of Sensitive Information ............................................................................ 13 II. Compliance Criteria ..................................................................................................... 13 III. Scope and Sampling .................................................................................................... 14 -
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#YoSoy132: A spontaneous Mexican student social movement Jaime Jiménez and Juan C Escalante National Autonomous University of Mexico Abstract for corruption and impunity observed globally. Some During the past presidential elections, in 2012, Mex - movements, like the Arab Spring, have succeeded in ico endured her own Mexican Spring . Iam132 overthrowing old dictatorships. Others, less violent, (#YoSoy132) is an ongoing Mexican movement cen - have impinged on large segments of the population, tered on the democratisation of the country and not really making a difference in the way ‘business’ is its mass communications. It began as an opposition done in the world. However, they seem to constitute to the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI, Partido a force that sooner or later will wield influence in the Revolucionario Institucional) candidate Enrique Peña way both governments and society conduct their af - Nieto and the Mexican media’s allegedly biased cov - fairs. They are organised, connected via Internet, and erage of the 2012 general election, surprisingly, by convinced that the fight is just starting and will go on students of an upper-middle class Jesuit University. for many years now. The purpose of this paper is to provide an insight for In this global turmoil where Mexican youngsters readers into the Mexican movement’s emergence and apparently played a minor role, a spontaneous move - the immediate events that led to the outbreak, place ment was sparked by the discomfort produced by the these in light of similar spontaneous mass movements way a presidential election campaign was conducted that have taken place around the world, and finally, by a powerful party and its candidate. -
Social Movements, Virtual Networks and Alternative Media in June When “The Giant Awakened” (?)1
Social movements, virtual networks and alternative media in June when “the giant awakened” (?)1 Cicilia M. Krohling Peruzzo2 Abstract This study is about the large Brazilian civil demonstrations which began in June 2013, with the aim of identifying the main aspects that characterize them, and to understand the presence of social networks and alternative communication in the process. This is a first approach based on literature research and unsystematic observation of manifestations as they happened, and through virtual networks as well as the tracking of media coverage of conventional and alternative media. We conclude that civil society has shown its strength, and exposed the existence of a universe of communication larger than the mainstream media. Keywords: Social Movements, mobilization, communication, virtual networks, alternative media. Introduction The theme of this article is quite encompassing and has complex connections to be summarized, and it deals with a subject still in flux, which allows us to say that we have no intention of completely tackling it, but just to raise some aspects and weave approximations regarding the question of communication in the context of the huge public protests that erupted in Brazil in June 2013. The initial question asks if virtual networks really were responsible for the organization of the urban protests that led hundreds of thousands of people to the streets. After all, this kind of view was repeated by analysts from the press and 1 Ideas originally exposed on a lecture presented on the Opening Session of the IV JornadaAcadêmicaDiscente of PPGCOM-USP, Escola de Comunicações and Artes of the Universidade de São Paulo, on August 23rd 2013. -
Uncovering Views from the Occupy Movement: Johannesburg Leg
Uncovering Views from the Occupy Movement: Johannesburg Leg by Sean Michael Smith Submitted in accordance with the requirements for the degree of: Master of Arts in Psychology with specialisation in Research Consultation At the University of South Africa Supervisor: Professor Martin Terre Blanche February 2014 1 Student Number: 45588295 I declare that ‘Uncovering Views from the Occupy Movement: Johannesburg Leg’ is my own work and that all the sources that I have used or quoted have been indicated and acknowledged by means of complete references. ……………………………………………………. Signed Date: 2014/02/28 2 Key Terms: Occupy Movement; Occupy Johannesburg; social psychology; protest psychology; mixed methods; cluster analysis. Abstract This exploratory study set out to uncover views from the Occupy Movement’s Johannesburg leg. The Occupy Movement arose in late 2011, aiming to occupy public space and challenge conventional economics, politics, and governance. Data were collected by means of an online survey amongst 39 ‘core’ members of the group. The study took up a mixed methods approach underpinned by critical realism. Basic descriptive statistics and cross tabulations were used to analyse 6 closed-ended survey items in a quantitative fashion; thereafter, 4 open-ended items were qualitatively examined by delineating responses into discursive themes based on response content and positions taken up by respondents in their claims and statements. Finally, a cluster analysis was performed in order to cluster or profile significant groups that emerged from the data based on demographics, selection of closed- ended items, and quantitatively transformed response content to qualitatively examined open-ended items. It was found that the sample mirrored the demographics present in foreign movements as it was primarily male (61.5%), white (87.2%), highly educated (51.4% holding a bachelor’s degree or higher) and young (74.4% in the 21 to 40 age range). -
Students Add New Dynamic to Presidential Race, but PRI Remains Ahead in Polls Carlos Navarro
University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository SourceMex Latin America Digital Beat (LADB) 6-13-2012 Students Add New Dynamic to Presidential Race, but PRI Remains Ahead in Polls Carlos Navarro Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sourcemex Recommended Citation Navarro, Carlos. "Students Add New Dynamic to Presidential Race, but PRI Remains Ahead in Polls." (2012). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sourcemex/5895 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Latin America Digital Beat (LADB) at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in SourceMex by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. LADB Article Id: 78638 ISSN: 1054-8890 Students Add New Dynamic to Presidential Race, but PRI Remains Ahead in Polls by Carlos Navarro Category/Department: Mexico Published: 2012-06-13 The plan by the Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI) to cruise into the presidency appears to have hit a bump, with university students around the country trying everything to prevent PRI candidate Enrique Peña Nieto from winning the July 1 election. The students have launched a campaign on social media to mobilize against the PRI candidate, but it is uncertain whether this will be sufficient. Peña Nieto appeared to hold his own in the second official debate among the top four presidential candidates, which might have consolidated his position as the front-runner. Still, the university students, led by a group at the Universidad Iberoamericana (also known as Ibero) have not given up. They organized a large demonstration on the weekend of June 9-10 to coincide with the second debate. -
Occupy: a Case Illustration of Social Movements in Global Citizenship Education
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by UNL | Libraries University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Faculty Publications: Department of Teaching, Department of Teaching, Learning and Teacher Learning and Teacher Education Education 8-2013 Occupy: A case illustration of social movements in global citizenship education Theresa Catalano University of Nebraska-Lincoln, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/teachlearnfacpub Catalano, Theresa, "Occupy: A case illustration of social movements in global citizenship education" (2013). Faculty Publications: Department of Teaching, Learning and Teacher Education. 139. https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/teachlearnfacpub/139 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Department of Teaching, Learning and Teacher Education at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Publications: Department of Teaching, Learning and Teacher Education by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. Published online September 6, 2013 (ahead of print) in Education, Citizenship and Social Justice, DOI: 10.1177/1746197913497661 Copyright © 2013 Theresa A Catalano; published by Sage Publications. Used by permission. http://esj.sagepub.com Occupy: A case illustration of social movements in global citizenship education Theresa A. Catalano Department of Teaching, Learning and Teacher Education, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE 68588, USA. email [email protected] Abstract Due to the complex nature of global understanding and practice of citizenship, it is essential to understand how to educate for a responsive public sphere with active and emancipated citizens. This study aims to clarify how social movements (through a case illustration of Oc- cupy) are representative of global citizenship goals while illuminating Occupy’s main goals and dynamic nature. -
1 United States District Court for the District Of
Case 1:13-cv-00595-RMC Document 18 Filed 03/12/14 Page 1 of 31 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA ) RYAN NOAH SHAPIRO, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Civil Action No. 13-595 (RMC) ) U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, ) ) Defendant. ) ) OPINION Ryan Noah Shapiro sues the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. § 552, and the Privacy Act (PA), 5 U.S.C. § 552a, to compel the release of records concerning “Occupy Houston,” an offshoot of the protest movement and New York City encampment known as “Occupy Wall Street.” Mr. Shapiro seeks FBI records regarding Occupy Houston generally and an alleged plot by unidentified actors to assassinate the leaders of Occupy Houston. FBI has moved to dismiss or for summary judgment.1 The Motion will be granted in part and denied in part. I. FACTS Ryan Noah Shapiro is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Science, Technology, and Society at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Compl. [Dkt. 1] ¶ 2. In early 2013, Mr. Shapiro sent three FOIA/PA requests to FBI for records concerning Occupy Houston, a group of protesters in Houston, Texas, affiliated with the Occupy Wall Street protest movement that began in New York City on September 17, 2011. Id. ¶¶ 8-13. Mr. Shapiro 1 FBI is a component of the Department of Justice (DOJ). While DOJ is the proper defendant in the instant litigation, the only records at issue here are FBI records. For ease of reference, this Opinion refers to FBI as Defendant. 1 Case 1:13-cv-00595-RMC Document 18 Filed 03/12/14 Page 2 of 31 explained that his “research and analytical expertise . -
Youth As a Seismograph for Societal Problems Sabine Kurtenbach
Number 1 2013 ISSN 1862-3581 INTERNATIONAL Youth as a Seismograph for Societal Problems Sabine Kurtenbach Over the course of the last two years, 2011 and 2012, youths around the world have pro- tested in a variety of contexts and forms. More than the various manifestations of their protests – from political upheaval in Tunisia or Chile to violence in Syria – it is youths’ worries about their own place in society that unify them. Analysis Even in the most divergent societies, youth are perceived as a problem group, despite the fact that a consistent definition of what constitutes youth has been absent to date. To base such a definition exclusively on age would be misleading: other factors, for ex- ample, social position, would remain unconsidered. No longer children but not yet part of the circle of adults, youths find themselves both physically and socially in a phase of transition. For very different reasons, they rebel against established orders and authori- ties and question existing boundaries and conventions. However, even under very diffi- cult political and economic conditions, youths only head onto the streets en masse when EDITION they see no prospects for the transition into adult life. The forms their protests take re- veal fundamental societal processes and problems. Young people grow up with expectations about the transition into adult life that, be- cause of rapid social change, can now scarcely be realized. The lifeworlds of youths and their problems with the entry into adult life are, de- spite all the differences, comparable worldwide. The mobilization of youths and the nature of their protests are closely connected with the socialization processes and types of cohesion within a society. -
Occupy-Gazette-3.Pdf
Sarah Resnick ANN SNITOW Nov. 15 page 7 Greenham Common Courtroom page 20 Geoffrey Wildanger Kathryn Crim page 30 Kathleen Ross page 14 OCCUPY UC DAVIS Bulldozers of the Arrested! page 14 Mind OCCUPY!#3 An OWS-Inspired Gazette Daniel Marcus page 30 Marco Roth Occupation to Mayor Communization Bloomberg’s page 32 SIlvia Federici Language page 2 CHRISTOPHER HERRING AND ZOLTAN GLUCK page 22 Women, Re-Articulating the Struggle for Education Austerity, Marina Sitrin page 30 and the Some unfinished issues with feminist horizon- revolution talism Nicholas Mirzoeff page 32 Eli Schmitt page 18 Mark Greif page 2 COMPLETE TABLE OF CONTENTS Occupy Climate The best Years Open Letter INSIDE THE BACK COVER Change! of our lives ZUCCOTTI RAID & AFTER they were outnumbered, easily, two to “Police—protect—the 1 per-cent.” You a life of qualities? Is quality, by definition one. were standing, twenty of you, defending immeasurable, only describable, some- “What are they so afraid of?” my com- an empty street with bank skyscrapers thing that can be charted by the cleanli- Astra Taylor panion asked when we first arrived at Wall rising out of it. You don’t belong in those ness of a street, the absence of certain Street just after 1 AM, and as I watched skyscrapers. You knew it too. smells, certain people? Is the absence of the eviction this excessive use of force the question dirt, smells, noise, and people what the kept ringing in my ears. But the answer is mayor means by “thriving?” Is there really Last night, in what seems to be part of a obvious: they are afraid of us.