scholarly journals LIBOR as a Keynesian Beauty Contest: A Process of Endogenous Deception

2014 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 392-407 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexis Stenfors
Keyword(s):  
2019 ◽  
Vol 113 ◽  
pp. 587-610 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nobuyuki Hanaki ◽  
Yukio Koriyama ◽  
Angela Sutan ◽  
Marc Willinger

2017 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Izziya Putri Ananda

World Muslimah is a beauty contest set up by Eka Shanty and aimed as a forum for women in veil to join the beauty queens contest, especially by highlighting the side of women’s spiritualism. However, the contest attracts criticism from online media, one of them is arrahmah.com, which is one of the popular online Islamic media with high number of visitors. This research aims to know the framing of arrahmah.com media against the World Muslimah beauty contest. The authors use Pan and Kosicki framing theory to analyze the media ideology to the construction of the reality that is raised. Methodically, this article is a qualitative study based on literature research. From this research, it can be seen from the media perspective through the subjective side of the author, which states that this a beauty contest event is not taught in Islam and women who follow the event is considered to have taken off her side of virtuousness.


1985 ◽  
pp. 88-93
Author(s):  
Philip J. Davis ◽  
William G. Chinn

Author(s):  
Shirlita Africa Espinosa

Diaspora philanthropy has increasingly become a visible resource of nations from the South, next only to the more widespread money transfers from members of diasporic communities in the first world. The discourse of transnational giving is shaped by the liberal philosophy that has always accompanied solidarity through philanthropy, which sidelines questions of the unevenness of giving, political accountability, and the role of the state in regulating and transforming resource transfers into profitable investment. I argue in this paper that the problematic operations wherein benevolence rendered are manifested in covert gendered techniques. The yearly Sydney Fiesta Cultura’s Miss Philippines-Australia exemplifies the solid links between gender and the political economy of giving. What renders this otherwise ‘ordinary’ beauty contest as more contentious than other forms of generating funds for philanthropy are the specificities of Filipino-Australian migration: the transnational movement of sexual labour that hyperfeminised the community like no other in Australia. The fiesta, not unlike other expressions of cultural production that attempt to conceal this sexualised past, nonetheless raises the spectre of the ‘mail-order bride’ whose migration ‘built’ the community, an assertion that meets opposition from the middle class, professional and mestizo migrants from the Philippines. However, the processes that the fiesta puts into place in facilitating diaspora philanthropy are reliant on women’s labour, thus revealing the intersections of the community’s past and present. This overlooked facet also hints at the philanthropy engendered within diasporic formations as distinct and conditioned by the migrant history that has shaped these communities.


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