Chile's constitutional convention raises uncertainties

Headline CHILE: Constitutional convention raises uncertainties

Significance The process of drafting a new constitution is scheduled to be completed by July 4. A period of public hearings is drawing to a close and the convention’s seven permanent commissions are starting to discuss, draft and vote on articles to be submitted to the plenary. Impacts The constitutional process will be one of the defining issues of the new president’s mandate. Investor sentiment will remain cautious until there is more clarity on the new constitution’s impact on business. The right’s lack of representation in the convention may undermine its credibility.


2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 84-94
Author(s):  
Sarah Fisher ◽  
Florian Justwan

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to detail a simulation exploring the academic and real-world debates surrounding constitutional design. Design/methodology/approach The authors deployed this simulation in different contexts: undergraduate courses in comparative politics and middle school classrooms of gifted students in India. Findings In conjunction with discussion of institutional setup, such as parliamentary vs presidential systems and judicial review vs parliamentary sovereignty, the students were required to design a new constitution for a fictional country that just overthrew a brutal dictator. Throughout the simulation, the students were assigned to be the representatives of a particular ethnic group, each with distinct interests to be represented during the constitutional convention. Originality/value The authors detail the learning objectives and simulation setup for this constitutional convention. Finally, the authors discuss some issues raised by the students during the simulation.


Significance They also voted for the new constitution to be drawn up by a fully elected constitutional convention. The process will mean at least another 18 months of uncertainty, with elections on April 11, 2021, for the 155 members of the convention. Impacts Protests for change, marred by violence on the sidelines, will likely continue, although on a smaller scale. Coupled with uncertainty, protests may hamper efforts to revive an economy hit both by COVID-10 and social unrest. The convention will have to reach a two-thirds majority to approve each new clause of the constitution, to be drafted from scratch.


Significance The previous week it tried to block a similar congressional initiative by sending it to the Constitutional Tribunal for review. Its own initiative aims to order the ranks of its centre-right coalition and appease public opinion in a marathon election year. Impacts The volatile political scenario will foster social unrest, especially in an election year. Governability will be an issue for the remaining eleven months of Pinera’s presidency. The Executive-Congress power balance will be a key discussion of the constitutional convention.


Significance Moreover, the results suggest that Chile’s next president, to be elected in November, may not come from either of the two coalitions that have dominated politics since 1990. Impacts The convention’s composition, which was at odds with all forecasts, will itself increase uncertainty. The emergence of leaders able to broker agreements across ideological lines will be key for the convention’s success. The economic effects of the constitutional convention will be apparent in 2022, rather than this year. A member of the Communist Party is likely to be a strong presidential contender in November.


Subject Women's rights. Significance In a landmark decision, Chile’s Congress passed a law on March 4 to ensure gender parity in the body that will draft a new constitution, provided this is approved by a referendum now expected to be held on October 25. Impacts Gender parity would give legitimacy to a constitutional convention at a time of all-time low confidence levels in political institutions. Parity would encourage the emergence of new women leaders among lesser-known academics, politicians and community leaders. The gender parity issue will cause further tensions in the ruling centre-right coalition, which split over the measure.


Significance However, mining companies are warning that bills before Congress and possible changes under a new constitution to be drawn up by a recently elected constitutional convention could raise doubts over these plans. Impacts As Chile’s copper mines age, efficiency gains will be ever more important for the industry’s ongoing international competitiveness. As countries seek to decarbonise, 'clean' copper will command an increasing price premium. In the constitutional convention, left-wing sectors will argue against extractivism as a manifestation of neoliberalism.


Author(s):  
Jeeyun Oh ◽  
Mun-Young Chung ◽  
Sangyong Han

Despite of the popularity of interactive movie trailers, rigorous research on one of the most apparent features of these interfaces – the level of user control – has been scarce. This study explored the effects of user control on users’ immersion and enjoyment of the movie trailers, moderated by the content type. We conducted a 2 (high user control versus low user control) × 2 (drama film trailer versus documentary film trailer) mixed-design factorial experiment. The results showed that the level of user control over movie trailer interfaces decreased users’ immersion when the trailer had an element of traditional story structure, such as a drama film trailer. Participants in the high user control condition answered that they were less fascinated with, absorbed in, focused on, mentally involved with, and emotionally affected by the movie trailer than participants in the low user control condition only with the drama movie trailer. The negative effects of user control on the level of immersion for the drama trailer translated into users’ enjoyment. The impact of user control over interfaces on immersion and enjoyment varies depending on the nature of the media content, which suggests a possible trade-off between the level of user control and entertainment outcomes.


Mousaion ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 25-54
Author(s):  
Wanyenda Leonard Chilimo

 There is scant research-based evidence on the development and adoption of open access (OA) and institutional repositories (IRs) in Africa, and in Kenya in particular. This article reports on a study that attempted to fill that gap and provide feedback on the various OA projects and advocacy work currently underway in universities and research institutions in Kenya and in other developing countries. The article presents the findings of a descriptive study that set out to evaluate the current state of IRs in Kenya. Webometric approaches and interviews with IR managers were used to collect the data for the study. The findings showed that Kenya has made some progress in adopting OA with a total of 12 IRs currently listed in the Directory of Open Access Repositories (OpenDOAR) and five mandatory self-archiving policies listed in the Registry of Open Access Repositories Mandatory Archiving Policies (ROARMAP). Most of the IRs are owned by universities where theses and dissertations constitute the majority of the content type followed by journal articles. The results on the usage and impact of materials deposited in Kenyan IRs indicated that the most viewed publications in the repositories also received citations in Google Scholar, thereby signifying their impact and importance. The results also showed that there was a considerable interest in Swahili language publications among users of the repositories in Kenya.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caitlyn Johnston ◽  
William E. Davis

In the present study, we examined how the influence of exercise-related social media content on exercise motivation might differ across content type (with images vs. without images) and account type (individual vs. corporate). Using a 2 × 2 within-subjects experimental design, 229 participants viewed a series of 40 actual social media posts across the four conditions (individual posts with images, corporate posts with images, individual posts without images, and corporate posts without images) in a randomized order. Participants rated the extent to which they felt each social media post motivated them to exercise, would motivate others to exercise, and was posted for extrinsic reasons. Participants also completed other measures of individual differences including their own exercise motivation. Posts with images from individuals were more motivating than posts with images from corporations; however, corporate posts without images were more motivating than posts without images from individuals. Participants expected others to be similarly motivated by the stimuli, and perceived corporate posts as having been posted for more extrinsic reasons than individuals’ posts. These findings enhance our understanding of how social media may be used to promote positive health behaviors.


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