Globalisation and Justice: Fait Accompli or Choice

Author(s):  
Ashok Agrwaal
Keyword(s):  
1954 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 241-247
Author(s):  
Huguette Chaunu ◽  
Pierre Chaunu

Nous avons déjà eu l'occasion de signaler la publication de plusieurs ouvrages de VÉcole des Études hispano-américaines de Séville3: au total, plus de soixante volumes parus en moins de dix ans et qui portent témoi gnage sur la valeur et la puissance de la contribution espagnole à l'historiographie hispano-américaine. Le livre de Francisco Morales Padrón sur la Jamaïque espagnole (1494-1660) est représentatif de cet immense labeur. Autre mérite : il nous offre la première étude, jusqu'à ce jour, sur la domination espagnole dans la grande île. La Jamaïque, avec Saint-Domingue, fut la plus ancienne des possessions espagnoles d'Amérique. La présente étude est la bienvenue qui couvre près de deux siècles des destins de la grande île, de la découverte en 1494 à ce 20 mai 1655, date du débarquement anglais, au 9 mai 1660 qui est la fin de la résistance espagnole, à cette année 1670 enfin, où le traité de Madrid reconnaît le fait accompli.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 ◽  
pp. 263-281
Author(s):  
William Strnad

Kim Il Sung’s 1964 and 1966 conversations with linguists are appropriately deemed important as the establishment of the North’s “cultured language” as a standard, as well as guidance related to language purification and script. In the analysis of inflection point related to language planning and policy in the North, is the often guidance on re-enshrinement of teaching “Chinese characters” (hanja) in North Korean education. Clearly this was official pronouncement of functional, synchronic digraphia, which has been preserved and operationalized down to the present. Scholarship on these conversations, amounting to policy guidance, attribute the shift in policy related to script as an inflection point. The author of this article concurs with its importance, but with respect to digraphia in the North, the conversations related to hanja instruction served as a confirmation for what was a broad trend in North Korean language planning during the years 1953-1964, a language planning and policy  fait accompli, diminishing the portrayal of the conversations as a digraphic inflection point in North Korea.


Diogène ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 217 (1) ◽  
pp. 79 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin W. Bauer
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
pp. 359-368
Author(s):  
Keith Grint

The final chapter looks back at the cases of mutiny through several different lenses. First we use Wright Mills’s notion of Vocabularies of Motive that takes what actors say they are doing as opposed to how we might interpret that. In effect these act as mobilizations, not descriptions, of action and explore the way leaders channel a general discontent into a particular form of action. Second, the cases are distributed according to whether the mutineers appear to assume the situation is one where the economic or social or political contract has been undermined. This is mirrored on the establishment side by considering whether the actions of the mutineers are perceived to be a fait accompli or the result of misled subordinates or something that actually poses an existential threat to the status quo. Finally, the nature of the individual leaders of mutinies is explored through the frame of the puer robustus, a term used by many philosophers and political commentators to describe those individuals—rule breakers—who invariably end up taking control over mutinies and often paying the price for that leadership.


Author(s):  
Rodolphe De Koninck

To better understand, on the one hand, the remarkable and largely commendable transformation that Singapore has undergone over the last century and, on the other hand, its vulnerability, answers should be sought to the following two questions. Does not the relentless overhaul of Singaporean living space, nearly always considered as a fait accompli, yet always subject to being revised by the state, lead to territorial alienation among the city state’s citizens and permanent residents? Just as classical Athens and even classical Rome came to depend on a constant and everincreasing supply of foreign labour, Singapore has reached a point where its dependence on a modern and imported form of lumpenproletariat has become apparently irreversible. Is this sustainable?


2020 ◽  
Vol 74 (3) ◽  
pp. 490-522 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan Altman

AbstractPast studies conclude that a territorial integrity norm caused territorial conquest to decline sharply after 1945, virtually subsiding after 1975. However, using new and more comprehensive data on territorial conquest attempts, this study presents a revised history of conquest after 1945. Unlike attempts to conquer entire states, attempts to conquer parts of states remained far more common than previously recognized. More than conquest declined in frequency, its relationship with war evolved. Challengers attempting conquest before 1945 often initiated a war, then sought to occupy large territories. Today, challengers more often seize small regions, then attempt to avoid war. Adopting this strategy, the fait accompli, challengers increasingly came to target territories with characteristics that reduce the risk of provoking war—such as a low population and the absence of a defending military garrison—but challengers nonetheless take a calculated gamble. In part because seizures of smaller territories with such characteristics have not declined, the operative constraint appears to be against war-prone aggression, not territorial revision. The evolution of conquest is a symptom of war's decline, not its cause. Most of the evidence that the territorial integrity norm suppressed conquest or war withers under investigation with new data. Attempts to get away with seizing small pieces of territory are likely to be a defining element of the twenty-first-century international security landscape.


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