scholarly journals Book Review: Beauty around the World: A Cultural Encyclopedia

2018 ◽  
Vol 57 (4) ◽  
pp. 301
Author(s):  
Stacey Marien

Kenny is an assistant professor of anthropology at Missouri State University with research experience in East and West Africa. Nichols is a professor of Spanish at Drury University with her research specializing in cultures of Latin America. Nichols has also co-written Pop Culture in Latin American and the Caribbean (ABC-CLIO, 2015) and authored a chapter on beauty in Venezuela for the book The Body Beautiful? Identity, Performance, Fashion and the Contemporary Female Body (Inter-Disciplinary Press, 2015). Both authors have taught extensively on the topic of beauty and bodies (xi). 

2018 ◽  
Vol 57 (3) ◽  
pp. 230
Author(s):  
Shannon Pritting

Professors Jim Willis (Azusa Pacific University) and Anthony R. Fellow (California State University at Fullerton) edited the affordable and relevant single-volume Tweeting to Freedom: An Encyclopedia of Citizen Protests and Uprisings Around the World. The extensive teaching and research experience of Willis and Fellow is evident in the instructive and informative writing throughout. A major consideration with a reference work on a topic as quickly evolving as social media is how quickly the text will become outdated. The focus on providing context for social media movements will serve to keep the content in Tweeting to Freedom relevant, especially as the memory of the reasons for protests gets shorter and shorter. The analysis will be useful even when the examples are inevitably no longer current; however, there are many timely examples, such as references to the 2016 US presidential election.


2018 ◽  
Vol 58 (1) ◽  
pp. 65
Author(s):  
Amy F. Fyn

What is the history behind the Dr. Who series? Which bands dominated the Britpop sound in the 1990s? Which fashion icons represent uniquely European pop culture in the twentieth century? Pop Culture in Europe, from ABC-CLIO’s Entertainment and Society around the World series, provides reliable content to patrons researching popular trends and entertainments across the pond. The title efficiently introduces residents of the United States to the stars and amusements primarily associated with Western Europe.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 63
Author(s):  
Hikmah Fatimah ◽  
Ulinuha Mastuti Hafsah

Corona virus pandemic or Covid-19 that occurs in all countries in the world causes a decrease in various sectors in life. In a long period of time, no vaccine has been found to prevent transmission of the virus. This has inspired the Covid edition of social works program at Universitas Negeri Malang (State University of Malang) to make a breakthrough in preventing Covid-19 transmission. One of the work programs that showed a breakthrough in preventing Covid-19 transmission was spraying disinfectants in Kunti Village, Bungkal District, Ponorogo.Spraying of disinfectants is carried out 5x within a period of 45 days by using an electric sprayer with disinfectants and water solvents. Spraying disinfectants is expected to kill the virus that is developing in the body of bacteria that will die if exposed to disinfectants, so as to reduce the amount of ODP in the village of Kunti


Author(s):  
Orchid Mazurkiewicz

HAPI began as a local project at Arizona State University (ASU) in 1973. Its founder, Barbara G. Valk, the librarian responsible for Latin American materials at ASU, wanted to provide an index to the university’s periodical literature on the region, which was something that had been unavailable since the cessation of the OAS-sponsored Index to Latin American Periodicals in 1970. Following the success of the project, HAPI moved to the UCLA Latin American Center (now Latin American Institute) in 1976, where Valk used a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities to fund further development of an annual printed edition of the index. This annual volume would continue to be published through 2008. HAPI was first searchable online via Telnet in 1991 and CD-ROM in 1992; its first website debuted in 1997. Now exclusively available online, HAPI is a self-supporting, not-for-profit publishing unit within UCLA, with subscribers (primarily university and college libraries) around the world. Free subscriptions are provided to institutions in Latin America and the Caribbean. HAPI now contains over 300,000 citations to journal articles about Latin America, the Caribbean, and Latina/os in the United States and around the world. Articles date back to 1968 following an early retrospective indexing project to cover the gap between the last volume of the Index to Latin American Periodicals and the first volume of HAPI. Almost 400 journal titles are currently indexed and over 600 titles have been included since HAPI’s creation. Subject coverage includes the social sciences and the humanities; history titles represent the largest single subject area covered. HAPI aims to provide access to the most well-known and influential titles in Latin American studies as well as to regional titles that are less well known and often underrepresented in disciplinary indexes with limited Latin American and Caribbean content. Librarians (staff and volunteers) with relevant subject training examine each article and create bibliographic descriptions, subject headings, and keywords for multiple access points to the journal content. Searches can be carried out in English, Spanish, or Portuguese on HAPI’s trilingual website. HAPI has provided links to the online full-text content of many of its indexed titles since 2003. At that time, with university and college libraries spending heavily on commercial databases, students and scholars were increasingly expecting easy access to the full text of journal articles, but few Latin American and Caribbean journals were included in these commercial products. With limited financial and technological resources, HAPI was unable to become a full-text publisher; instead, HAPI staff focused on tracking down and linking to the full text of the indexed journals wherever they could find it, especially in two Open Access regional databases: Mexico’s Redalyc and Brazil’s SciELO. A vibrant Open Access movement in Latin America has led to a dramatic increase in the free online availability of the region’s journals and unprecedented access to this content for scholars around the world. Over 75 percent of the Latin American journals indexed by HAPI now include links to freely available full text.


Energies ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (15) ◽  
pp. 2954 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mun Ahmed ◽  
Koji Shimada

The objective of the paper is to figure out the nexus between renewable energy consumption and sustainable economic development for emerging and developing countries. In this paper, a panel of 30 emerging and developing countries is selected using the World Development Indicators (WDI) of the World Bank, Renewable Energy Country Attractiveness Index (RECAI) by Ernst and Young, and a random selection method based on the current trend of renewable energy consumption for five different regions of the world i.e., Asia, South-Asia, Latin America, Africa and the Caribbean. To achieve the objective, robust panel econometric models such as the Pesaran cross-section dependence (CD) test, second generation panel unit root test, e.g., cross-sectional augmented IPS test (CIPS) proposed by Pesran (2007), panel co-integration test, fully modified ordinary least square (FMOLS) and dynamic ordinary least square (DOLS) are applied to check the cross-sectional dependence, heterogeneity and long-term relationship among variables. The panel is strongly balanced and the findings suggest a significant long-run relationship between renewable energy consumption and economic growth for selected South Asian, Asian and most of the African countries (Ghana, Tunisia, South Africa, Zimbabwe and Cameroon). But for the Latin American and the Caribbean countries, economic growth depends on non-renewable energy consumption. Renewable energy consumption in the selected countries of these two regions are still at the initial stage. In case of the renewable energy consumption and CO 2 emissions nexus, for selected South Asian, Asian, Latin American and African countries both GDP and non-renewable energy consumption cause the increase of CO 2 emissions. For the Caribbean countries only non-renewable energy consumption causes the increase of CO 2 emissions. An important finding regarding renewable energy consumption-economic growth nexus indicates the existence of bi-directional causality. This supports the existence of a feedback hypothesis for the emerging and developing economies. In the case of renewable energy consumption- CO 2 emissions nexus, there exists unidirectional causality. This supports the existence of the conservation hypothesis, where CO 2 emissions necessitates the renewable energy consumptions. Based on the findings, the study proposes possible policy options. The countries, who have passed the take-off stage of renewable energy consumption, can take advanced policy initiatives e.g., feed-in tariff, renewable portfolio standard and green certificate for long-term economic development. Other countries can undertake subsidy, low interest loan and market development to facilitate the renewable energy investments.


ILUMINURAS ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 18 (43) ◽  
Author(s):  
Vanessa Marx ◽  
Lilian Celiberti

A atuação dos movimentos sociais pode ser sentida em vários lugares do mundo intervindo nas mais diversas esferas: local, nacional ou internacional. O movimento de mulheres e a fronteira se insere neste contexto de disputas de significados, agendas e novas metodologias de diálogos e troca de experiências. Estas trocas podem dar-se a partir de uma perspectiva decolonial com agendas pautadas a partir das autonomias: do corpo, econômica, política e territoriais. A metodologia consiste no intercambio de saberes acadêmico e popular por meio da ecologia de saberes empregada a partir da Universidade Popular dos Movimentos Sociais (UPMS). Neste trabalho propomos discutir o processo da UPMS a partir do diálogo de mulheres de fronteira e para isto faremos a discussão deste processo a partir de três pontos neste artigo: 1) contextualização da geopolítica mundial e latino-americana, 2) construção de novas pedagogias e epistemologias a partir do diálogo e 3) a experiência da Universidade Popular dos Movimentos Sociais: mulheres em diálogo de fronteira.Palavras-chave: Movimentos sociais. Feminismo. Mulheres. Ecologia de saberes.Border women's dialogue in the popular university of social movements context: new methologies and agendas.AbstractThe activities of social movements have an impact in several places of the world intervening in the most diverse spheres: local, national or international. The women's movement and the border are inserted in this context of disputes of meanings, agendas and new dialogue's methodologies and exchange of experiences. These exchanges can take place from a decolonial perspective with agendas based on the autonomies: of the body, economic, political and territorial. The methodology consists of the exchange of academic and popular knowledge through the ecology of knowledges employed by the Popular University of Social Movements (UPMS). In this article, we propose to discuss the UPMS' process from the border women's dialogue point of view and for this propose we divide this article in three parts: 1) contextualization of global and Latin American geopolitics, 2) construction of new pedagogies and epistemologies through dialogue and 3) the Popular University of Social Movements’ experience: women in border’s dialogue.Key words: Social movements. Feminism. Women. Ecology of knowledge.


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