...Kenya’s recently passed Security Act substantially increases police power while reducing civilian oversight. Background The Kenyan police are governed by the National Police Service Act, 2011. The head...
...to question this.” Pornography, she argues, exists against a “backdrop of inequality,” in which women earn less than men and have less access to positions of power. “I, for one,...
...to consolidate the stratification of power inside the class, that is, the power of salaried over non-salaried, their compromise of power with capital in the mediation of control over the...
...combine the various movements under the banner of “Continental Realism”). At their best, Continental Realists show that “all the entities of the world are deeply interrelated and mutually dependent even...
...ancient Greeks, it could be the source of virtue necessary to the state, embodying common interest and self-sacrifice among citizens, or it could be the source of factional power and...
...has already given birth to a robustrevolutionary gemeinschaft that will stay with these societies no matter who and what is in power. Unbeknown to the political machinations that have divided...
...wants a seat at the table at the Denny’s where we used to go to meet and commune with other teens in all our midnight, underground, post-all-ages-show angst. It isn’t...
...EPCOT center, Jim comments “It’s a giant testicle!” One scene takes place within a ride centered around a fountain that spurts a constant stream of water straight up into the...
...aspire to be innocent or human (like them, at least) are the moments in which we stand at the threshold of new worlds. There is power in understanding innocence as...
...valued because they confer power; they are hated because they are hideous and loathed because they impose slavery." --Bertrand Russell The Futurists hated Italy as it was. They thought it...
...over the whole kingdom, and now divides into a gigantic network of narrow streams; now it bubbles forth from under the ground like a fresh spring and now is completely...
Reading Canada’s and Sri Lanka’s anti-terror acts reveals the need for comparative and cross-jurisdictional resistance to globally self-justifying discourses of “terror”