1-20 of 974

Search Results for self

Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account

Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
Close Modal
Sort by
Journal Article
New Political Science (2022) 44 (2): 210–226.
Published: 01 June 2022
... state across public and private spheres by uniting the police with white citizens. I make this argument through a novel juxtaposition of John Locke’s liberal theorizing of patriarchy and self-defense with Black feminist Ida B. Wells’s critiques of how American liberalism disavows Black people’s own...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2022) 44 (1): 58–74.
Published: 01 March 2022
..., it distinguishes this decolonial politics and its central means of community self-defense from both its reactionary opposites and revolutionary siblings. Foregrounding its foundationally anti-nationalist character, the paper proposes to approach this revolutionary, egalitarian, and community based self-defense...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1986) 7 (1): 39–61.
Published: 01 July 1986
...Doris Sommer Doris Sommer SUPPL YING DEMAND: Walt Whitman as the Liberal Self Many of Whitman's admirers read him as the poet of American democracy; and they are not wrong. My agreement, however, verges on iconoclasm, since for me Whitman created a poetry for liberal democracy 1) more because...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2012) 34 (3): 417–419.
Published: 01 September 2012
... Claire E. Rasmussen, The Autonomous Animal: Self-Governance and the Modern Subject, Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 2011, 210 pp. Claire E. Rasmussen's, The Autonomous Animal: Self-Governance and the Modern Subject is an interesting and informative tour through previous conceptualizations...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1998) 20 (4): 399–420.
Published: 01 December 1998
... Caucus for a New Political Science 1998 New Political Science, Volume 20, Number 4, 1998 399 Lessons from El Barrio-The East Harlem Real Great SocietylUrban Planning Studio: A Puerto Rican Chapter in the Fight for Urban Self-Determination* Luis Aponte-Pares University of Massachusetts, Boston Abstract...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2020) 42 (1): 127–129.
Published: 01 March 2020
...William J. Kelleher Matthew H. Bowker, Ideologies of Experience: Trauma, Failure, Deprivation, and the Abandonment of the Self , by Matthew H. Bowker , New York , Routledge , 2016 , 172 pp., $35.00 (paperback), ISBN: 978-1138182684 © 2020 William J. Kelleher 2020 9NEW...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2018) 40 (1): 151–164.
Published: 01 March 2018
...Shireen Roshanravan Abstract In “Unsettling the Privilege of Self-Reflexivity,” Andrea Smith argues that self-reflection is a deterrent to coalitional work and that in doing the work we will transform ourselves into coalitional beings. Maria Lugones, however, exposes how the “do-the-work...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1979) 1 (2-3): 88–92.
Published: 01 December 1979
...Daniel Zwerdling 88 NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE Self-Management in the University Daniel Zwerdling When people advocate bringing worker participation or self-management to an autocratic workplace, they usually envision machine operators in a smoke-belching factory or rows of robot-like typists...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2024) 46 (2): 129–149.
Published: 01 June 2024
... on socioeconomic relationships, demonstrating how they shape a person’s temporal imagination, and consequently, their perception of self-interest. Far from adhering to a belief in the supremacy of rational self-interest, Smith actually helps us understand how different social contexts can engender profoundly...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1999) 21 (3): 325–343.
Published: 01 September 1999
...J. David Singer; Jeffrey Keating Abstract Everyone knows that war destroys and war kills. We also know that preparedness for war, despite all the protests of prudence, deterrence, self-defense, and the like, often makes war more likely. Less self-evident, however, are some of the consequences...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2019) 41 (4): 622–653.
Published: 01 December 2019
... run the gamut from parliamentarism to armed self-defense. © 2019 Caucus for a New Political Science 2019 NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE 2019, VOL. 41, NO.4, 622-653 httpsdoLorg/10.1080/07393148.2019.1686735 ARTICLE Marxist Political Theory, Diversity of Tactics, and the Doctrine of the Long Civil War...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2023) 45 (2): 359–379.
Published: 01 June 2023
... parties. This sets off a self-reinforcing system that keeps these larger parties in power and squeezes out the smaller parties, a process that is especially potent when this dynamic is not offset by public funding of electoral campaigns. The resource advantages that result from such bias include control...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2024) 46 (3): 205–227.
Published: 01 September 2024
... us to make a distinctive contribution to the existing academic scholarship concerning Citizens’ Assemblies and prefigurative politics on two grounds. Firstly, Auroville is an intentional community shaped by specific spiritual and self-governance values – an uncommon setting for a Citizens’ Assembly...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2021) 43 (1): 46–66.
Published: 01 March 2021
... call “ecological belonging,” can inspire a politics of self-defense in which everyday people act politically to defend their homes, broadly conceived, against the economic norms and institutions that threaten them with destruction. Drawing on the legacy of the American farmer-labor Populists...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2007) 29 (3): 297–312.
Published: 01 September 2007
...Leonard Williams Abstract Long regarded as a dated school of political thought, anarchism has been rejuvenated in the last decade or so. From anarcho-punk bands putting out “noise music” to bands of young people sporting black attire and the circle-A, its cultural symbols are widely present. Self...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2017) 39 (4): 554–567.
Published: 01 December 2017
.... As the environment affects biological activity at all levels, who we are will always be connected to what we experience. However, while the human subject, as a self- contained entity has dissolved, subjectivity, or a point of view that is mine, has not. Put differently, the mutual constitution of nature and nurture...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2022) 44 (1): 105–121.
Published: 01 March 2022
... rejected Solanas, and radicals embraced her. Both sides of the feminist divide, however, turned away from violence as a political tactic. Even sympathetic radicals adopted separatist agendas that sanctioned violence only for the purpose of self-defense. I argue that the reaction to Solanas by her...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2022) 44 (1): 75–89.
Published: 01 March 2022
..., to form bonds of intimacy and intercommunal solidarity, and outward, to break the bonds of law and order politics with the “perfect disorder” of disciplined and yet spontaneous guerilla violence. This idea of “channeling” distinguishes Jackson’s self-fashioning from redemptive forms of violence...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2002) 24 (2): 221–234.
Published: 01 June 2002
... culture. Cumulatively, the cultural place of the militia is one of self-described individualists struggling against cultural opponents—the representatives of the New World Order. As Americans, militia members insist that only their specific brand of individualism is “real” Americanism. Thus their disputes...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2002) 24 (3): 469–478.
Published: 01 September 2002
...Vanessa Ruget Abstract American political science has recently undergone a process of self-criticism principally illustrated by the so-called "Perestroika movement." This article suggests turning to Pierre Bourdieu's sociology of science to clarify some of the mechanisms that contribute...