Leftist Constructs
by Diana Pho
Upcoming article for Overland Magazine
"Diana M Pho on steampunk and progressive politics" "Diana M Pho on steampunk and progressive politics"
การประกอบสร้างรัฐฆราวาสนิยมในฝรั่งเศส: นัยต่อชาวมุสลิมและผ้าคลุมศีรษะ(ที่สูญหาย)
Journal of European Studies Vol.19 (2) July-December 2011.
บทคัดย่อ
คุณลักษณะสำคัญของรัฐสมัยใหม่ประการหนึ่งคือ... more
บทคัดย่อ
คุณลักษณะสำคัญของรัฐสมัยใหม่ประการหนึ่งคือ หลักการฆราวาสนิยมหรือแนวคิดในการแบ่งแยกระหว่างรัฐและศาสนาเพื่อสร้างรัฐอันเป็นเอกภาพ ตลอดจนหลีกเลี่ยงการให้สิทธิพิเศษแก่ศาสนาหรือความเชื่ออื่นใดเพื่อรักษาไว้ซึ่งความเป็นกลางและความเท่าเทียมระหว่างพลเมืองภายในรัฐ อย่างไรก็ตามแต่บทความนี้เสนอว่าในทางปฏิบัติการประกอบสร้างรัฐฆราวาส ณ ปัจจุบันยังห่างไกลจากสภาวะดังกล่าว พิจารณาได้จากกรณีปัญหาเกี่ยวกับผ้าคลุมศีรษะในฝรั่งเศสซึ่งถูกตีความว่าขัดต่อหลักการฆราวาสนิยมและอุดมการณ์แห่งการก่อตั้งสาธารณรัฐฝรั่งเศส นอกจากนี้หลักการฆราวาสนิยมซึ่งถูกผลิตและผลิตซ้ำให้กลายเป็นอุดมการณ์หลักทางสังคมโดยรัฐและกลไกทางอุดมการณ์ ยังถูกใช้เพื่อสร้างความชอบธรรมในการกำหนดกรอบพฤติกรรมและควบคุมสมาชิกในสังคม บทความนี้สรุปว่าความพยายามในการประยุกต์หลักการฆราวาสนิยมในสังคมฝรั่งเศสกลับลดทอนพื้นที่และเสรีภาพในการแสดงศรัทธาของชาวมุสลิม ซึ่งท้ายที่สุดแล้วนำมาซึ่งความแปลกแยกทางชาติพันธุ์ของชาวฝรั่งเศสเชื้อสายมุสลิม
Abstract
One of the most significant attributes of the modern state is a concept of secularism, denoting the separation between religion and state. The secular state aims to create the statist unity and avoids privileging either religious or cults in order to create the equality of social members. Nevertheless, this study argues that the secularism, in practice, is far from such conditions, considering from the headscarf controversy in French society interpreting as a symbol against the principle of secularism and the fundamental ideology of the republic of France. In addition, the principle of secularism, produced and reproduced as a dominant ideology by the state and the ideological state apparatus, has been used to legitimize a way to control over people and their behavior. This study concludes that the implementation of secularism in France, in fact, diminishes the freedom of expression of Muslim, and thereby, eventually, has stimulated the ethnic alienation of French Muslims.
Effects of Gain-Loss News Framing and Political Ideology on Audience Sympathy
by Itay Gabay
This study examines how valenced news frames interact with audience orientations to influence emotions and how the... more This study examines how valenced news frames interact with audience orientations to influence emotions and how the strength of this effect varies according to whether news stories are held factually equivalent across conditions. Using an experiment, we examined the effect of valence framing and its interaction with respondents’ political ideology on sympathy for individuals — an employee bankrupt due to medical expenses and a business executive — interviewed in a news story about the issue of employee access to health care. Results showed that valence framing interacted with political ideology such that liberals presented with a loss frame expressed the most sympathy for the bankrupt employee, while conservatives presented with a loss frame expressed the most sympathy for the business executive. We explain these findings in light of the relationship between political ideology and attributions of responsibility for personal and social problems. Regarding the different approaches to framing, we found that the addition of frame-resonant facts attenuated the strength of the interaction between gain-loss framing and political ideology on sympathy for the business executive. Directions for future research on valenced framing effects on emotions are discussed.
Nationalism in times of globalization: A study in the dynamics of 'globalism'
Published in: LÓGOI: Revista de Filosofía. (January-June 2008). (n. 13). (pp. 101-120). Caracas: Escuela de Filosofía/Universidad Católica Andrés Bello.
ISSN 1316-693X
Prime Minister Koizumi's visits to Yasukuni-jinja; the deployment of Japanese Self-Defense Forces to Iraq; Prime... more
Prime Minister Koizumi's visits to Yasukuni-jinja; the deployment of Japanese Self-Defense Forces to Iraq; Prime Minister Abe's claim that the coercion of "comfort women” remains to be proven …
In recent years, China, Korea and other countries have expressed outrage towards controversial Japanese government decisions and public statements. Added to proposals of constitutional revision, bills regarding Self-Defense Forces and the content of education, the specter of Japan's ultranationalist past seems to hinder its integration and ability to overcome differences within the Asian-Pacific region. However, carefully considered, these matters may not be as interrelated as they appear. Some actions respond to domestic nationalistic discourse, but others are a reaction to the changes in global geopolitics and attempts at international cooperation. In times of globalization, all countries try to accommodate to “globalism” - the often-contradictory ideology that underlies globalization - in order to secure and maintain their own national identity. This paper, using Japan as a case study, offers an explanation regarding how “globalism” can lead to nationalism. It also questions whether the greatest threat to democracy is not civil society’s tendency to inaction; and, if action is sufficient to thwart radicalization of nationalism.
The New Spartakists. The thought of Rosa Luxemburg to understand the Global Movement
2005 - Con Pablo Iglesias en Barker, C. And Tyldesley (eds.) “Alternative Futures and Popular Protest. Conference Papers Supplementary Volume”. Manchester Metropolitan University
press.
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Seen by:Rethinking Populism: Populism as a Political Style
Presented at Australian Political Studies Association Conference, Old Parliament House, Canberra, 26-28 September 2011.
Recent events such as the unexpected return of Pauline Hanson, the rise of the Tea Party, and the continued success of... more
Recent events such as the unexpected return of Pauline Hanson, the rise of the Tea Party, and the continued success of Hugo Chávez has meant that populism has enjoyed a resurgence in the fields of political theory and comparative politics over the past decade, moving from a topic of near obscurity to become one of political studies’ central – and most contentious – issues. Yet the very idea of populism remains hazy, with dominant conceptualisations of populism – as ideology, logic, discourse or strategy – often attempting to fit a square peg in a round hole, and failing to capture the specificity of the phenomenon.
As such, this paper argues that thinking of populism as a ‘political style’ presents a way out of interminable debates around the term, and offers a conceptualisation that is amenable to both theoretical development and empirical analysis. To do so, it firstly considers the strengths and weaknesses of current theoretical approaches to populism, before developing the concept of ‘political style’ by drawing on the work of Frank Ankersmit, Robert Hariman and Judith Butler. In the process, it explores the central role of performance within political styles, asks what it actually means to speak on behalf of ‘the people’, and explores the aesthetic and relational elements of populism. It will further draw on empirical examples across the globe to demonstrate that such a concept allows us to understand how populism appears across the political spectrum, as well as how it translates into the political mainstream.
“Red Laughter”: On Refined Weapons of Soviet Jesters
by Serguei Alex. Oushakine (Сергей Ушакин)
Social Research Vol. 79 : No.1 : Spring 2012
Patriotism and Nationalism in Music Education
by David Hebert
Forthcoming multi-author book, co-edited with Alexandra Kertz-Welzel.
Patriotism And Nationalism In Music Education
by David Hebert and Alexandra Kertz-Welzel (edt.)
ISBN-13 : 9781409430803
ISBN-10 : 1409430804
Publisher : ASHGATE PUBLISHING
Format : Hardback
Pub Date : August 2012
Status : Not yet published [complete manuscript now in press]
Music has long served as an emblem of national identity in educational systems throughout the world. Patriotic songs... more
Music has long served as an emblem of national identity in educational systems throughout the world. Patriotic songs are commonly considered healthy and essential ingredients of the school curriculum, nurturing the respect, loyalty and 'good citizenship' of students. But to what extent have music educators critically examined the potential benefits and costs of nationalism? Globalization in the contemporary world has revolutionized the nature of international relationships, such that patriotism may merit rethinking as an objective for music education. The fields of 'peace studies' and 'education for international understanding' may better reflect current values shared by the profession, values that often conflict with the nationalistic impulse. This is the first book to introduce an international dialogue on this important theme; nations covered include Germany, the USA, South Africa, Australia, Japan, Taiwan, Singapore and Canada.
Hebert, D. G. & Kertz-Welzel, A. (Eds.) (2012, Ashgate, forthcoming/in press). Patriotism and Nationalism in Music Education. [Contributors: Simon Keller, Jane Southcott, Kari Veblen, Ambigay Yudkoff, Carlos Abril, CheeHoo Lum, Eugene Dairianathan, Amy Beegle, Wai-Chung Ho, Marja Heimonen, David G. Hebert, Alexandra Kertz-Welzel].
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the Globe of Globalization
by pieter meurs
published in Kritike 5:2
The starting question in this article is: what does globalization mean philosophically? What matters for this article,... more The starting question in this article is: what does globalization mean philosophically? What matters for this article, is not inasmuch the content of the politico-moral claims or the ideological scope of worldviews as described by sociological and political sciences in the process of globalization, but rather a philosophical horizon that exceeds everyday political reality. This stems from a point of view that the debate on globalization and its alternatives is still too often protruded by ideological and idealist arguments. This article will scrutinize what globalization actually means, considered from a philosophical standpoint. In order to investigate the meaning of globe in globalization, we turn to the philosophy of Jean-Luc Nancy.
Boosting Implicit Self-Esteem Precipitates Liberal Shift
Co-authored with John Jost, in press in Psychological Science
It has been claimed often that political ideology reflects unconscious motives and that insecure self-esteem underlies... more It has been claimed often that political ideology reflects unconscious motives and that insecure self-esteem underlies conservative orientation, but these claims have never received direct experimental test. Adopting a motivated social cognition perspective, we hypothesized that boosting implicit self-esteem would strengthen the psychological attractiveness of liberal ideology. Two experimental studies employing an evaluative-conditioning procedure corroborated this prediction. Increasing implicit (but not explicit) self-esteem produced more liberal self-identification and preferences for more liberal policy outcomes. In leveraging the distinction between implicit and explicit self-esteem, this research helps to clarify the nature of the relationship between self-esteem and political orientation and the unconscious motivational basis of ideological preferences more generally.
2008. Licking Knives and Stone Snakes: The Ideology of Flint in Ancient Egypt. In Martinón-Torres, M. and Rehren, T. (eds.), Archaeology History and Science. Integrating Approaches to Ancient Materials. Left Coast Press: Walnut Creek, 37-60.
This is a draft of the version which appeared with photos in 2008.
Flint tools, the study of which is traditionally the preserve of the prehistorian, were used in Egypt throughout the... more Flint tools, the study of which is traditionally the preserve of the prehistorian, were used in Egypt throughout the pharaonic period. Here the lithic technology of Dynastic Egypt is employed to explore the relationship between archaeology and text, restricting discussion to selected aspects of flint knife manufacture and use following the introduction of writing (c. 3100 BC) to the Graeco- Roman Period (ca. AD 300). I am concerned with ideological aspects where, following the Hawksian ladder of inference (Hawkes 1954), one might assume that text would play the significant role. Through a straight comparison of evidence from each area, it is argued that archaeology too can illuminate ideology, that there is overlap between the two. Finally an attempt to explain difference, rather than simply using one tool as a handmaiden of the other, may shed light on ideological development and bring new areas into focus. In the second part of this paper aspects of metaphor theory are used in an attempt to achieve this.
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Institutions Are What Actors Make of Them: The Changing Construction of Firm-Level Employment Relations in Spain
British Journal of Industrial Relations. Forthcoming. 2012
This article analyses the variation and change in firm-level employment relations in Spain between the transition to... more This article analyses the variation and change in firm-level employment relations in Spain between the transition to democracy and the global financial crisis. Using three auto companies as case studies, I address a crucial puzzle in the institutional literature on comparative employment relations: How do employment relations change and vary, even when national employment relations institutions do not? This article argues that differences in actor ideologies shape the construction of national institutions at the firm level, which explains change and variation of employment relations over time and across cases. The study identifies four drivers of ideological change—generational change, leadership change, identity work and diffusion — that impact the variation and change in employment relations at the firm level.
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Seen by:The Dark Magic of Ideology: Althuser’s State Apparatuses in J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter
Louis Althuser uncovers the subtle but powerful role of ideology in capitalistic machinery. Through his “Ideological... more
Louis Althuser uncovers the subtle but powerful role of ideology in capitalistic machinery. Through his “Ideological and Repressive State Apparatuses,” Althuser (1969) examines the ways in which the dominant social order propagates its ideology among the common people in the society (p. 1341). In J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series, the Ministry of Magic can be
considered a repressive apparatus. It perpetuates the ideology of the powerful in the magical community through ideological apparatuses like Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry
and the newspaper, The Daily Prophet. Through different events in the first book Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, the fourth, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire and the seventh, Harry
Potter and the Deathly Hallows, readers witness the ideological and punitive scope of different State Apparatuses. This paper asserts how the ideology of the dominant social order is indispensable and always affects the common denominator and their social practices.
Uncertainty and the Logic of Imperfect Ideological Integration
Published in Revista de Stiinte Politice.Revue des Science Politiques, 32, 2011, pp.50-61
In this paper I provide an argument supporting Downs’s defense of political party attempts to construct weakly... more
In this paper I provide an argument supporting Downs’s defense of political party attempts to construct weakly integrated ideologies, i.e. supporting certain policies which contradict the assumed ideological mainstream. In this respect I employ a simplified version of the Davis-Hinich-Ordeshook proximity
model in order to identify the voting mechanisms of individuals which analyze party policies as part of their electoral decision-making process. I conclude that although the main reason for occasional policy defections from the conventional ideological program is the fact that voters attach different weights to each policy dimension, uncertainty is in its turn a key factor in this respect.
Anarchism and Political Theory: Contemporary Problems
by Uri Gordon
My Oxford doctoral thesis
This thesis explores contemporary anarchism, in its re-emergence as a social movement and political theory over the... more
This thesis explores contemporary anarchism, in its re-emergence as a social movement and political theory over the past decade. Its method combines cultural sociology and philosophical argumentation, in a participatory research framework.
The first part, “Explaining Anarchism”, argues that it should be addressed primarily as a political culture, with distinct forms of organisation, of campaigning and direct action repertoires, and of political discourse and ideology. Largely discontinuous with the historical workers’ and peasants’ anarchist movement, contemporary anarchism has fused in the intersection of radical direct-action movements in the North since the 1960s: feminism, ecology, and the resistance to nuclear energy and weapons, war, and neoliberal globalisation. Anarchist ideological discourse is analysed with attention to key concepts such as “domination” and “prefigurative politics”, emphasising the avowedly open-ended, experimental nature of the anarchist project.
The second part, “Anarchist Anxieties”, is a set of theoretical interventions in four major topics of controversy in anarchism today. Leadership in anarchist politics is addressed through sustained attention to the concept of power, proposing an agenda for equalising access to influence among activists, and an “ethic of solidarity” around the wielding of non-coercive power. Violence is approached through a recipient-based definition of the concept, exploring the limits of any attempt to justify violence and offering observations on violent empowerment, revenge and armed struggle. Technology is subject to a strong anarchist critique, which stresses its inherently social nature, leading to the exploration of Luddism, the disillusioned use of ICTs, and the promotion of lo-tech, sustainable human-nature interfaces as strategical directions for an anarchist politics of technology. Finally, the lens of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is used to address anarchist dilemmas around national liberation, exploring anarchist responses in conflict-ridden societies, and direct action approaches to peacemaking.
Cisgenderism in psychology: Pathologizing and misgendering children from 1999 to 2008
Published as Ansara Y.G., & Hegarty P. (2012) Cisgenderism in psychology: Pathologizing and misgendering children from 1999 to 2008'. Psychology and Sexuality, 3, 137-160.
We assessed whether recent psychological literature on children reflects or contrasts with the zeitgeist of American... more We assessed whether recent psychological literature on children reflects or contrasts with the zeitgeist of American Psychological Association’s recent non-discrimination statement on ‘transgender’ and ‘gender variant’ individuals. Article records (N = 94) on childhood ‘gender identity’ and ‘expression’ published between 1999 and 2008 inclusive were evaluated for two kinds of cisgenderism, the ideology that invali- dates or pathologises self-designated genders that contrast with external designations. Misgendering language contradicts children’s own gender assignations and was less frequent than pathologising language which constructs children’s own gender assigna- tions and expression as disordered. Articles on children’s gender identity/expressionare increasingly impactful within psychology. Cisgenderism is neither increasing nor decreasing overall. Mental health professionals are more cisgenderist than other authors. Articles by members of an ‘invisible college’ structured around the most pro- lific author in this area are more cisgenderist and impactful than other articles. We suggest how authors and editors can implement American Psychological Association policy and change scientific discourse about children’s genders.

