The Art of Multiculturalism [[electronic resource] ] : Bharati Mukherjee’s Imaginal Politics for the Age of Global Migration / / by Roland Benedikter, Judith Hilber |
Autore | Benedikter Roland |
Edizione | [1st ed. 2018.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Cham : , : Springer International Publishing : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2018 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (142 pages) |
Disciplina | 813.54 |
Collana | SpringerBriefs in Sociology |
Soggetto topico |
Political science
Sociology Postmodernism Political Science Sociology, general Postmodern Philosophy |
ISBN | 3-319-89668-7 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto | Foreword: Chiara Bottici -- Preface; Bo Stråth -- The Western Global: Lands dof Difference - Lands of Building? -- Evolving the Time-Space Through the Hybridization of Art, Literature, Architecture, Transformation Design and Complexity Science -- A 400-Year Old Legacy: The Traditional Locality and Its Interrelation with Globalized ''Hybrid'' Frameworks -- Setting the Example for Imaginal Politics Through Art, Techniques and Procedures to Integrate Mukherjee's Indian Legacy with Western Post Modernity -- Mukherjee's 20th Century Source: Pop Art of the 1960s: A Similar Inspiration, 400 Years After the Moghuls -- Mukherjee and the Future of Multiculturalism as ''Imaginal Politics'' -- Conclusion. . |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910300572403321 |
Benedikter Roland
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Cham : , : Springer International Publishing : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2018 | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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China’s Road Ahead [[electronic resource] ] : Problems, Questions, Perspectives / / by Roland Benedikter, Verena Nowotny |
Autore | Benedikter Roland |
Edizione | [1st ed. 2014.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | New York, NY : , : Springer New York : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2014 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (140 p.) |
Disciplina | 327 |
Collana | SpringerBriefs in Political Science |
Soggetto topico |
Globalization
Markets Social policy International relations Emerging Markets/Globalization Social Policy International Relations |
ISBN | 1-4614-9363-3 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto | Foreword -- Preface -- Chapter 1 Xi Jinping's China -- Chapter 2 The cry for Chinese democratization -- Chapter 3 The 2012-13 generational power transfer and it's perspectives -- Chapter 4 The Ethnonationalism Problem -- Chapter 5 China's new foreign policy and the West -- Chapter 6 China and its neighbors -- Chapter 7 China: The road ahead -- Chapter 8 Perspectives I: Basing China's government on legitimacy and values: An Interview with Peng Bo -- Chapter 9 Perspectives II: Coexistence between Communitarian China and the Individualistic U.S.: An Interview with Robert Martin Less. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910298528203321 |
Benedikter Roland
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New York, NY : , : Springer New York : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2014 | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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Corona : the once-in-a-century health crisis and its teachings : towards a more multi-resilient post-Corona world / / Roland Benedikter and Karim Fathi |
Autore | Benedikter Roland |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Leiden, Netherlands ; ; Boston, Massachusetts : , : Brill, , [2022] |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (458 pages) |
Disciplina | 362.1962/414 |
Collana | Studies in Critical Social Sciences |
Soggetto topico |
Crisis management
COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020- - Social aspects Globalization - Social aspects |
ISBN | 90-04-46968-0 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT -- LIST OF IMAGES, TABLES AND FIGURES -- OVERVIEW AND SUMMARY -- FOREWORD -- Jan Nederveen Pieterse -- PREFACE -- PART 1: THE CORONAVIRUS CRISIS -- 1 Introduction: "Do nothing" or, An epochal crisis -- 2 Systemic unpreparedness inducing a variety of psychological reactions -- 3 The branches and social strata hardest hit: A list to be carefully remembered for the next systemic rupture -- 4 Were nature, the environment and crime statistics "winners" of the crisis? Disputed "improvements" and their flip sides -- 5 Children and relationships -- 6 Labour and the economy: "Generation Corona" -- 7 Corona and Re-Globalisation 1: Sharpening awareness about the differences between political systems and their growing asymmetries -- 8 A battle for values and transformation not confined to bilateral competition, but spanning the globe -- 9 Unprecedented penetrative depth: Uplifting technology, changing sexuality, questioning science? -- 10 Corona and Re-Globalisation 2: Creating conscience for national and international reforms -- 11 Intellectual rhetoric between cheap "humanistic" appeal and kitsch -- 12 "Humanised" technology instead of a new humanism? -- 13 A boost to "post-human hybrid intelligence" such as Biological Espionage and Sentiment Analysis? -- 14 Striking a balance: Was Corona a watershed for Western humanism and the basic rationality of the enlightenment? -- 15 The vast variety of political instrumentalisations -- 16 Three more far-reaching aspects within global democracies and open societies: Confirmation Bias, "Republican" Turn and Re-Globalisation Drive -- PART 2: THE SIMULTANEOUSNESS OF LOCAL, NATIONAL AND GLOBAL EFFECTS -- 17 Corona: An unprecedented crisis accelerating the (temporary?) rupture of advanced life patterns - including gender role models in democracies -- 18 "Unsocial sociability" and the re-shaping of the global order: Anthropology and politics intertwined -- 19 Medical diplomacy, or: The great divide of principles over and after Corona. More "Do it alone" - or more cooperation? -- 20 Don't forget the bizarre, the surreal and the perfidious: From Mona Lisa to Sharon Stone and global terror -- 21 Coronavirus crisis social psychology: Between disorientation, infodemic and the need to understand -- 22 Conspiracy theories: Misusing the crisis for legitimating the absurd in times of "fake news" -- 23 The perspective: The real question is not about COVID-19, but about "the world after" -- PART 3: THE CORONA CHALLENGE: MULTI-RESILIENCE FOR AN INTERCONNECTED WORLD RIDDEN BY CRISIS BUNDLES -- 24 In search of examples of efficient resilience: From the evolutionary teachings of bats to regional self-administration within political autonomies to a "flexible" handling of constitutions -- 25 Crisis resistance in the face of Corona and in anticipation of potential future pandemics: A short overview of different options of socio-political responses -- 26 The primordial path to follow: Enhancing resilience. Basic philosophical assumptions and their implications for crisis-policy design -- 27 Revisioning the concept of resilience: A necessary step (not only) after Corona -- 28 Progressing from resilience to multi-resilience: Two basic approaches -- 28.1 Prerequisites: Relevant criteria -- 28.2 Complexify : Multi-resilience in a systemic perspective -- 28.3 Simplify : Multi-resilience in an action-oriented perspective -- 29 Five principles of Multi-resilience -- 29.1 Principle 1: Fostering individual resilience -- 29.2 Principle 2: Integrating centralised and decentralised decision-making and implementation -- 29.3 Principle 3: Problem-solving practices with knowns and unknowns -- 29.4. Principle 4: Supporting and enhancing collective intelligence through participatory and cross-sectoral knowledge management and integration -- 29.5 Principle 5: Fostering "Resilience Culture" by stimulating and facilitating collective reasoning and cohesion -- 30 Summary. Multi-resilience: A crucial topic to shape "Globalisation 2.0" -- PART 4: REQUIREMENTS FOR A POST-CORONA WORLD -- 31 The Corona Effect and "Diseasescape": Towards weaker, but more realistic globalisation and transnationalisation? -- 32 The uncertainty about the future of COVID-19: Short-term scenarios versus big-picture trends -- 33 Technological requirements: Six trends -- 33.1 Remote working -- 33.2 eLearning -- 33.3 Telehealth -- 33.4 E-commerce and on-demand economy -- 33.5 Automatisation -- 33.6 Increasing use of immersive technologies -- 34 Towards a post-Corona world: Seven upcoming conflict lines open societies should prepare for -- 34.1 Nationalism versus globalism -- 34.2 Freedom versus safety -- 34.3 Professionalism versus populism -- 34.4 Class: Rich versus poor -- 34.5 Ethnicity (racism) -- 34.6 Gender -- 34.7 Generation: young versus old -- 35 The post-Corona world: Potentials and visions for a "better globalised" international system -- 35.1 Idea potentials: Policy-relevant contributions by intellectuals, ecologists and futurists -- 35.2 Universal basic income as a driver towards better socio-economic resilience? -- 35.3 Post-Growth and Degrowth as responses to the economic and ecological challenges in a post-Corona world? -- PART 5: POST-CORONA POLICY DESIGN -- 36 Chances and limits of resilience: The development paradox and the increasing danger of man-made disasters with multi-sectoral side effects -- 37 Towards a broader and more integrated policy of future preparedness: Contributions from selected guiding concepts -- 37.1 A brief outline of three major contemporary coping concepts: Development, Sustainability, Resilience -- 37.2 Development versus Sustainability versus Resilience: Similarities, fault lines and potential (realistic) complementarities -- 37.3 Collective Wisdom as the missing connecting principle towards Multi-Resilience? -- 38 Fostering local, national and international paths towards Multi-resilience: Leverage points for interrelated social change bottom-up and top-down -- 38.1 Education programs for individual resilience -- 38.2 Bottom-up transformational impulses via building critical masses for positive change -- 38.3 Experimental Prototyping Projects -- 38.4 Building bridges between subsystems -- 38.5 Methods of communicative complexity management -- 38.6 Towards the integration of standards? -- PART 6: RECOMMENDATIONS FOR A MULTI-RESILIENT POST-CORONA WORLD -- 39 "Health Terror"? Towards an adequate framework for a post-Corona socio-political philosophy: "Resistance" and power critique will not suffice -- 40 Seven strategic recommendations for pro-positive multi-resilient policy-making in the post-Corona world of open societies -- 40.1 Recommendation 1: Include Competency Development to become a crucial part of the education system -- 40.2 Recommendation 2: Strengthen European-Western Simulation Methodology and Strategic Foresight -- 40.3 Recommendation 3: Strengthen Future Anticipation Capacities and (potentially) their integration. From the Futures Cone and the Futures Diamond to Futures Literacy -- 40.4 Recommendation 4: Improve communication through "Complexity Workers -- 40.5 Recommendation 5: Refine multi-level governance -- 40.6 Recommendation 6: Expand and improve international cooperation -- 40.7 Recommendation 7: Sharpen global "crisis automatisms" and interconnected responsibility patterns on the way to global governance -- 41 Recommendations for global post-Corona policy-making in an increasingly multipolar world -- 41.1 Five policy trajectories proposed by the University of the United Nations - leading to the key concept of "Futures Literacy" -- 41.2 The forgotten perspective: Instilling a more encompassing and trans-systemic concept of health and healing? -- PART 7: OUTLOOK.
THE CORONAVIRUS LEGACY: A "NEW WORLD" AHEAD - OR BACK TO BUSINESS AS USUAL? -- 42 The (productively) ambiguous post-Corona vision: A "new world" ahead? -- 43 "Corona positivism": The global pandemic as an unprecedented "chance" for radical transformation - or even as the epochal example for what (social) art should achieve? -- 44 Corona as a driver of Re-globalisation towards post-Corona globalisation -- 45 A post-Corona core task: Re-positioning the open systems of Europe and the West by the means of Multi-Resilience -- 46 An end to geopolitical rivalry? Not likely - despite some positive signals -- 47 Back to business as usual - or systemic improvements at the "evo-devo" interface? -- 48 Integrating the obvious. post-Corona, Multi-Resilience and "Futures Literacy": "Bring together what belongs together" -- 49 Corona and emerging new responsibility patterns -- 50 Outlook: A post-Corona world in the making. Towards difficult, but feasible innovation - for the sake of a more pro-positive re-globalisation -- AFTERWORD -- Manfred B. Steger -- REFERENCES -- INDEX. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910795552203321 |
Benedikter Roland
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Leiden, Netherlands ; ; Boston, Massachusetts : , : Brill, , [2022] | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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Corona : the once-in-a-century health crisis and its teachings : towards a more multi-resilient post-Corona world / / Roland Benedikter and Karim Fathi |
Autore | Benedikter Roland |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Leiden, Netherlands ; ; Boston, Massachusetts : , : Brill, , [2022] |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (458 pages) |
Disciplina | 362.1962/414 |
Collana | Studies in Critical Social Sciences |
Soggetto topico |
Crisis management
COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020- - Social aspects Globalization - Social aspects |
ISBN | 90-04-46968-0 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT -- LIST OF IMAGES, TABLES AND FIGURES -- OVERVIEW AND SUMMARY -- FOREWORD -- Jan Nederveen Pieterse -- PREFACE -- PART 1: THE CORONAVIRUS CRISIS -- 1 Introduction: "Do nothing" or, An epochal crisis -- 2 Systemic unpreparedness inducing a variety of psychological reactions -- 3 The branches and social strata hardest hit: A list to be carefully remembered for the next systemic rupture -- 4 Were nature, the environment and crime statistics "winners" of the crisis? Disputed "improvements" and their flip sides -- 5 Children and relationships -- 6 Labour and the economy: "Generation Corona" -- 7 Corona and Re-Globalisation 1: Sharpening awareness about the differences between political systems and their growing asymmetries -- 8 A battle for values and transformation not confined to bilateral competition, but spanning the globe -- 9 Unprecedented penetrative depth: Uplifting technology, changing sexuality, questioning science? -- 10 Corona and Re-Globalisation 2: Creating conscience for national and international reforms -- 11 Intellectual rhetoric between cheap "humanistic" appeal and kitsch -- 12 "Humanised" technology instead of a new humanism? -- 13 A boost to "post-human hybrid intelligence" such as Biological Espionage and Sentiment Analysis? -- 14 Striking a balance: Was Corona a watershed for Western humanism and the basic rationality of the enlightenment? -- 15 The vast variety of political instrumentalisations -- 16 Three more far-reaching aspects within global democracies and open societies: Confirmation Bias, "Republican" Turn and Re-Globalisation Drive -- PART 2: THE SIMULTANEOUSNESS OF LOCAL, NATIONAL AND GLOBAL EFFECTS -- 17 Corona: An unprecedented crisis accelerating the (temporary?) rupture of advanced life patterns - including gender role models in democracies -- 18 "Unsocial sociability" and the re-shaping of the global order: Anthropology and politics intertwined -- 19 Medical diplomacy, or: The great divide of principles over and after Corona. More "Do it alone" - or more cooperation? -- 20 Don't forget the bizarre, the surreal and the perfidious: From Mona Lisa to Sharon Stone and global terror -- 21 Coronavirus crisis social psychology: Between disorientation, infodemic and the need to understand -- 22 Conspiracy theories: Misusing the crisis for legitimating the absurd in times of "fake news" -- 23 The perspective: The real question is not about COVID-19, but about "the world after" -- PART 3: THE CORONA CHALLENGE: MULTI-RESILIENCE FOR AN INTERCONNECTED WORLD RIDDEN BY CRISIS BUNDLES -- 24 In search of examples of efficient resilience: From the evolutionary teachings of bats to regional self-administration within political autonomies to a "flexible" handling of constitutions -- 25 Crisis resistance in the face of Corona and in anticipation of potential future pandemics: A short overview of different options of socio-political responses -- 26 The primordial path to follow: Enhancing resilience. Basic philosophical assumptions and their implications for crisis-policy design -- 27 Revisioning the concept of resilience: A necessary step (not only) after Corona -- 28 Progressing from resilience to multi-resilience: Two basic approaches -- 28.1 Prerequisites: Relevant criteria -- 28.2 Complexify : Multi-resilience in a systemic perspective -- 28.3 Simplify : Multi-resilience in an action-oriented perspective -- 29 Five principles of Multi-resilience -- 29.1 Principle 1: Fostering individual resilience -- 29.2 Principle 2: Integrating centralised and decentralised decision-making and implementation -- 29.3 Principle 3: Problem-solving practices with knowns and unknowns -- 29.4. Principle 4: Supporting and enhancing collective intelligence through participatory and cross-sectoral knowledge management and integration -- 29.5 Principle 5: Fostering "Resilience Culture" by stimulating and facilitating collective reasoning and cohesion -- 30 Summary. Multi-resilience: A crucial topic to shape "Globalisation 2.0" -- PART 4: REQUIREMENTS FOR A POST-CORONA WORLD -- 31 The Corona Effect and "Diseasescape": Towards weaker, but more realistic globalisation and transnationalisation? -- 32 The uncertainty about the future of COVID-19: Short-term scenarios versus big-picture trends -- 33 Technological requirements: Six trends -- 33.1 Remote working -- 33.2 eLearning -- 33.3 Telehealth -- 33.4 E-commerce and on-demand economy -- 33.5 Automatisation -- 33.6 Increasing use of immersive technologies -- 34 Towards a post-Corona world: Seven upcoming conflict lines open societies should prepare for -- 34.1 Nationalism versus globalism -- 34.2 Freedom versus safety -- 34.3 Professionalism versus populism -- 34.4 Class: Rich versus poor -- 34.5 Ethnicity (racism) -- 34.6 Gender -- 34.7 Generation: young versus old -- 35 The post-Corona world: Potentials and visions for a "better globalised" international system -- 35.1 Idea potentials: Policy-relevant contributions by intellectuals, ecologists and futurists -- 35.2 Universal basic income as a driver towards better socio-economic resilience? -- 35.3 Post-Growth and Degrowth as responses to the economic and ecological challenges in a post-Corona world? -- PART 5: POST-CORONA POLICY DESIGN -- 36 Chances and limits of resilience: The development paradox and the increasing danger of man-made disasters with multi-sectoral side effects -- 37 Towards a broader and more integrated policy of future preparedness: Contributions from selected guiding concepts -- 37.1 A brief outline of three major contemporary coping concepts: Development, Sustainability, Resilience -- 37.2 Development versus Sustainability versus Resilience: Similarities, fault lines and potential (realistic) complementarities -- 37.3 Collective Wisdom as the missing connecting principle towards Multi-Resilience? -- 38 Fostering local, national and international paths towards Multi-resilience: Leverage points for interrelated social change bottom-up and top-down -- 38.1 Education programs for individual resilience -- 38.2 Bottom-up transformational impulses via building critical masses for positive change -- 38.3 Experimental Prototyping Projects -- 38.4 Building bridges between subsystems -- 38.5 Methods of communicative complexity management -- 38.6 Towards the integration of standards? -- PART 6: RECOMMENDATIONS FOR A MULTI-RESILIENT POST-CORONA WORLD -- 39 "Health Terror"? Towards an adequate framework for a post-Corona socio-political philosophy: "Resistance" and power critique will not suffice -- 40 Seven strategic recommendations for pro-positive multi-resilient policy-making in the post-Corona world of open societies -- 40.1 Recommendation 1: Include Competency Development to become a crucial part of the education system -- 40.2 Recommendation 2: Strengthen European-Western Simulation Methodology and Strategic Foresight -- 40.3 Recommendation 3: Strengthen Future Anticipation Capacities and (potentially) their integration. From the Futures Cone and the Futures Diamond to Futures Literacy -- 40.4 Recommendation 4: Improve communication through "Complexity Workers -- 40.5 Recommendation 5: Refine multi-level governance -- 40.6 Recommendation 6: Expand and improve international cooperation -- 40.7 Recommendation 7: Sharpen global "crisis automatisms" and interconnected responsibility patterns on the way to global governance -- 41 Recommendations for global post-Corona policy-making in an increasingly multipolar world -- 41.1 Five policy trajectories proposed by the University of the United Nations - leading to the key concept of "Futures Literacy" -- 41.2 The forgotten perspective: Instilling a more encompassing and trans-systemic concept of health and healing? -- PART 7: OUTLOOK.
THE CORONAVIRUS LEGACY: A "NEW WORLD" AHEAD - OR BACK TO BUSINESS AS USUAL? -- 42 The (productively) ambiguous post-Corona vision: A "new world" ahead? -- 43 "Corona positivism": The global pandemic as an unprecedented "chance" for radical transformation - or even as the epochal example for what (social) art should achieve? -- 44 Corona as a driver of Re-globalisation towards post-Corona globalisation -- 45 A post-Corona core task: Re-positioning the open systems of Europe and the West by the means of Multi-Resilience -- 46 An end to geopolitical rivalry? Not likely - despite some positive signals -- 47 Back to business as usual - or systemic improvements at the "evo-devo" interface? -- 48 Integrating the obvious. post-Corona, Multi-Resilience and "Futures Literacy": "Bring together what belongs together" -- 49 Corona and emerging new responsibility patterns -- 50 Outlook: A post-Corona world in the making. Towards difficult, but feasible innovation - for the sake of a more pro-positive re-globalisation -- AFTERWORD -- Manfred B. Steger -- REFERENCES -- INDEX. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910821546503321 |
Benedikter Roland
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Leiden, Netherlands ; ; Boston, Massachusetts : , : Brill, , [2022] | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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Die Erneuerung der politischen Mitte : Das Auseinanderbrechen der Gesellschaft, das Format Volkspartei und die Zukunft der Demokratie |
Autore | Benedikter Roland |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Baden-Baden, : Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG, 2022 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 electronic resource (210 p.) |
Soggetto topico | JPL |
Soggetto non controllato | Globalisierung Glokalisierung Kommunitarismus Kosmopolitismus Nicht-Demokratien Parteiensystem Parteipolitik Pluralismus Populismus Re-Politisierung Transformationen Vertrauensverlust westliche liberale Demokratien Zentrum-Parteien Wahlverhalten Politisches System Politische Mitte Volkspartei Parteienstaat Parteiendemokratie |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | ger |
Altri titoli varianti | Erneuerung der politischen Mitte |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910637801103321 |
Benedikter Roland
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Baden-Baden, : Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG, 2022 | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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Die Erneuerung der politischen Mitte : das Auseinanderbrechen der Gesellschaft, das Format Volkspartei und die Zukunft der Demokratie / / Roland Benedikter |
Autore | Benedikter Roland |
Edizione | [Erste Auflage.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Baden-Baden : , : Nomos, , 2022 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (210 pages) |
Disciplina | 324.2094 |
Soggetto topico |
Political parties - Europe
Center parties - Europe |
ISBN | 9783748936084 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | ger |
Record Nr. | UNISA-996540326703316 |
Benedikter Roland
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Baden-Baden : , : Nomos, , 2022 | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. di Salerno | ||
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Die Erneuerung der politischen Mitte : das Auseinanderbrechen der Gesellschaft, das Format Volkspartei und die Zukunft der Demokratie / / Roland Benedikter |
Autore | Benedikter Roland |
Edizione | [Erste Auflage.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Baden-Baden : , : Nomos, , 2022 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (210 pages) |
Disciplina | 324.2094 |
Soggetto topico |
Political parties - Europe
Center parties - Europe |
ISBN | 9783748936084 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | ger |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910734378503321 |
Benedikter Roland
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Baden-Baden : , : Nomos, , 2022 | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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Religion in the Age of Re-Globalization : A Brief Introduction |
Autore | Benedikter Roland |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Cham : , : Springer International Publishing AG, , 2022 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (412 pages) |
Altri autori (Persone) |
JuergensmeyerMark
HoodRalph Wilbur |
Collana | Culture and Religion in International Relations Ser. |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
9783030808570
9783030808563 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910513600103321 |
Benedikter Roland
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Cham : , : Springer International Publishing AG, , 2022 | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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Religion in the age of re-globalization : a brief introduction / / Roland Benedikter ; foreword by Mark Juergensmeyer and Ralph Wilbur Hood |
Autore | Benedikter Roland |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Cham, Switzerland : , : Palgrave Macmillan, , [2022] |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (412 pages) |
Disciplina | 201.7 |
Collana | Culture and Religion in International Relations |
Soggetto topico | Globalization - Religious aspects |
ISBN | 3-030-80857-2 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910523888703321 |
Benedikter Roland
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Cham, Switzerland : , : Palgrave Macmillan, , [2022] | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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