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Showing 1 to 15 of 31 results
Fiamengo, Janice – Academic Questions, 2013
In this article, the author comments on an unsigned newspaper piece titled "Helping Talent Rise to the Top," printed in Canada's "Globe and Mail" about a new measure to enhance student well-being at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario. The "Globe" piece lauds Queen's, a top-ranked Canadian…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, College Students, Risk
Davidson, Bruce W. – Academic Questions, 2013
The author has lived in Japan over twenty-five years, teaching in higher education for more than twenty. He observes that it has been alarming to see the inroads of ideological activism in the academic community in Japan, which is having unfortunate effects on the curricula of many schools, including his own, Hokusei Gakuen University. In this…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Political Attitudes, Foreign Countries, Ideology
Solway, David – Academic Questions, 2013
One of the main factors implicated in the atomization of contemporary life, both as cause and effect, is the brunt and tenor of modern liberal education. For it cannot be denied that liberal education in the classic sense has severed its mandate to instruct and enlighten from the archive of the past and has been replaced by the concept of…
Descriptors: General Education, Foreign Countries, Educational History, Intellectual History
Fox, Robin – Academic Questions, 2012
Civilization is always a work in progress. Every civilization is an experiment in how far people can shift themselves from the evolutionary norm of the small, kinship-integrated tribal society governed by ritual and custom to any kind of society either more complex in structure or less tribal in foundation. People assume that given intelligence…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Citizenship Education, Democracy, Western Civilization
Huff, Toby E. – Academic Questions, 2012
In terms of political liberation and constitutional democracy, Americans cannot help but think back to 1776 and the Declaration of Independence. For the English, the mind reaches back to the English Declaration of Rights of 1689, and for those with somewhat longer historical memories, to Magna Carta of 1215. But the true origin of political…
Descriptors: Sciences, Scientific Concepts, Western Civilization, Foreign Countries
Duchesne, Ricardo – Academic Questions, 2012
The claim that there were "surprising similarities" between the West and the more advanced regions of Asia as late as 1800-1830, and that the Industrial Revolution was the one transformation that set Europe apart from Asia is central to the arguments of multicultural historians such as Kenneth Pomeranz, Bin Wong, Jack Goldstone, John Hobson, and…
Descriptors: Sciences, Western Civilization, Foreign Countries, Historians
Williamson, Kevin D. – Academic Questions, 2012
On January 20, 2009, Dr. Manmohan Singh, the prime minister of India, became the leader of the free world. The free world's attention was focused elsewhere: Senator Barack Obama, who on that day became President Barack Obama, quietly abdicated the role now taken up by Dr. Singh, having run an election campaign premised upon the ever-present but…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Change, Economic Change, Leaders
Williams, Philip F. – Academic Questions, 2012
Great Books programs and Western civilization courses have understandably emphasized the Greco-Roman and Hebraic origins of Western civilization, while moving on to a European focus, with some material relating to the Western Hemisphere usually brought in for good measure. After all, people have the ancient Greeks to thank for such landmark…
Descriptors: Western Civilization, Foreign Countries, Non Western Civilization, Asian History
Yee, Cordell D. K. – Academic Questions, 2012
One of the reasons often advanced for the study of Western civilization is its history of scientific and technical prowess. Advances in science and technology have resulted in the many conveniences of modern life: air travel, automobiles, and smart phones, to name just a few. These are fruits of the Baconian project, which emphasized observation…
Descriptors: Western Civilization, Foreign Countries, Poetry, Democracy
Horowitz, Irving Louis – Academic Questions, 2012
Now that Colonel Muammar Gaddafi is dead and his forty-two years as despotic ruler of Libya and fomenter of international disorder has come to a permanent halt, it is a good time for governments--both in and beyond the NATO alliance--to review accommodations and agreements made with his regime. It is also time for the academic social policy…
Descriptors: Social Sciences, Social Scientists, Foreign Countries, International Relations
Patai, Daphne – Academic Questions, 2012
In the late 1990s and early 2000s, the controversy surrounding Nobel Peace Prize laureate Rigoberta Menchu constituted one of the most interesting--and acrimonious--academic debates to take place in recent decades. It may seem that not much new can be said about it now, for most every single person weighing in on the subject has already spoken,…
Descriptors: Interviews, Debate, Postmodernism, Politics
Jasser, M. Zuhdi – Academic Questions, 2011
In the nearly ten years since the attacks by Muslim terrorists on 9/11, people have seen an exponential growth in homegrown radical Islam, or Islamism. Insufficiently recognized and acknowledged, this metastasis has produced its natural, deadly effects: jihad against American citizens on their own soil. Some analysts cite "the narrative" as the…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Muslims, Democracy, Islam
Williams, Austin – Academic Questions, 2010
This essay explores the ubiquity of the sustainability agenda in higher education in the United Kingdom (with some parallel examples from the United States) with a view to pointing out its corrosive influence on educational ambition. In so doing, the author suggests that the prevalence of sustainability within education has only been possible…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Essays, Sustainability
Klehr, Harvey; Haynes, John Earl – Academic Questions, 2009
Although the Communist Party USA (CPUSA) never became a major player in American political life, it was a significant participant in mainstream politics and the trade union movement in the 1930s and 1940s. It has also been the focus of sustained attention by historians. An online bibliography of scholarly writing about domestic American communism…
Descriptors: Social Systems, Doctoral Dissertations, Unions, Historians
Ericson, Edward E., Jr. – Academic Questions, 2009
When Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn entered the world stage in the 1960s, the West interpreted him without preconceptions. Then the West turned against him with a vengeance. The great exception to this turn was France--"France!"--where virtually all of his writings appeared in translation and where intellectuals took instruction from him on the nature of…
Descriptors: Social Systems, Foreign Countries, Social Studies, Religion

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