Tag: Intractability

Calcutta Poor Inquiry into the Intractability of Poverty


Free Download Frederic C. Thomas, "Calcutta Poor: Inquiry into the Intractability of Poverty"
English | 1996 | ISBN: 1563249812 | EPUB | pages: 200 | 0.8 mb
Calcutta is notorious for its pavement dwellers, street children, and scavengers that have become a portrait of the worst sort of human degradation. In this illuminating critique, Thomas investigates the standard solutions – improved housing, increased job creation, and intervention of social services agencies – only to come to the conclusion that such initiatives have little effect on the inherent nature of the problem of poverty. Based on historical and anthropological findings, and the author’s visits to the slums of Calcutta, what becomes clear is that even in the midst of great poverty, there is a nobility of character, a vitality of ethnic and cultural ties, and an energy that bring out inventiveness and ingenuity in the lives of the poor. If Calcutta’s poverty is not to be an intractable problem, these internal forces must be awakened to generate solutions. Illustrated with stunning photographs, Thomas’s reflections provide new insight into an age-old problem.

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Radical Conflict Essays on Violence, Intractability, and Communication


Free Download Andrew R. Smith, "Radical Conflict: Essays on Violence, Intractability, and Communication "
English | ISBN: 1498521770 | 2016 | 326 pages | EPUB | 3 MB
Radical Conflictaddresses conflict at interpersonal and communal, legal and rhetorical, ethnopolitical, global, and geopolitical levels. The conflicts analyzed are "radical" because in each some intense and often prolonged violence takes place. The chapters address different kinds of violence(s)-physical and gratuitous, structural and socio-economic, legal and symbolic, all with significant ill effects and injustices that spiral in all directions. All share an interest in exploring imaginatively and speculatively what can be done to attenuate such cycles of violence. The volume analyzes how recurrent narratives, mythologies, media(ted) constructions and other discourse(s) of liberal democratic and authoritarian states play a significant role in exacerbating or thwarting violence, exposing, escalating, legitimizing, rationalizing, propagating, but also possibly mitigating violence in all of its forms.

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