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CONDUCT (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   113328


Company survey series: BAE systems PLC / Hartley, Keith   Journal Article
Hartley, Keith Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract BAE Systems is the UK's largest defence and security firm and one of the world's major arms companies. It has changed from a state-owned aerospace firm to a privatised specialist defence company involved in a range of air, land, sea and cyber systems with a major presence in the US defence market. This article describes and assesses the history of the company, its organization, conduct and performance.
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2
ID:   090404


Conduct and counter-conduct on the Southern border of Turkey: multicultural Antakya / Dogruel, Fulya; Leman, Johan   Journal Article
Dogruel, Fulya Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract Due to its particular border situation and historical past, Antakya (in south-central Turkey) has, in contrast to most cities in Turkey, been successful in protecting important components of its diachronically composed multiculturalism. In light of such qualities Antakya is able to permit a diachronic analysis of different subsequent 'governmentalities' (Foucault) and flexible network formations that reflect the various processes in government styles in twentieth century Turkey. Through participant observation and in-depth interviews the authors try to reconstruct the diachronic multiculturalism from a perspective of macro- and micro-powers, 'conduct' and 'counter-conduct'.
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3
ID:   148284


International lawyers in the aftermath of disasters: inheriting from Radhabinod Pal and Upendra Baxi / Khan, Adil Hasan   Journal Article
Khan, Adil Hasan Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract In the present lives in the postcolony are beset by relentless disasters, generating great suffering and loss. How should an international lawyer conduct herself in response? Resisting the urge to construct these times as entirely unprecedented, this article attempts a response by drawing out the conduct of two ancestral Third World international lawyers responding to disasters in their own time. It reveals how disasters never simply occur but are actively produced by particular modes of conduct deployed by international lawyers. From their conduct we learn how to attend to the tasks of justice and responsibility in the aftermath of disaster by being responsive to the suffering and by recognising the disastrous effects of our action. We also learn how attending to the tasks of inheritance is vital for this.
Key Words Disasters  Responsibility  Conduct  Inheritance  Frames  Suffering 
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