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TAKLE, MARIANNE (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   181168


Common concern for the global ecological commons: solidarity with future generations? / Takle, Marianne   Journal Article
Takle, Marianne Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article elaborates on ideas concerning future generations and whether they are useful in understanding some aspects of the concern for the global ecological commons. The article’s main scholarly contribution is to develop analytical tools for examining what a concern for future generations would require of current generations. It combines the scholarly literature on future generations with that of solidarity. The ideas concerning future generations are interpreted in terms of an ideal typical concept of solidarity with future generations. This concept is divided into four dimensions: the foundation of solidarity, the objective of solidarity, the boundaries of solidarity and the collective orientation. By applying these four dimensions in the context of the political process leading to Agenda 2030, the potentials and limitations of the concept are evident. The article concludes that the absence of reciprocity between current and future generations and uncertainty about the future are both crucial issues, which cut across the four dimensions. We cannot expect anything from people who have not yet been born, and we do not know what preferences they will have. This shows the vulnerability of forward-looking appeals to solidarity with future generations. Nevertheless, such appeals to solidarity may give global political processes a normative content and direction and can thereby contribute to understanding common concerns for the global ecological commons.
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2
ID:   099848


National reproduction: Norway's new national library / Takle, Marianne   Journal Article
Takle, Marianne Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract This article elaborates on the concept of national reproduction as a means of analysing how national categories were redefined and adjusted in the political process that led to the establishment of the National Library of Norway. Three different forms of national reproduction may be distinguished in this process: the adjustment of cultural and territorial hierarchies within the nation-state in the 1980s; the consolidation of the national community by defining it in contrast to the "foreign" in the 1990s; and the definition by the political elite of a "new national we" that includes the "foreign" after the turn of the millennium.
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