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1 |
ID:
105465
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Publication |
2011.
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Summary/Abstract |
The Sheikh Hasina government has been able to crack down on militant outfits by initiating a process of de-radicalisation ever since it came to power in 2009. This has been evident from the fact that since 2009 the violent activities of the Islamic extremists have been curtailed with relatively little bloodshed. And the same has been the case with the left wing extremists in the country. The Sheikh Hasina regime is more determined, than any government since the formation of Bangladesh to de-radicalise the political as well as the social structure of Bangladesh. This paper will describe and analyse eradicalisation process underway in Bangladesh and the emerging challenges.
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2 |
ID:
102715
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3 |
ID:
154119
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Summary/Abstract |
Sustainable development is a very slippery concept. It is slippery in the sense that it demands curtailment of luxury and privileges in favor of the needy others and therefore commitment to sustainable development by the rich and mighty may easily slip away. At the same time, high energy, high calorie, high wasteful lifestyle is not going to be sustained in the long term.
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4 |
ID:
161236
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Summary/Abstract |
The pragmatism of globalization of knowledge and technology has generated an over optimism around the globe. It has generated an atmosphere of excitement of instant economic growth. It is being regarded substantively as the growing interdependence and interconnectedness of the world that is the part of the logic of modernity. It is expected to create unprecedented new opportunities for sustainable development.
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5 |
ID:
161247
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Summary/Abstract |
Recently, the world has celebrated World Water Day, on 22 March, is about focusing attention on the importance of water. This year’s theme, “Nature for Water”, explores nature-based solutions to the emerging challenges of water that we face in the 21st century. Environmental damage, together with climate change, is driving the water-related crises we see around the world. Floods, drought and water pollution are all made worse by degraded vegetation, soil, rivers and lakes. When we neglect our ecosystems, we make it harder to provide everyone with the clean water we need to survive and thrive.
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6 |
ID:
154137
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Summary/Abstract |
Water is Life. Water is power. Water is the new oil of the contemporary era. Water is becoming, rapidly, scarce across the globe through overuse and contamination. As this issue becomes more acute, tensions will escalate and this will affect us all. But unlike oil, water is essential for survival of humanity.
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7 |
ID:
141024
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8 |
ID:
133571
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Publication |
2014.
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Summary/Abstract |
Sudhanshu Tripathi historicises and contextualises contemporary views and discussions about globalisation and introduces its discourses, politics, practices and technologies. He also analyses the emerging challenges to as well as dilemmas and prospects of the ongoing process.
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9 |
ID:
133674
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Publication |
2014.
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Summary/Abstract |
A major feature of India's foreign policy in the post-Cold War era has been its increasing economic, political and strategic engagement with the Asia-Pacific region, a process that began in the 1990s as India's "Look East Policy". However, New Delhi's eastward expansion, despite sharing many commonalities with New Zealand, has not yet resulted in any substantial relationship with Wellington, be it in the field of politics, economic or defence/security. Despite attempts taken in the last two decades, India's engagement with New Zealand in terms of overall bilateral relationship is still untapped. There is ample scope for these two countries to collaborate and engage themselves in a wide-range of issues encompassing economic, political and strategic aspects of their bilateral relationship, with focus on a closer security partnership to deal with the emerging challenges from traditional and non-traditional threats in the region.
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10 |
ID:
154127
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Summary/Abstract |
The present development goals that the United Nations is pursuing are primarily oriented towards a sustainable world. There is recognition that the planet we inhabit needs to be sustained while we are developing and marching towards progress. The environment that has been sustaining us has been exposed to human activities and experiments throughout history especially after the Industrial revolution.
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11 |
ID:
133593
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Publication |
2014.
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Summary/Abstract |
The Panama Canal's handover from US governance to Panamanian sovereignty concluded on 31 December 1999. 'Patria Entera' (loosely translated as 'Whole Homeland'), a state-sponsored open-air concert, commemorated the handover and promulgated new readings of the Panama Canal Zone's decolonisation process. Concert headliner Rubén Blades deployed repertory and symbolic strategies to counterbalance Panamanians' ambivalence regarding the handover. 'Patria Entera' recast the Panama Canal Zone as an accessible space and narrated the handover as the Panamanian citizenry's collective inheritance of the Canal and accompanying Zone. Yet the concert's discursive arc overlooked persistent and emerging challenges.
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12 |
ID:
134016
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Publication |
2014.
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Summary/Abstract |
As NATO shifts away from Afghanistan and from a land focus, Martin Ewence considers the maritime challenges facing the alliance, and assesses how the alliance maritime strategy can enable NATO to respond to change and risk at sea.
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13 |
ID:
130451
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14 |
ID:
154132
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Summary/Abstract |
In the very simple words sustainable means something that has a longer life or pertaining to a system that maintains its own viability and that can be carried forward. In the Today’s world the concept of development has been replaced by the term “sustainable development”. It is because we all have realized that we are chasing the wrong goals on the name of development. Today, even a breath of fresh air, pure drinking water is becoming a luxury because of over exploitation of resources and unorganized pattern of development.
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15 |
ID:
129703
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