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WORLD RISK SOCIETY (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   124595


Life-world: beyond Fukushima and Minamata / Yoneyama, Shoko   Journal Article
Yoneyama, Shoko Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract The human and ecological disasters of Minamata and Fukushima highlight Japan's need to plan for a sustainable future. Ogata Masato, a Minamata fisherman, through his philosophy of "life-world" suggests that this quest for a sustainable future requires a change in the epistemology of social science. His philosophy offers a postmodern version of Japan's heritage of animism, where humans are connected with all living beings, including the souls of the living and the dead, as well as animate and inanimate entities in nature. His philosophy thus presents an alternative framework for a new modernity.
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2
ID:   154706


Postmodern warfare and the blurred boundaries between war and peace / Ehrhart, Hans-Georg   Journal Article
Ehrhart, Hans-Georg Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Each age has its own wars and its own forms of warfare. In today’s evolving world risk society warfare has entered a new development stage. The states of the “global North” adapt their forms of intervention. They increasingly practice postmodern warfare characterized especially by the role of influencing the information space, networked approaches, the incorporation of indirect and covert actions, and the special quality of new technologies. This practice furthers an increasing grey zone between limiting and de-bounding of warfare. The phenomenon of postmodern warfare raises some tough questions and offers a rich research agenda.
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