Essays about: "State aid"
Showing result 26 - 30 of 307 essays containing the words State aid.
-
26. Aid Strategies of an Asian Democracy: The Formation of Japanese Governance and Democracy Promotion in the Field
University essay from Lunds universitet/Graduate SchoolAbstract : This is a study of the promotion of democracy and governance as a part of Japan’s official development cooperation. Despite being one of few Asian democracies among aid donors, Japan’s work with democracy and governance has largely been overlooked in the discussion of its aid programme. READ MORE
-
27. Hibernation Sites and Activity of Bats During Winter
University essay from Umeå universitet/Institutionen för ekologi, miljö och geovetenskapAbstract : In the temperate region, bats have evolved the strategy of hibernation to survive the harsh winter. During hibernation, bats enter the vulnerable state of torpor that requires specific environmental conditions to function optimally. Bats are known to use caves and anthropogenic structures as hibernation sites. READ MORE
-
28. Peace Through Tourism : Visiting the Korean Borderland
University essay from Linnéuniversitetet/Institutionen för samhällsstudier (SS)Abstract : According to South Korea, there is no North Korea. In fact, the government considers itself the only legitimate state on the peninsula, much alike North Korea’s view. Officially, the two countries on the Korean peninsula are at war, having been in a ceasefire for 70 years. READ MORE
-
29. North-South entanglements in Somali-Swedish family language policy : Practices, ideologies and everyday challenges
University essay from Stockholms universitet/Centrum för tvåspråkighetsforskningAbstract : This thesis explores the family language policies (FLP) of two Somali-Swedish families living in Rinkeby, Stockholm. It focuses on the relationships between FLP and identity construction in different social spaces. READ MORE
-
30. Navigating Criminal Violence and Aid : Strategies to Negotiate Humantiarian Access in Guatemala
University essay from Uppsala universitet/Teologiska institutionenAbstract : Due to the high rates of criminal violence and the alternative authority of Criminal Armed Groups (CAGs) in Guatemala humanitarian access faces multiple barriers in regions under CAG control, often leaving vulnerable populations without necessary humanitarian services. With limited institutional and conceptual frameworks to support negotiating for humanitarian access in these criminally violent contexts the international humanitarian system favors avoiding these contexts altogether to minimize the risk of their operations, but with the trends of violence increasing in the region not addressing the issue of negotiating for humanitarian spaces in these contexts only will result in crises worsening. READ MORE