Essays about: "Tribal Nations"
Found 4 essays containing the words Tribal Nations.
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1. Agents of Peace or Tension: Analysing Political Elites’ Electoral Rhetoric : A Qualitative Analysis of Campaign Rhetoric in the 2023 Nigerian Presidential Election
University essay from Uppsala universitet/Statsvetenskapliga institutionenAbstract : How do some political elites, in unstable democracies with communal divisions, use ethnic, religious, and tribal affiliations for a rhetoric of polarisation and/or reconciliation when running for office? This thesis applies a framing analysis to explore how political elites employ these affiliations in speech acts, mainly political rallies, to construct narratives of polarisation and reconciliation during election campaigns. The theoretical framework is constructed by previous research on “Big Men” politics and the rhetoric used by ex-combatants turned politicians within a context embossed with electoral violence and division. READ MORE
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2. Decolonial affordances of a communal heritage platform: A case study of the Reciprocal Research Network
University essay from Malmö universitet/Institutionen för konst, kultur och kommunikation (K3)Abstract : Museums are increasingly reckoning with their roles in the colonization of Indigenous peoples as they seek to engage diverse forms of participation and justify their social relevance. Many are turning to digital solutions to aid with these endeavors, including digital repatriation/return platforms. READ MORE
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3. Social Dialogue and Labour Relations in United States' Federal Indian Law and Policy: Alien Concepts?
University essay from Lunds universitet/Juridiska institutionenAbstract : .... READ MORE
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4. “Whose nation?” : A study of nation-building in Namibia
University essay from Institutionen för samhälls- och välfärdsstudier; Filosofiska fakultetenAbstract : Using a critical discourse analysis this study focuses on the Namibian nation-building process. The former colony gained its independence in 1990 from the South African apartheid administration. It was this oppressing social structure that gave the people a common enemy to unite against. It was from this unity that the Namibian identity sprung. READ MORE