Essays about: "moral character"
Showing result 16 - 20 of 44 essays containing the words moral character.
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16. Ignorance v. Innocence : Go Set a Watchman’s Case against the Hegemony of To Kill a Mockingbird
University essay from Högskolan Kristianstad/Fakulteten för lärarutbildningAbstract : This paper takes a cultural materialist approach in analyzing the hegemonic purpose of using Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird in American education. Ideas from critical race theory and Lee’s second novel, Go Set a Watchman, are used to reveal obfuscated aspects of Mockingbird’s narrative. READ MORE
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17. The Gentleman, The Rebel and The Villain: A comparative study of the scandal-sensitivity of athlete personalities in sports marketing
University essay from Handelshögskolan i Stockholm/Institutionen för företagande och ledning; Handelshögskolan i Stockholm/Institutionen för marknadsföring och strategiAbstract : Celebrity athletes have been powerful marketing tools throughout the professionalization and commercialization of sports. During the last couple of decades, the amount of sponsorship money allocated to the sports industry has rapidly increased, outplaying other sectors of entertainment. READ MORE
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18. Swedish Trade Unions’ Alliances - Geographical strategies and motivations
University essay from Göteborgs universitet / Institutionen för ekonomi och samhälleAbstract : Workers’ agency, and their struggles to potentially increase their agency, has been and still is intriguing labour geographers. The relevance and potential of the role of the trade union for workers’ power is an interesting subject in a time of international competition and economic disparities. READ MORE
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19. Trivialising Through Trial. The Victim-Perpetrator in International Criminal Law.
University essay from Göteborgs universitet/Juridiska institutionenAbstract : This thesis encircles the Ongwen case currently pending in the International Criminal Court. The thesis develops a number of theoretical observations, focusing on the unique character of this case in terms of a ‘victim-perpetrator’ perspective. READ MORE
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20. The consequences of war: The UK's responsibility towards its interpreters / translators in Afghanistan
University essay from Lunds universitet/Mänskliga rättigheterAbstract : The paper engages a provocative, multi-dimensional legal, moral and human rights issue that strikes at the heart of 21st century UK asylum law. Throughout the NATO Afghanistan military campaigns (headed by the International Security Assistance Force) in which the UK committed combat troops from 2001 to 2014, hundreds of local Afghan nationals were employed by the British Army as interpreters and translators. READ MORE