The World Renewal - October- 2021

The World Renewal - October- 2021
Author: BK Aatmaprakash
Publisher: Brahma Kumaris
Total Pages: 36
Release: 2021-10-22
Genre: Body, Mind & Spirit
ISBN:

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‘The World Renewal’ English Monthly Spiritual Magazine Published by Brahma Kumaris

The World Renewal - December - 2021

The World Renewal - December - 2021
Author: BK Aatmaprakash
Publisher: Brahma Kumaris
Total Pages: 36
Release: 2021-12-16
Genre: Body, Mind & Spirit
ISBN:

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‘The World Renewal’ English Monthly Spiritual Magazine Published by Brahma Kumaris

The World Renewal - August- 2021

The World Renewal - August- 2021
Author: BK Aatmaprakash
Publisher: Brahma Kumaris
Total Pages: 36
Release: 2021-08-16
Genre: Body, Mind & Spirit
ISBN:

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‘The World Renewal’ English Monthly Spiritual Magazine Published by Brahma Kumaris

The World Renewal - March - 2021

The World Renewal - March - 2021
Author: BKAatmaprakash
Publisher: Brahma Kumaris
Total Pages: 36
Release: 2021-04-01
Genre: Body, Mind & Spirit
ISBN:

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‘The World Renewal’ English Monthly Spiritual Magazine Published by Brahma Kumaris

The World Renewal - May- 2021

The World Renewal - May- 2021
Author: BK Aatmaprakash
Publisher: Brahma Kumaris
Total Pages: 36
Release: 2021-05-29
Genre: Body, Mind & Spirit
ISBN:

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‘The World Renewal’ English Monthly Spiritual Magazine Published by Brahma Kumaris

Agents of World Renewal

Agents of World Renewal
Author: Takashi Miura
Publisher: University of Hawaii Press
Total Pages: 249
Release: 2019-08-31
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0824880420

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This volume examines a category of Japanese divinities that centered on the concept of “world renewal” (yonaoshi). In the latter half of the Tokugawa period (1603–1867), a number of entities, both natural and supernatural, came to be worshipped as “gods of world renewal.” These included disgruntled peasants who demanded their local governments repeal unfair taxation, government bureaucrats who implemented special fiscal measures to help the poor, and a giant subterranean catfish believed to cause earthquakes to punish the hoarding rich. In the modern period, yonaoshi gods took on more explicitly anti-authoritarian characteristics. During a major uprising in Saitama Prefecture in 1884, a yonaoshi god was invoked to deny the legitimacy of the Meiji regime, and in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the new religion Ōmoto predicted an apocalyptic end of the world presided over by a messianic yonaoshi god. Using a variety of local documents to analyze the veneration of yonaoshi gods, Takashi Miura looks beyond the traditional modality of research focused on religious professionals, their institutions, and their texts to illuminate the complexity of a lived religion as practiced in communities. He also problematizes the association frequently drawn between the concept of yonaoshi and millenarianism, demonstrating that yonaoshi gods served as divine rectifiers of specific economic injustices and only later, in the modern period and within the context of new religions such as Ōmoto, were fully millenarian interpretations developed. The scope of world renewal, in other words, changed over time. Agents of World Renewal approaches Japanese religion through the new analytical lens of yonaoshi gods and highlights the necessity of looking beyond the boundary often posited between the early modern and modern periods when researching religious discourses and concepts.

Human Rights Museums

Human Rights Museums
Author: Jennifer Carter
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 223
Release: 2022-09-16
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1317092805

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Human Rights Museums presents case studies that trace how calls for historical and social justice, and the commensurate rise of a rights regime have led to the emergence of a new museological genre: the human rights museum. Presenting innovative field research conducted in new and emerging human rights museums across Asia and Latin America, the book adopts a broad museological approach. It does so by including national and community museums, as well as public and private museological initiatives, within its purview. Drawing on in-depth case studies about museums in Taiwan, Japan, Paraguay and Colombia – all discussed within their political and cultural contexts – the book examines the paradigmatic shift that has occurred within the museum field in the wake of the larger global transformations that have shaped contemporary geo-politics over the last 50 years. The diversity of geographical and political contexts, and the attention to lesser-known institutions within the canon of English museum studies literature, presents readers with a valuable opportunity to learn more about innovative museological models in non-English-speaking and non-Western contexts. Human Rights Museums will appeal to academics, scholars and students of museum studies and related disciplines, and to museum professionals seeking to know more about the diverse and evolving roles of museums in contemporary society.

Sustainable Approaches in Textiles and Fashion

Sustainable Approaches in Textiles and Fashion
Author: Subramanian Senthilkannan Muthu
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 238
Release: 2022-05-29
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9811908745

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This second volume in this set of books discusses various sustainable approaches in textiles and the fashion sector with a focus on consumerism and the supply chain. Sustainability is one of the important aspects in today’s industrial context, and is no exception to textiles and fashion. Sustainability and strict adherence to the principles of sustainability has become as one of the essential needs again for any industrial sector including textiles and fashion. There are countless measures in terms of various approaches to make the textiles and fashion sector sustainable. These measures, but not limited to, ranging from innovating and implementing new fibres and raw materials, introducing innovative manufacturing methods, chemicals, processes to focus on all the possible stages of a textile product’s life cycle from cradle to grave. These approaches include making the textiles and fashion sector circular and also development of new products from sustainable raw materials/processes or combination of both.

Great Power Competition as the New Normal of China–US Relations

Great Power Competition as the New Normal of China–US Relations
Author: Jinghao Zhou
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 291
Release: 2022-09-01
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 3031094131

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Will China–U.S. relations come back to the normal track? Does the confrontational approach work for China–US relations? This book argues that it is an unrealistic hope to bring China–US relations back to the so-called normal track because the great power competition will be a new normal of China–US relations and the USA will gain more from strategic competition than cooperation in the long run. This book shows that the strategy of “great power cooperation through competition” is more positive and constructive than the approaches of “peaceful coexist” and “maximum pressure.” This book does not intend to provide policy recommendations for governments to consider, but mainly to explain why the great power competition is inevitable and why it is necessary to continuously work with China in some areas through strategic competition. This book alarms the importance of understanding the nature of the Chinese Communist Party during the great power competition and aims to motivate both sides to revisit their foreign policy practice and come up with a better foreign policy strategy of handling China–US relations.

Pacific Island Women and Contested Sporting Spaces

Pacific Island Women and Contested Sporting Spaces
Author: Yoko Kanemasu
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 128
Release: 2023-06-26
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1000902862

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This book focuses on the variety of strategies developed by women athletes in the Pacific Islands to claim contested sporting spaces – in particular, rugby union, soccer, beach volleyball, recreational sports and exercise – as a prism to explore grassroots women’s engagement with heavily entrenched postcolonial (hetero)patriarchy. Based on primary research conducted in Fiji, Samoa, Solomon Islands, and Vanuatu, the book investigates contested sporting spaces as sites of infrapolitics intersected primarily by gender and also by other markers of inequality, including ethnicity, sexuality, class and geopolitics. Contrary to historical and contemporary representations of Pacific Island women as victims of gender injustice, it explores how these athletes and those who support them actively carve out space for their transformative agency. Pacific IslandWomen and Contested Sporting Spaces: Staking Their Claim focuses on a region underexamined by sport or gender studies researchers and will be of key interest to scholars and students in Gender Studies, Sport Studies, Sociology and Pacific Studies as well as sport practitioners and policymakers.