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  1. 17 avr. 2024 · First of all, it was a question of indicating that we rejected the French ideology of postmodernism and that we found it preferable to affirm that history still had a meaning, but that it was only decipherable by supposing a break in the history of modernity. Refusing the death of modernity meant affirming a succession of several modernities. But this plural does not have a simple ...

  2. 30 avr. 2024 · Puntland Elections: Between Hope and History. Said Abdullahi Deni, president of Puntland state of Somalia. Semi-autonomous state in north eastern of Somalia is a region officially known as Puntland which established a local government in its territory in 1998, 7 years after the collapse of the central government in Somalia.

  3. Il y a 2 jours · The book splits the history of humanitarianism into three ‘ages’ (and three corresponding sections): the first, ‘imperial humanitarianism’, from the late 18th century to the end of the Second World War; the second, ‘neo humanitarianism’, from the end of the Second World War to the end of the Cold War; and third, ‘liberal humanitarianism’, from t...

  4. 29 avr. 2024 · Nikole Hannah-Jones on history, rage — and hope. Pulitzer Prize winner delivers keynote at Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery Initiative’s 2024 Symposium. Samantha Laine Perfas. Harvard Staff Writer. April 29, 2024 5 min read. Nikole Hannah-Jones was 11 the first time she wrote a letter to the editor.

  5. 27 avr. 2024 · But a new book, ‘H Is for Hope,’ says there is reason for hope in the fight against climate change. William Brangham speaks with its author, Elizabeth Kolbert.

  6. 26 avr. 2024 · We argue that this situation leads migrants to oscillate betweenhope” and “despair” as their migration aspirations are “stranded” in the current context of their fragmented journeys. This ambivalence, though often misunderstood as disinterest, shows to be a coping strategy to navigate through these ups and downs. By ...

  7. Il y a 6 jours · It is in turn the task of the historian of science to reveal the larger connections between the sciences and these working worlds so that we can escape the thrall of localized case-studies that have informed yet stultified so much history of science (pp. 1–5).