Klondike Ad. Interface volume 5 issue 1. Anticolonial and postcolonial movements | Interface: a journal for and about social movements. Volume 5 issue 1, single file PDF (7.44 MB) Editorial Struggles, strategies and analysis of anticolonial and postcolonial social movements. Aziz Choudry, Mandisi Majavu and Lesley Wood (pp. 1 – 10) PDF (EN) Call for papers volume 6 issue 1 The pedagogical practices of social movements (pp. 11 – 13) PDF (EN) Las p rácticas pedagógicas de los movimientos sociales (pp. 11 – 13) PDF (ES) Struggles, strategies and analysis of anticolonial and postcolonial social movements Trans-local rural solidarity and an anticolonial politics of place: contesting colonial capital and the neoliberal state in India (peer-reviewed article) Dip Kapoor (pp. 14 – 39) PDF (EN) Fair Trade, neo-colonial developmentalism, and racialized power relations (peer-reviewed article) Ian Hussey and Joe Curnow (pp. 40 – 68) PDF (EN) The translation of Indigenous agency and innovation into political and cultural power: the case of Indigenous fishing rights in Australia (peer-reviewed article) Julia Cantzler (pp. 69 – 101) PDF (EN)
Søk - global. The land of promise: Science of migration. Hvorfor fattigdom?: Penger og makt på Park Avenue - 3:8. Tears of Gaza. The globalisation of work - and people. 6 September 2012Last updated at 19:18 ET Viewpoint by Prof Lynda Gratton Director, Future of Work Consortium Little big planet: As a result of connectivity and globalisation millions of jobs across the world are disappearing, according to Lynda Gratton What is fundamentally transforming work is extraordinary connectivity. In the near future, at least five billion people around the world will use some form of mobile device to download information, access knowledge and coach and teach each other. Some will have the intellectual capacity and motivation to really make something of this opportunity, wherever they happen to be born.
These people will want to join the global talent pool and, if possible, migrate to creative and vibrant cities. By doing so, this vast crowd of talented people will increasingly compete with each other, continuously upping the stakes for what it takes to succeed. Hollowing out of work So what is left is the jobs at each end of the skill and wage spectrum.