№ files_lp_4_process_3_072483
File format: docx
Character count: 23867
File size: 32 KB
The document explores the evolution of political theory in the Western tradition from theocratic models to secular-liberal ones, focusing on the changing role of religion in politics across different eras and thinkers.
Year:
2023
Region / City:
Western political thought
Theme:
Political theory, religion, secularism, liberalism
Document type:
Academic article
Institution:
N/A
Author:
N/A
Target audience:
Scholars, students of political theory
Period of validity:
N/A
Date of approval:
N/A
Date of changes:
N/A
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The product description is provided for reference. Actual content and formatting may differ slightly.
Year:
2026
Organization:
UK Research and Innovation, AHRC Public Engagement & Skills teams
Type of document:
Equality Impact Assessment
Scope:
New Generation Thinkers programme
Target group:
Early career researchers, BBC partners, general public
Consultation:
Annual consultation with BBC partners; review and evaluation of 2022 programme
Objectives:
Increase public engagement with arts and humanities research, create innovative engagement opportunities, develop high-profile advocates
Key considerations:
Age, disability, gender reassignment, pregnancy and maternity, race, religion or belief, sexual orientation, sex, geographical location
Mitigation measures:
Accessible venues, flexible participation options, anonymised assessment processes, prior EDI statements, timeline and access requirements communication
Impact assessment period:
2026 programme year
Approval date:
Not specified
Revision date:
Adjustments made following 2022 review recommendations
Author:
Edmund Neill
Institution:
New College of the Humanities
Language:
English
Document Type:
Academic book chapter
Academic Field:
Intellectual history; Political history; Political thought
Subject:
Conservative political thought and the role of the state in post-war Britain
Geographical Focus:
United Kingdom
Historical Period Covered:
1945–1979
Key Topics:
welfare state, conservative ideology, state intervention, civil society, social policy, post-war political debates
Referenced Scholars:
Jose Harris, Ewen Green
Referenced Figures:
William Beveridge, James Meade, Stafford Cripps, G. D. H. Cole, Richard Crossman, Thomas Balogh, C. A. R. Crosland, Quintin Hogg
Political Context:
Development of the welfare state and debates over state planning, redistribution, and civil society in post-war Britain
Type of Source:
Scholarly historical analysis
Year:
2000s–2010s
Region / City:
United States, University of California San Diego
Subject:
Philosophy, Logic, Epistemology, Semiotics
Document Type:
Academic Quiz / Commentary Compilation
Institution:
University of California San Diego
Author:
Harris Bunker
Audience:
Students, Scholars, Quiz Participants
Topics Covered:
Al-Farabi, Zapffe, Cioran, Brandom, Sokal Paper, Baudrillard, Churchland, AI Ethics
Language:
English
Format:
Question-and-Answer with Explanatory Notes
Contextual Description:
Academic source presenting a series of philosophical quiz questions and explanatory commentary covering classical and modern thinkers, concepts, and debates.
Year:
1998
Author:
Sean Sayers
Topic:
Political philosophy
Document type:
Scholarly article
Philosophical focus:
Critique of liberalism, historical materialism
Referenced thinkers:
Marx, Engels, Hegel, Locke, Rousseau, Kant, Rawls
Key concepts:
Justice, rights, bourgeois society, social values
Source type:
Academic publication
Period analyzed:
Eighteenth century to modern interpretations
Publication context:
Analysis of Marx’s divergence from liberal thought
Year:
2022
Event type:
Summer school
Location:
International / Prague
Theme:
Classical liberalism, philosophy, economics, politics
Organizing institution:
AAU
Target audience:
Students, researchers, and professionals interested in classical liberalism
Dates:
July 25-29, 2022
Speakers:
Josef Šíma, Mark LeBar, Adam Martin, John Hasnas
Activities:
Lectures, group discussions, panel discussion, Prague history tour, graduation ceremony
Schedule subject to change:
Yes
Academic focus:
Philosophy, economics, political theory
Document type:
Event program
Year:
1972
Region / City:
United States
Topic:
Separation of Powers, Presidential Powers, National Security
Document Type:
Legal Case
Institution:
United States Supreme Court
Author:
Howard Gillman, Mark A. Graber, Keith E. Whittington
Target Audience:
Legal professionals, scholars, students
Period of Effectiveness:
N/A
Approval Date:
N/A
Date of Changes:
N/A
Context:
The document presents a legal case study discussing the constitutional implications of presidential power to authorize surveillance without judicial approval, focusing on a domestic security issue related to national security.
Year:
1934
Region / city:
Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
Theme:
Racial discrimination and higher education
Document type:
Academic article / historical case study
Institution:
University of Michigan
Author:
Not specified
Target audience:
Scholars and students of American history and race relations
Period covered:
Early 20th century, Interwar Period
Key figures:
Willis Ward, Gerald Ford, Moses “Fleetwood” Walker, Henry Graham, W.A. Alexander, Fielding Yost
Sports discussed:
Football, basketball, baseball, tennis, swimming, gymnastics, wrestling
Main events:
Benching of Willis Ward, racial quotas in university athletics
Historical context:
Northern racial liberalism, Jim Crow influences in Northern institutions