Moved to Action

Moved to Action
Author: Hahrie C. Han
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Total Pages: 276
Release: 2009-08-17
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0804772444

Wealthy, educated, and more privileged people are more likely to participate and be represented in politics than their poorer, less educated, and less privileged counterparts. To reduce these inequalities, we need a better understanding of how the disadvantaged become motivated to participate. Moved to Action fills the current gap in this area of research by examining the commitments and pathways through which the underprivileged become engaged in politics. Drawing on original, in-depth interviews with political activists and large-scale survey data, author Hahrie C. Han contests the traditional idea that people must be politicized before they participate, and that only idiosyncratic factors outside the control of the political system can drive motivation. Her findings show that that highly personal commitments, such as the quality of children's education or the desire to help a friend, have a disproportionately large impact in motivating political participation among people with fewer resources. Han makes the case that civic and political organizations can lay the foundation for greater citizen participation by helping people recognize the connections between their personal commitments and politics.

Moved to Action

Moved to Action
Author: Hahrie Han
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Total Pages: 208
Release: 2009-08-17
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0804762244

The book examines how the underprivileged become motivated to participate in politics even though they lack the educational, financial, and civic resources commonly assumed to be necessary for participation.

Moved

Moved
Author: Ryan Dalton
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 167
Release: 2010
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1449080693

People use the term "moved" to describe a mental state or emotion. Being truly moved by something usually goes much further than emotions and feelings. Someone who is "moved by a song" is therefore "moved to tears" or "moved to dance". Being moved by something is action fueled by emotion, feelings or experience. So being moved is more than a feeling. It's feelings which lead to action; an adjective that is actually a verb. MOVED is a commentary on modern-day Christianity; how, many Christians all too often gets caught up in services within the walls of a building, religion, tradition and liturgy, whilst sometimes neglecting the needs of broken, hurting groups of people outside those church walls. Jesus lived a selfless life of love and service to others, and more specifically the people who society of the time pushed to the outskirts. If we are Christians, "followers of Christ", it is important for us to look at the life Jesus led, and to be moved to act similarly. We need to be MOVED; faith which leads to appropriate action.

Moved by God to Act

Moved by God to Act
Author: Wm. Carter Aikin
Publisher: Wipf and Stock Publishers
Total Pages: 277
Release: 2014-01-03
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1630871141

Moved by God to Act offers a fresh description of Christian moral action as a moment of connection between divine and human agency. Through an ecumenical consideration of a variety of resources, this book gives an accessible description of the work of God's grace not only in individual Christian agency but also within the dynamics of Christian community. Moved by God to Act brings the contemporary theological ethics of community into dialogue with the pneumatology of Thomas Aquinas. The ethic emerging from this dialogue lifts up the centrality of God's grace in Christian community while at the same time offering a detailed articulation of the human being as naturally and beautifully drawn into cooperation with God's grace in the ethical life. The book concludes by showing how Aquinas stands in substantial harmony with the contemporary authors discussed, offering a proper description of God's agency in individual Christian human agency and the dynamics of the "body" of the Christian community to which the contemporary discourse so rightly points. Moved by God to Act is an attempt to speak to the work of God in the life and day-to-day action of Christians and Christian communities as moved to act by the Holy Spirit.

On Moving and Being Moved

On Moving and Being Moved
Author: Frances La Barre
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 271
Release: 2013-05-13
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1135829489

Every sensitive therapist intuits the wealth of meaning that resides in nonverbal behavior. Yet, trained as they are to discern and communicate verbal insights, few therapists have a clear idea of how to tap that stream of meaning. In On Moving and Being Moved, Frances La Barre remedies this situation in an intellectually broadening and clinically exciting manner. Drawing on an extensive research literature on movement and nonverbal behavior, her background as a dancer, and her extensive analytic experience, she seeks to enhance our perception of movement and our understanding of its role in therapeutic communication. La Barre anchors her contribution in a thorough-going review of both analytic and nonanalytic sources as they bear on clinical issues. Conversant with the language of posture-gesture mergers, of kines and context analysis, and of body attitudes and self-directed touching, she spans the research literatures of all relevant disciplines, from anthropology to developmental psychology to ethology, from studies of temperament to cross-cultural comparisons of interactive rhythms. Turning to the psychoanalytic domain, she begins by considering the traditionally peripheral role of the body that derived from Freud's own belief that action was often an obstacle to verbal understanding. With the advent of the contemporary relational perspective, she holds, the stage is set for a deeper understanding of nonverbal behavior both as a source of meaning and as a ubiquitous shaper of therapeutic communication. For the clinician, On Moving and Being Moved is a wonderfully informative introduction to the realm of the nonverbal that succeeds both as a reference work and as a pivotal contribution to the theory of therapy. La Barre goes on to illuminate the manner in which analytic and nonanalytic insights can be integrated into a flexible yet disciplined approach that restores nonverbal behavior to its rightful place in the "talking cure."

On Being Moved

On Being Moved
Author: Stein Bråten
Publisher: John Benjamins Publishing
Total Pages: 352
Release: 2007-01-01
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 9789027252043

In this collective volume the origins, neurosocial support, and therapeutic implications of (pre)verbal intersubjectivity are examined with a focus on implications of the discovery of mirror neurons. Entailing a paradigmatic revolution in the intersection of developmental, social and neural sciences, two radical turnabouts are entailed. First, no longer can be upheld as valid Cartesian and Leibnizian assumptions about monadic subjects with disembodied minds without windows to each other except as mediated by culture. Supported by a mirror system, specified in this volume by some of the discoverers, modes of participant perception have now been identified which entail embodied simulation and co-movements with others in felt immediacy. Second, no longer can be retained the Piagetian attribution of infant egocentricity. Pioneers who have broken new research grounds in the study of newborns, protoconversation, and early speech perception document in the present volume infant capacity for interpersonal communion, empathic identification, and learning by altercentric participation. Pertinent new findings and results are presented on these topics: (i) Origins and multiple layers of intersubjectivity and empathy (ii) Neurosocial support of (pre)verbal intersubjectivity, participant perception, and simulation of mind (iii) From preverbal sharing and early speech perception to meaning acquisition and verbal intersubjectivity (iv) New windows on other-centred movements and moments of meeting in therapy and intervention. (Series B)

Moved by Machines

Moved by Machines
Author: Mark Coeckelbergh
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 235
Release: 2019-07-17
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 1000517446

Given the rapid development of new technologies such as smart devices, robots, and artificial intelligence and their impact on the lives of people and on society, it is important and urgent to construct conceptual frameworks that help us to understand and evaluate them. Benefiting from tendencies towards a performative turn in the humanities and social sciences, drawing on thinking about the performing arts, and responding to gaps in contemporary artefact-oriented philosophy of technology, this book moves thinking about technology forward by using performance as a metaphor to understand and evaluate what we do with technology and what technology does with us. Focusing on the themes of knowledge/experience, agency, and power, and discussing some pertinent ethical issues such as deception, the narrative of the book moves through a number of performance practices: dance, theatre, music, stage magic, and (perhaps surprisingly) philosophy. These are used as sources for metaphors to think about technology—in particular contemporary devices and machines—and as interfaces to bring in various theories that are not usually employed in philosophy of technology. The result is a sequence of gestures and movements towards a performance-oriented conceptual framework for a thinking about technology which, liberated from the static, vision-centred, and dualistic metaphors offered by traditional philosophy, can do more justice to the phenomenology of our daily embodied, social, kinetic, temporal, and narrative performances with technology, our technoperformances. This book will appeal to scholars of philosophy of technology and performance studies who are interested in reconceptualizing the roles and impact of modern technology.

The Cambridge Handbook of Class Actions

The Cambridge Handbook of Class Actions
Author: Brian T. Fitzpatrick
Publisher: Cambridge Law Handbooks
Total Pages: 577
Release: 2021-02-18
Genre: Law
ISBN: 1108488587

International authors describe class action procedure in this concise, comparative, and empirical perspective on aggregate litigation.

Moved by the State

Moved by the State
Author: Tina Loo
Publisher: UBC Press
Total Pages: 296
Release: 2019-06-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 0774861037

From the 1950s to the 1970s, the Canadian government relocated people living in rural and urban communities, often against their will, in order to alleviate the all-too-common lack of social services and economic opportunities. Moved by the State offers a completely new interpretation of this undertaking, focusing on the bureaucrats and academics who designed and implemented these relocations – and on the larger development project they were pursuing. Tina Loo’s finely crafted history reveals the optimistic belief underpinning postwar relocations: the power of the interventionist state to do good.