The case is quite different for individual entities, as we have
argued in earlier chapters.
Not exact matches
In a chapter devoted to Chile in the early 1970s, Sigmund argues that liberation theologians there became too enthusiastic about political revolution in a socialist mode, but he gives little if any attention to U.S. political involvement
In a
chapter devoted to Chile
in the early 1970s, Sigmund argues that liberation theologians there became too enthusiastic about political revolution in a socialist mode, but he gives little if any attention to U.S. political involvement
in the
early 1970s, Sigmund
argues that liberation theologians there became too enthusiastic about political revolution
in a socialist mode, but he gives little if any attention to U.S. political involvement
in a socialist mode, but he gives little if any attention to U.S. political involvements.
But two days
earlier, literary scholar Robert K. Wallace
argued in his Wattis lecture that explicit references to «Moby Dick» appear
in works by Stella whose titles he borrowed from the
chapters of Melville's novel.
This
chapter, based on the evidence from the United States and consideration of the Australian context,
argues that it is about time we got smart with our money and reinvested
in community wide
early intervention and support our Indigenous communities, rather than throwing it away on imprisonment.
I would
argue that many of these changes, and many of the events outlined
earlier in this
chapter, are symptomatic of government failures, both at a federal and state level, to adequately include Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people
in decision making.