Sentences with phrase «of economic emancipation»

The openness to education may very well be the differentiating factor between mediocrity or failure, and the perception of economic emancipation — what we call success.
The idea of learning under a candle - light in pursuit of the dream or promise of economic emancipation is much romanticized in China [4].
As a torchbearer of Africa's Political emancipation, the Ghana Beyond Aid vision resonates within Ghana and catching up with other African countries as the only sustainable means of reaching our goals of economic emancipation as a continent by using internal resources to create the needed infrastructural development and jobs opportunity for the teeming unemployed graduate youth.
Vice President Bawumia challenged the financial institutions, the telcos and the Fintechs to find very innovative ways of turning mobile phones and the mobile money platform into vehicles of economic emancipation for the many players in the huge informal sector.

Not exact matches

However, the more insecure the future of a liberal, secular society appears to be, the more confident I feel about the future of religion — not a future in relation to emancipation and economic and / or political liberation.
To lift the economic burdens which depress life and spoil opportunity, to liberate folk from the slavery of their diseases, to set men free by education from the Town of Stupidity, which, as Bunyan rightly says, is only four degrees north of the City of Destruction itself — all these endeavors to give persons a chance to be their best selves are crusades for human emancipation and happiness.
He calls attention to (1) the degeneration in syncretism of the old Yahweh faith prior to the appearance of the eighth - century prophets; (2) a kind of «emancipation» from Yahweh in increasing dependence upon the maturing structure of the political state; and (3) the dissolution of the old tribal social order with the shift of economic power to the cities, the increasing inability of the farmer, because of the burdens of heavy taxation, to maintain himself as a free man, and the growing concentration of land in the hands of a few wealthy urbanites (cf. Isa.
Where differentiation and specialization have progressed, it is more difficult to prevent partial or total emancipation of economic, artistic, and erotic interests when a conflict of loyalties appears.
A concept like of equality should therefore be extended to all those (socio - economic and cultural) spheres that are essential to human emancipation and self - development.
Suggestions for any radical solution of the problem, such as emancipation, had never been seriously considered, and now that slaveholders had the cotton gin, and cotton ruled as king of their economic life, they felt that they had to maintain slavery.
Tiwa n Tiwa l'Osun is a socio - political movement that came into existence on the need to achieve democratic excellence, economic prosperity, political advancement and social emancipation for the people of Osun.
«Though the media most important role is to help the public to enjoy its «right to know» by informing, educating, sensitizing and enlightening the populace, media should also work with a share responsibility of the legislature to contribute to political emancipation and transformation in ways consistent with economic principals by pursuing fact based, fully substantiated reporting.
Comrade Olafare described the African foremost monarch as king of the youths whose developmental agenda focuses on the total socio - economic emancipation of the youths across the continent of Africa.
After a successful fight for political freedom, Ghana is once again leading the rest of Africa in a fight for emancipation, this time for economic freedom, Ghana's Vice President has declared.
«What brought us together is not interest to acquire power but the interest to bring the necessary change for the economic emancipation of our great nation.
Whether through CBTs or WBTs, learners could harness the power of technology, such as graphics, audio, and video to understand concepts as taught in a traditional setting and use it as a means for economic and social emancipation.
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