Sentences with phrase «rapid social change»

They also create, from the view of climate change, a form of social inertia that inhibits rapid social change.
Most of the artworks in this exhibition were created in the 1990s, and represent various aspects of individual artistic practices in this period of rapid social change.
Hakuoki: Edo Blossoms tells the story of a girl who allies with the warriors of the Shinsengumi, who are struggling to uphold their faith in an era of rapid social change in Japan, and the fate of those who sought to resist that change... Find true love in the journey to Edo — your choices decide your fate.
Africans, who were living in a period of rapid social change gradually came to feel that their traditional world - view was no longer adequate as a method of «explanation, prediction and control.»
Already the New Covenant Churches have produced some damning «prophecies» and booklets condemning apartheid as evil and calling for rapid social change.
Civic culture is strained to the breaking point by rapid social change.
Interdependence in trade and in the conditions of peace requires constructive economic development in areas of rapid social change if chaos and violence are to be avoided.
«In some areas, there's rapid social change due to the rapid growth of illegal gold mining,» Jones says; when one person, often an outsider, shoots a lemur and isn't harmed, others follow suit.
First, it seemed to me that in a time of rapid social change the church also needed to modify its forms of its ideas of evangelization, ministry, etc..
It's not easy for youth to move into adulthood in this time of conflicting values and rapid social change.
«rapid social changes are affecting the development of languages... political changes have affected the status of Certain languages.
The influence of leaders like, Jawaharlal Nehru, Julius Nyerere, Lee Quan Yew, Fidel Castro and Nelson Mandela helped maintain the unity of their countries and peoples in a world of rapid social change.
In the end, the faces of globalization that matter are not technology, economics, politics or rapid social changes.
The faces of globalization that matter are not technology, economics, politics or rapid social changes.
Its appeal is complex, drawing on belief in anthropogenic global warming and trust in the «scientific consensus» behind it; the Great Recession and a protective reaction to rapid social change; a basic need for the concrete, local, and personal; the waning of religious observance; peer pressure, star power, money, and more.
It is not enough to call what society is experiencing today «rapid social change» or even «revolution,» since these connote only social or political upheaval.
Thus, it is not enough to call what we are experiencing «rapid social change» or even «revolution,» since these phrases connote only social or political upheaval.
This larger perspective on the shaping of beliefs and practices in relation to literacy (and other social practices) is particularly important in times of rapid social change, such as we are experiencing in California at the end of the twentieth century.
Inspired by the intellectual debates that characterised much of the mid 1900s, particularly the emergence of semiology as a field of study, these artists evoked numerous media to explore and attempt to understand the rapid social change unfolding around them.
From Peter Blake's work with the Beatles to Eduardo Paolozzi's vibrant screenprints, this show examines how artists responded to the rapid social change of 1950s / 60s Britain.
As they sought to express a cultural identity that could bridge ancient traditions and modernity, they were also experiencing periods of conflict and rapid social change.
A number of the pieces, such as the depiction of a bulldozer knocking over a snake charmer from the 2006 series «Charming Nation,» address the rapid social changes confronting a globalizing India today, yet they often do this with a sense of ambivalence.
Artists responded to rapid social change and economic anxiety with some of the 20th century's most powerful art — brought together now in this once - in - a-generation show.
Celebrating Pallant House Gallery's significant collection of British Pop Art, this show explores how artists in the 1950s and 60s responded to rapid social change.
A multifaceted history of New York's influential alternative art scene during a time of rapid social change.
Artists responded to rapid social change and economic anxiety with some of the 20th century's most powerful art - brought together now in this once - in - a-generation show, America after the Fall: Paintings in the 1930s.
The art of 1930s America tells the story of a nation in flux Artists responded to rapid social change and economic anxiety with some of the the 20th century's most powerful art brought together in this once - in - a-generation show.
Yet Tate Britain's title has a precise historical meaning: it focuses on a moment of rapid social change and creative awakening; a time when the term «queer» was in increasing, if covert, use.
Artists responded to rapid social change and economic anxiety with some of the 20th century's most powerful art - brought together now in this once - in - a-generation show.
Interpersonal violence is strongly associated with social factors such as unemployment, income inequality, rapid social change and access to education; 26 thus, measures that aim to reduce inequality and address such factors may indirectly impact on levels of violence.
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