Geographical indication in agri-food and its role in the neoliberal global era : a theoretical analysis
Alessandro Bonanno
Geographical indications out of context and in vogue : the awkward embrace of European heritage agricultural protections in Asia
Hart N. Feuer
The impact of geographical indications on the power relations between producers and agri-food corporations : a case of powdered green tea "matcha"
Kae Sekine
Provenance for whom? A comparative analysis of geographical indications in the EU and Indonesia
Cinzia Piatti and Angga Dwiartama
How to use geographical indication for the democratization of agricultural production : a comparative analysis of GI rent-seeking strategies in Turkey
Derya Nizan
Geographical indications
a double-edged tool for food democracy. The cases of the Norwegian GI-evolution and the protection of stockfish from Lofoten as cultural adaptation work
Atle Wehn Hegnes and Virginie Amilien
The decline of the French label of origin wine
Romain Blancaneaux
Modern resilience of Georgian wine : geographical indications and international exposure
Anastasiya Shtaltovna and Hart N. Feuer
The multi-level, multi-actor and multifunctional system of geographical indications in Brazil
Paulo Niederle, John Wilkinson and Gilberto Mascarenhas
The GI of mezcal in Mexico : a tool of exclusion for small producers
Marie-Christine Renard and David Rodolfo Domínguez Arista
Whose labor counts as craft? Terroir and farm workers in North American craft cider
Anelyse Weiler
The potential role of geographical indication in supporting indigenous communities in Canada
Donna Appavoo and Monika Korzun
Conclusions : comprehensive change and the limits and power of sectorial measures
Alessandro Bonanno, Kae Sekine and Hart N. Feuer.
Geographical indication in agri-food and its role in the neoliberal global era : a theoretical analysis
Alessandro Bonanno
Geographical indications out of context and in vogue : the awkward embrace of European heritage agricultural protections in Asia
Hart N. Feuer
The impact of geographical indications on the power relations between producers and agri-food corporations : a case of powdered green tea "matcha"
Table of Contents Introduction Michela Massimi and Casey D. McCoy Chapter 1. Pragmatism, Perspectivism, and the Historicity of Science Hasok Chang Chapter 2. Explanation, interdisciplinarity, and perspectives Melinda Bonnie Fagan Chapter 3. What is Perspectivism, and Does it Count as Realism? Paul Teller Chapter 4. Realism and Explanatory Perspectives Juha Saatsi Chapter 5. Universality and the Problem of Inconsistent Models Collin Rice Chapter 6. Representationalism in Measurement Theory. Structuralism or Perspectivalism? Johanna E. Wolff Chapter 7. Safe-and-substantive perspectivism David Danks Chapter 8. Charting the Heraclitean Brain: Perspectivism and Simplification in Models of the Motor Cortex Mazviita Chirimuuta Chapter 9. Cancer Modeling: the Advantages and Limitations of Multiple Perspectives Anya Plutynski Chapter 10. Perspectives, Representation, and Integration Sandra D. Mitchell
Table of Contents Introduction Michela Massimi and Casey D. McCoy Chapter 1. Pragmatism, Perspectivism, and the Historicity of Science Hasok Chang Chapter 2. Explanation, interdisciplinarity, and perspectives Melinda Bonnie Fagan Chapter 3. What is Perspectivism, and Does it Count as Realism? Paul Teller Chapter 4. Realism and Explanatory Perspectives Juha Saatsi Chapter 5. Universality and the Problem of Inconsistent Models Collin Rice Chapter 6. Representationalism in Measurement Theory. Structuralism or Perspectivalism? Johanna E. Wolff Chapter 7. Safe-and-substantive perspectivism David Danks Chapter 8. Charting the Heraclitean Brain: Perspectivism and Simplification in Models of the Motor Cortex Mazviita Chirimuuta Chapter 9. Cancer Modeling: the Advantages and Limitations of Multiple Perspectives Anya Plutynski Chapter 10. Perspectives, Representation, and Integration Sandra D. Mitchell
1. Ward cultures of care; 2. Ward life; 3. Visibilities and invisibilities; 4. Recognition and attribution of dementia at the bedside; 5. Tightening of the timetables and the organisation of bedside care; 6. Bedside talk and communicating the "rules" of the ward; 7. Organisational cultures of containment, restriction and restraint; 8. Wandering the wards
1. Ward cultures of care; 2. Ward life; 3. Visibilities and invisibilities; 4. Recognition and attribution of dementia at the bedside; 5. Tightening of the timetables and the organisation of bedside care; 6. Bedside talk and communicating the "rules" of the ward; 7. Organisational cultures of containment, restriction and restraint; 8. Wandering the wards
Introduction: Socialist interpretations of legal history
Sovietisation, socialism, and law
Higher education in socialism and national legal traditions
Mapping a space for socialist interpretations of legal history
Socialism and legal history
Notes
References
Part I: Framing the socialist legal historiography
1. The transformations of some classical principles in socialist Hungarian civil law: The metamorphosis of bona fides and boni mores in the Hungarian Civil Code of 1959
On the historical background
Creation of the first Hungarian Civil Code of 1959
The coming into being of the socialist equivalent of bona fides
Developments since the Novel of 1977
The coming into being of the socialist equivalent of boni mores
Conclusions
2. We few, we happy few? Legal history in the GDR
Introduction: The very beginning
Where have all the universities gone?
'Polak versus Mitteis'
Mostly no Marxists: Centres of legal history research in GDR
The Jena chair
The Halle Chair
And now for something completely different: The Babelsberg Conference 1958
Marxist Island: Berlin
Publishing and academia
Legal history trickling down
The last bid
Conclusion
3. Roman law studies in the USSR: An abiding debate on slaves, economy and the process of history
Introduction
Soviet historiography in the first decade after the Revolution of 1917
The official intervention and the eradication of the Pokrovskian view
Stalinism and the legal historiography of the Roman world
The post-Stalinist development
Concluding remarks
4. Strategies of covert resistance: Teaching and studying legal history at the University of Tartu in the Soviet era
The general framework of mandatory subjects in legal history
Individual strategies of survival and resistance
5. The Western legal tradition and Soviet Russia: The genesis of H.J. Berman's Law and Revolution
Harold J. Berman and the construction of the Western legal tradition
Harold J. Berman's Justice in Russia (1950)
Rosenstock-Huessy: An outsider ahead of his time
The Western legal tradition and natural rights history
Conclusion: the WLT and the Cold War
Part II: Legal historians of socialist regimes
6. Juliusz Bardach and the agenda of socialist history of law in Poland
Bardach's life at a historical intersection
The beginnings of an academic career and the Second World War
1. Judging Morality 2. Ethics Position Theory 3. Measured Morality 4. Individuals Differ 5. Moral Thought 6. Moral Behaviors and Emotions 7.The Geography of Ethics8. Ethics in Applied Contexts9. Appendix
1. Judging Morality 2. Ethics Position Theory 3. Measured Morality 4. Individuals Differ 5. Moral Thought 6. Moral Behaviors and Emotions 7.The Geography of Ethics8. Ethics in Applied Contexts9. Appendix