O documento discute o SESMT (Serviços Especializados em Engenharia de Segurança e Medicina do Trabalho), incluindo sua fundamentação legal, composição, funções, implantação e integração com a CIPA. O SESMT é responsável por promover a saúde e segurança dos trabalhadores através de medidas preventivas, programas de treinamento e atendimento à legislação.
Este documento describe varias aplicaciones móviles (apps) para diseño, arquitectura y medición. Explica qué son las apps, sus características principales y los requisitos para descargarlas. Luego resume las funciones de cinco apps populares, incluyendo AutoCAD 360 para dibujar planos, Magic Plan para crear planos de viviendas a partir de fotos, y myPANTONE para acceder a bibliotecas de colores.
El documento es una carta del expresidente venezolano Diego Arria a la presidenta de Chile Michelle Bachelet. En la carta, Arria elogia los esfuerzos de Bachelet y Chile para apoyar a los refugiados chilenos durante la dictadura de Pinochet. También describe cómo él mismo ayudó a liberar a un preso político chileno durante ese período. Luego insta a Bachelet a que Chile brinde más apoyo a Venezuela, que actualmente sufre bajo una dictadura similar, y pide específicamente que envíe a al
Este documento presenta una secuencia didáctica diseñada por los docentes Eder Rodríguez y Elsa Palmar para enseñar la adición y sustracción de números enteros a estudiantes de séptimo grado. La secuencia consta de cuatro fases que incluyen actividades como discusiones, videos, explicaciones del docente y tareas de los estudiantes. El objetivo es que los estudiantes aprendan los algoritmos de adición y sustracción de números enteros y reconozcan sus propiedades, evaluando su aprendizaje a través de talleres
Hp laser jet m1212nf mfp Driver Download and User GuideMuhammad Tayyab
Hp laser jet m1212nf mfp Driver Download and complete guide about how to use it and setup this printer. A - Z information is there and even a non-technical person can setup after reading this.
O documento discute o SESMT (Serviços Especializados em Engenharia de Segurança e Medicina do Trabalho), incluindo sua fundamentação legal, composição, funções, implantação e integração com a CIPA. O SESMT é responsável por promover a saúde e segurança dos trabalhadores através de medidas preventivas, programas de treinamento e atendimento à legislação.
Este documento describe varias aplicaciones móviles (apps) para diseño, arquitectura y medición. Explica qué son las apps, sus características principales y los requisitos para descargarlas. Luego resume las funciones de cinco apps populares, incluyendo AutoCAD 360 para dibujar planos, Magic Plan para crear planos de viviendas a partir de fotos, y myPANTONE para acceder a bibliotecas de colores.
El documento es una carta del expresidente venezolano Diego Arria a la presidenta de Chile Michelle Bachelet. En la carta, Arria elogia los esfuerzos de Bachelet y Chile para apoyar a los refugiados chilenos durante la dictadura de Pinochet. También describe cómo él mismo ayudó a liberar a un preso político chileno durante ese período. Luego insta a Bachelet a que Chile brinde más apoyo a Venezuela, que actualmente sufre bajo una dictadura similar, y pide específicamente que envíe a al
Este documento presenta una secuencia didáctica diseñada por los docentes Eder Rodríguez y Elsa Palmar para enseñar la adición y sustracción de números enteros a estudiantes de séptimo grado. La secuencia consta de cuatro fases que incluyen actividades como discusiones, videos, explicaciones del docente y tareas de los estudiantes. El objetivo es que los estudiantes aprendan los algoritmos de adición y sustracción de números enteros y reconozcan sus propiedades, evaluando su aprendizaje a través de talleres
Hp laser jet m1212nf mfp Driver Download and User GuideMuhammad Tayyab
Hp laser jet m1212nf mfp Driver Download and complete guide about how to use it and setup this printer. A - Z information is there and even a non-technical person can setup after reading this.
The document outlines topics to be discussed in a class on culture and globalization, including principles of anarchism such as autonomy, horizontality, and mutual aid. It also lists topics like the 15-M Movement in Spain and its relationship to grassroots and electoral politics, and the secret revolution occurring in Rojava, Syria following the model of democratic confederalism. The document asks how the structure of decision-making at GMU could be reorganized following Rojava's model of democratic confederalism.
This document discusses several topics related to criminal justice reform and the Syrian refugee crisis.
1) It discusses prison abolition and restorative justice as alternatives to punishment-focused prisons. Restorative justice focuses on repairing harm rather than punishment.
2) It summarizes Dasgupta's argument that the nation state is declining due to globalization, the volatility of poor countries, and the illegitimacy of the current international order. Dasgupta calls for global financial regulation, flexible democracy, and a new conception of citizenship.
3) The Syrian refugee crisis has been exacerbated by the war in Syria. Dasgupta's framework and ideas for reforming the international system could inform responses to the
This document provides facts about the US prison population and incarceration rates:
- Between 1980 and 2008, the US prison population quadrupled from 500,000 to 2.3 million.
- In 2002, 1 in every 143 Americans was in jail or prison.
- The US has 5% of the world's population but 25% of the world's prisoners.
- African Americans and Hispanics make up 25% of the US population and 58% of the prison population.
- Corrections costs the US approximately $70 billion annually.
This document contains discussion questions about two readings:
1) "Cabezas: Between Love and Money" which examines how Cabezas challenges categories of sex work and romance through ethnographic research methods.
2) "Sudbury: A World Without Prisons" which analyzes the prison industrial complex and its connections to militarism, neoliberalism, and prison expansion. Sudbury argues that truly tackling prison issues requires intersectional, multi-issue organizing rather than identity-based movements. The document also discusses how September 11th was used to justify increased militarism and privatization.
The document asks students to brainstorm final discussion topics and addresses key concepts and arguments from both readings such
The document discusses the concept of "Yellow Peril" and how it connects to international trade debates. It provides quotes from the 2012 US presidential debates between Obama and Romney where they accuse China of unfair trade practices like currency manipulation and intellectual property theft. The document asks what Ross argues the "fear of a Chinese threat" obscures. It discusses Ross' analysis of worker protests in China and the common cultural explanations versus Ross' Marxist perspective. It covers concepts like social reproduction through mass consumption and different types of workers like in factories, gold farming, and Apple stores. Finally, it lists several Marxist political economy concepts seen in these issues.
The document discusses Kwame Nkrumah and neocolonialism. It states that Nkrumah helped lead Ghana to independence from Britain in 1957 and was elected as its first president. However, in 1966 the CIA backed a coup that overthrew Nkrumah's government and realigned Ghana with Western nations. It defines colonialism as direct political control and economic extraction, while neocolonialism uses indirect political means for economic extraction.
- David Harvey argues that neoliberalism involves "creative destruction", destroying existing social and economic systems to drive innovation and competition.
- Key premises of neoliberal theory include that free markets maximize well-being, and the state's role is to enforce private property rights, individual liberty, free markets, and free trade.
- Harvey argues that in practice, neoliberal policies have mainly resulted in wealth redistribution to a smaller elite class, rather than generating broader prosperity.
The document discusses several topics related to globalization and capitalism including:
1) Why Britain was the center of industrialization - due to its naval power, cotton industry, and use of colonialism to extract raw materials like cotton through slave labor.
2) How cotton fueled industrialization - it was profitable, attracted investment, and machinery for processing it was cheap and promised quick returns.
3) Thomas Jefferson's innovations that impacted slavery and capitalism - including industrializing and dividing slave labor, recognizing the reproductive value of slaves, and using slaves as collateral.
The document discusses key concepts and events from Steven Marks' book "Origins of the Modern World: A Global and Ecological Narrative". It summarizes Marks' argument that the current globalized world system emerged from historical forces in the 15th-18th centuries, challenging a Eurocentric view. It also outlines Marks' analysis of the transition from a polycentric pre-modern world to European imperialism establishing core-periphery relations. Specific historical topics covered include Chinese and Islamic trade networks, the rise of European nation-states linked to warfare, and the impacts of European colonization in the Americas.
This document summarizes and asks questions about several articles related to environmental issues, globalization, and indigenous resistance movements. It discusses Naomi Klein's analysis of post-tsunami recovery efforts in Sri Lanka that imposed neoliberal economic reforms. It also covers the historical uranium mining on Navajo land in the US and its health impacts, contrasting with Grand Junction, Colorado. Glen Coulthard's framework on indigenous resistance and capitalism is examined. Finally, questions are posed about the Standing Rock protest against the Dakota Access Pipeline and how social change occurs.
This document provides an overview of a course on globalization and culture. It outlines the course requirements and syllabus. The course will cover key concepts like defining globalization and examining how it differs from related terms. It will also explore how globalization impacts political, economic, and cultural dimensions. The course website and schedule are reviewed, with topics like capitalism, colonialism, and neoliberalism to be discussed in the coming weeks. Mapping exercises will also trace the spread of global connections over time through lenses like population, indigenous populations, economies, time zones, and recent elections.
The document provides an overview of global economic development and international trade topics. It discusses the history of global trade dating back to ancient civilizations, the Bretton Woods conference that established international financial institutions, factors that affect economic development, models of economic growth, currency systems, trade relations between countries like the US and China, the roles of transnational corporations and international organizations in global economic governance.
This document discusses the relationship between humans and the environment from multiple perspectives. It begins by examining the concept of "environment" and the colonial impacts like land theft and genocide that have shaped human-environment relationships. It then analyzes how neocolonialism and neoliberalism have exploited environments and local communities for economic gain. Specific case studies on privatized water in Bolivia and the failures of ecotourism are provided. The document concludes by highlighting community-led environmental initiatives taken by indigenous groups and others to cultivate sustainable relationships with the land.
The document discusses migration and refugees. It provides context on the definition of immigrants and refugees, noting refugees are forced to flee while immigrants choose to resettle. The origins and history of asylum and refugee crises are examined, including events in World Wars I and II that led to large population displacements. More recent events like the 2014 crisis of unaccompanied minors migrating to the US are also summarized. Causes of migration patterns within countries like China and the US are outlined.
This document discusses the influence of capitalism and globalization on gender and sexuality. It addresses several topics:
1) Capitalism's influence on sexuality and how desires can be created and influenced by markets.
2) How transnational capitalism generates new modes of sexuality, including the commodification of sex shows in Thailand.
3) The globalization of the sex industry, issues like exploitation and health risks associated with it.
4) Gendered morality tales in Asia that critique women's behaviors to support capitalist development and gender hierarchies.
This document contains facts about US prisons:
- Between 1980 and 2008, the US prison population quadrupled from 500,000 to 2.3 million.
- In 2002, 1 out of every 143 Americans was in jail or prison.
- The US has 5% of the world's population but 25% of the world's prisoners.
- African Americans and Hispanics make up 25% of the US population but 58% of the prison population.
- Corrections costs about $70 billion annually, making prisons a significant economic institution.
The document summarizes key points from the reading "Sudbury: A World Without Prisons" in the upcoming Globalization and Culture class. It discusses how the reading analyzes the expansion of prisons through processes like militarism and neoliberalism. It notes that the reading argues tackling prison expansion requires intersectional, multi-issue organizing. It also summarizes how the reading discusses the prison industrial complex and globalization of prison economies.
This document summarizes key points from a reading on yellow peril and discusses related topics:
1. It defines "yellow peril" and connects it to fears depicted in a chapter from Fast Boat to China about a Chinese threat.
2. It discusses Obama and Romney invoking this fear in 2012 presidential debates on trade with China.
3. Ross argues the fear of a Chinese threat obscures other issues like workers' rights in China.
4. Mass consumption and a service economy are discussed as means of social reproduction and addressing overproduction crises in capitalism.
5. Common experiences of different Chinese and Thai workers are noted in relation to Marxist political economic concepts.
Kwame Nkrumah was born in 1909 in the British colony of Gold Coast, Africa. He lived and studied in the United States and United Kingdom from 1935 to 1947 before returning to help lead Ghana's independence movement. Ghana became independent in 1957 with Nkrumah as its first president. However, he was overthrown in a 1966 CIA-backed coup that realigned Ghana with Western powers. Nkrumah was primarily concerned with the concept of neocolonialism, in which former colonial powers extract resources through indirect political means rather than direct control after independence.
The document discusses topics related to globalization, neoliberalism, Marxism, and postcolonial theory. It provides information on research groups for various topics, defines key concepts from Marx such as commodity and surplus value, and outlines David Harvey's perspective on neoliberalism including his view of "creative destruction" and the premises of neoliberalism. It also discusses Keynesianism, the naturalization of neoliberalism in the US, Naomi Klein's "shock doctrine" theory, the military-industrial complex and disaster capitalism complex, and Kwame Nkrumah's views on neocolonialism.
The document outlines topics to be discussed in a class on culture and globalization, including principles of anarchism such as autonomy, horizontality, and mutual aid. It also lists topics like the 15-M Movement in Spain and its relationship to grassroots and electoral politics, and the secret revolution occurring in Rojava, Syria following the model of democratic confederalism. The document asks how the structure of decision-making at GMU could be reorganized following Rojava's model of democratic confederalism.
This document discusses several topics related to criminal justice reform and the Syrian refugee crisis.
1) It discusses prison abolition and restorative justice as alternatives to punishment-focused prisons. Restorative justice focuses on repairing harm rather than punishment.
2) It summarizes Dasgupta's argument that the nation state is declining due to globalization, the volatility of poor countries, and the illegitimacy of the current international order. Dasgupta calls for global financial regulation, flexible democracy, and a new conception of citizenship.
3) The Syrian refugee crisis has been exacerbated by the war in Syria. Dasgupta's framework and ideas for reforming the international system could inform responses to the
This document provides facts about the US prison population and incarceration rates:
- Between 1980 and 2008, the US prison population quadrupled from 500,000 to 2.3 million.
- In 2002, 1 in every 143 Americans was in jail or prison.
- The US has 5% of the world's population but 25% of the world's prisoners.
- African Americans and Hispanics make up 25% of the US population and 58% of the prison population.
- Corrections costs the US approximately $70 billion annually.
This document contains discussion questions about two readings:
1) "Cabezas: Between Love and Money" which examines how Cabezas challenges categories of sex work and romance through ethnographic research methods.
2) "Sudbury: A World Without Prisons" which analyzes the prison industrial complex and its connections to militarism, neoliberalism, and prison expansion. Sudbury argues that truly tackling prison issues requires intersectional, multi-issue organizing rather than identity-based movements. The document also discusses how September 11th was used to justify increased militarism and privatization.
The document asks students to brainstorm final discussion topics and addresses key concepts and arguments from both readings such
The document discusses the concept of "Yellow Peril" and how it connects to international trade debates. It provides quotes from the 2012 US presidential debates between Obama and Romney where they accuse China of unfair trade practices like currency manipulation and intellectual property theft. The document asks what Ross argues the "fear of a Chinese threat" obscures. It discusses Ross' analysis of worker protests in China and the common cultural explanations versus Ross' Marxist perspective. It covers concepts like social reproduction through mass consumption and different types of workers like in factories, gold farming, and Apple stores. Finally, it lists several Marxist political economy concepts seen in these issues.
The document discusses Kwame Nkrumah and neocolonialism. It states that Nkrumah helped lead Ghana to independence from Britain in 1957 and was elected as its first president. However, in 1966 the CIA backed a coup that overthrew Nkrumah's government and realigned Ghana with Western nations. It defines colonialism as direct political control and economic extraction, while neocolonialism uses indirect political means for economic extraction.
- David Harvey argues that neoliberalism involves "creative destruction", destroying existing social and economic systems to drive innovation and competition.
- Key premises of neoliberal theory include that free markets maximize well-being, and the state's role is to enforce private property rights, individual liberty, free markets, and free trade.
- Harvey argues that in practice, neoliberal policies have mainly resulted in wealth redistribution to a smaller elite class, rather than generating broader prosperity.
The document discusses several topics related to globalization and capitalism including:
1) Why Britain was the center of industrialization - due to its naval power, cotton industry, and use of colonialism to extract raw materials like cotton through slave labor.
2) How cotton fueled industrialization - it was profitable, attracted investment, and machinery for processing it was cheap and promised quick returns.
3) Thomas Jefferson's innovations that impacted slavery and capitalism - including industrializing and dividing slave labor, recognizing the reproductive value of slaves, and using slaves as collateral.
The document discusses key concepts and events from Steven Marks' book "Origins of the Modern World: A Global and Ecological Narrative". It summarizes Marks' argument that the current globalized world system emerged from historical forces in the 15th-18th centuries, challenging a Eurocentric view. It also outlines Marks' analysis of the transition from a polycentric pre-modern world to European imperialism establishing core-periphery relations. Specific historical topics covered include Chinese and Islamic trade networks, the rise of European nation-states linked to warfare, and the impacts of European colonization in the Americas.
This document summarizes and asks questions about several articles related to environmental issues, globalization, and indigenous resistance movements. It discusses Naomi Klein's analysis of post-tsunami recovery efforts in Sri Lanka that imposed neoliberal economic reforms. It also covers the historical uranium mining on Navajo land in the US and its health impacts, contrasting with Grand Junction, Colorado. Glen Coulthard's framework on indigenous resistance and capitalism is examined. Finally, questions are posed about the Standing Rock protest against the Dakota Access Pipeline and how social change occurs.
This document provides an overview of a course on globalization and culture. It outlines the course requirements and syllabus. The course will cover key concepts like defining globalization and examining how it differs from related terms. It will also explore how globalization impacts political, economic, and cultural dimensions. The course website and schedule are reviewed, with topics like capitalism, colonialism, and neoliberalism to be discussed in the coming weeks. Mapping exercises will also trace the spread of global connections over time through lenses like population, indigenous populations, economies, time zones, and recent elections.
The document provides an overview of global economic development and international trade topics. It discusses the history of global trade dating back to ancient civilizations, the Bretton Woods conference that established international financial institutions, factors that affect economic development, models of economic growth, currency systems, trade relations between countries like the US and China, the roles of transnational corporations and international organizations in global economic governance.
This document discusses the relationship between humans and the environment from multiple perspectives. It begins by examining the concept of "environment" and the colonial impacts like land theft and genocide that have shaped human-environment relationships. It then analyzes how neocolonialism and neoliberalism have exploited environments and local communities for economic gain. Specific case studies on privatized water in Bolivia and the failures of ecotourism are provided. The document concludes by highlighting community-led environmental initiatives taken by indigenous groups and others to cultivate sustainable relationships with the land.
The document discusses migration and refugees. It provides context on the definition of immigrants and refugees, noting refugees are forced to flee while immigrants choose to resettle. The origins and history of asylum and refugee crises are examined, including events in World Wars I and II that led to large population displacements. More recent events like the 2014 crisis of unaccompanied minors migrating to the US are also summarized. Causes of migration patterns within countries like China and the US are outlined.
This document discusses the influence of capitalism and globalization on gender and sexuality. It addresses several topics:
1) Capitalism's influence on sexuality and how desires can be created and influenced by markets.
2) How transnational capitalism generates new modes of sexuality, including the commodification of sex shows in Thailand.
3) The globalization of the sex industry, issues like exploitation and health risks associated with it.
4) Gendered morality tales in Asia that critique women's behaviors to support capitalist development and gender hierarchies.
This document contains facts about US prisons:
- Between 1980 and 2008, the US prison population quadrupled from 500,000 to 2.3 million.
- In 2002, 1 out of every 143 Americans was in jail or prison.
- The US has 5% of the world's population but 25% of the world's prisoners.
- African Americans and Hispanics make up 25% of the US population but 58% of the prison population.
- Corrections costs about $70 billion annually, making prisons a significant economic institution.
The document summarizes key points from the reading "Sudbury: A World Without Prisons" in the upcoming Globalization and Culture class. It discusses how the reading analyzes the expansion of prisons through processes like militarism and neoliberalism. It notes that the reading argues tackling prison expansion requires intersectional, multi-issue organizing. It also summarizes how the reading discusses the prison industrial complex and globalization of prison economies.
This document summarizes key points from a reading on yellow peril and discusses related topics:
1. It defines "yellow peril" and connects it to fears depicted in a chapter from Fast Boat to China about a Chinese threat.
2. It discusses Obama and Romney invoking this fear in 2012 presidential debates on trade with China.
3. Ross argues the fear of a Chinese threat obscures other issues like workers' rights in China.
4. Mass consumption and a service economy are discussed as means of social reproduction and addressing overproduction crises in capitalism.
5. Common experiences of different Chinese and Thai workers are noted in relation to Marxist political economic concepts.
Kwame Nkrumah was born in 1909 in the British colony of Gold Coast, Africa. He lived and studied in the United States and United Kingdom from 1935 to 1947 before returning to help lead Ghana's independence movement. Ghana became independent in 1957 with Nkrumah as its first president. However, he was overthrown in a 1966 CIA-backed coup that realigned Ghana with Western powers. Nkrumah was primarily concerned with the concept of neocolonialism, in which former colonial powers extract resources through indirect political means rather than direct control after independence.
The document discusses topics related to globalization, neoliberalism, Marxism, and postcolonial theory. It provides information on research groups for various topics, defines key concepts from Marx such as commodity and surplus value, and outlines David Harvey's perspective on neoliberalism including his view of "creative destruction" and the premises of neoliberalism. It also discusses Keynesianism, the naturalization of neoliberalism in the US, Naomi Klein's "shock doctrine" theory, the military-industrial complex and disaster capitalism complex, and Kwame Nkrumah's views on neocolonialism.