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-Debate serves as a space to have discourse on rejecting injustice in society. |
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-Giroux, Henry A. Waterbury Chair Professorship at Pennsylvania State University, University Park. 2004. “Critical Pedagogy and the Postmodern/Modern Divide: Towards a Pedagogy of Democratization,” from Winter 2004, Teacher Education Quarterly. |
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-The search for… and gendered inequalities. |
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-Thus, the role of the ballot is to endorse the best strategy for rejecting patriarchal institutions in society. |
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-Moghadam, Valentine. Feminist scholar and author. 2001. “Violence and Terrorism: Feminist Observations on Islamist Movements, State, and the International System,” from Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, vol. 21.1-2, Project Muse. |
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-Our world desperately… of peace education. |
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-The evil dehumanization of women continues via the systematic exclusion of women in power relations. |
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-Steven, Taylor. Ph.D Transpersonal Psychology @ Liverpool John Moores University, Senior lecturer in psychology @ Leeds Metropolitan University. 2012. “Out of the Darkness,” from RSpec. |
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-There have been… created by humania. |
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-Structures of society can be reformed, but we need to purge our lack of concern and acknowledge the ongoing injustice before change is even possible. |
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-Winter and Leighton. Winter, Deborah DuNann Professor of Psychology, Whitman College, and Dana C. Leighton, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Psychology, Southern Arkansas University. “Peace, Conflict, and Violence: Peace Psychology in the 21st Century.” New York: Prentice Hall, 2001. |
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-Finally, to recognize… building lasting peace. |
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-Our government excludes women and the feminist movement from inclusion. |
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-Marshall, Catherine. Professor at the University of North Carolina. 2005. “Feminist Critical Policy Analysis: A perspective from post-secondary education,” pg. ix-x. |
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-Policy researchers and… at the challenge. |
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-This is evidenced by domestic violence - historical context shows nothing short of police INDIFFERENCE. |
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-Wetendorf, Diane. 2000. “The Impact of Police-Perpetrated Domestic Violence,” from Domestic Violence by Police Officers, ed. D.C. Sheehan, 375-382. Washington DC: U.S. Department of Justice, 2000. |
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-Twenty years ago… but social work. |
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-The problem is more than that of disinterest – police intentionally contribute to and ignore domestic violence even when THEY ARE THE PERPETRATORS. |
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-Wetendorf 2, Diane. 2000. “The Impact of Police-Perpetrated Domestic Violence,” from Domestic Violence by Police Officers, ed. D.C. Sheehan, 375-382. Washington DC: U.S. Department of Justice, 2000. |
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-The final obstacle… to protect him. |
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-First is domestic violence - a form of oppression against women that is a microcosm of the society we live in. |
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-Tracy, Steven R. Professor, Theology and Ethics PhD, University of Sheffield, England ThM, Western Seminary MDiv,Western Seminary BA, Arizona State University Diploma, Pastoral Studies, Moody Bible Institute. September 2007. “Patriarchy and Domestic Violence: Challenging Common Misconceptions,” JETS 50/3 (September 2007) 573–94. |
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-While women are… an enormous social problem. |
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-The state as it is prevents solving ontologically for a multitude of issues – social change is impossible without the AC. |
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-Dillon and Reid, Michael and Julian. Prof of Politics and Prof of International Relations. 2000. “Global Governance, Liberal Peace, and Complex Emergency,” Alternatives: Social Transformation and Humane Governance 25.1. |
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-As a precursor… as Foucauldian "biopower" ways. |
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-Man’s subjugation of woman is the cause of war and domination. |
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-Workman, Thom. Political Science at University of New Brunswick. January 1996. “Pandora's Son's: The Paradox of Patriarchy and War,” YCISS Paper no. 31, p. 7, January 1996. |
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-The practices of… war is seamless. |
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-Thus, the plan: “The United States Federal Government shall be completely restructured to include the voices of women and feminists.” |
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-First, giving women a voice in politics is key – solves patriarchy in society. |
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-Enloe, Cynthia. Professor of Women’s Studies at Clark University. 2004. “The Curious Feminist,” pg. 129-139. |
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-Asking feminist questions… effective public voice. |
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-Qualified immunity serves only to diffuse conflict, but the AC endorses having actual discourse on the issues that inhibit change. |
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-Hassel, Diana. Associate Professor, Roger Williams University School of Law. 1999. “Living a Lie: The Cost of Qualified Immunity,” Missouri Law Review Vol. 64, 1999. |
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-Current qualified immunity… debate is unlikely. |
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-This means that the AC does endorse a limitation on qualified immunity – key to solving domestic violence because police use qualified immunity as a shield to hide behind and conceal their APATHY towards domestic violence. |
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-Harper, Laura S. September 1990. Lawyer in Dallas, Texas. “Battered Women Suing Police for Failure to Intervene: Viable Legal Avenues After Deshaney v. Winnibago County Department of Social Services,” 75 Cornell L. Rev. 1392 (1990). http://scholarship.law.cornell.edu/clr/vol75/iss6/4 |
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-Because qualified immunity… violence situations. |
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-If you still don’t think that my Aff Is topical, there is no topical version of my AC – the government in its current state can’t solve the AC. |
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-Youngs, Gillian. Professor of Digital Economy and Academic Director of the Institute of Advanced Broadcasting at the University of Wales. 2004. ““Feminist International Relations: A Contradiction in Terms? Or: Why Women and Gender Are Essential to Understanding the World 'We' Live in,” from International Affairs, JSTOR. |
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-Let us for… taken as given. |