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The Philippines' Dangerous Dependence on the Exploitation of its People – New Naratif
The Philippines' Dangerous Dependence on the Exploitation of its People – New Naratif
While it started labour export as a stop-gap measure, the Philippine government now aggressively exports Filipinos. Labour migration has helped address the short-term needs of migrant families and the economy, and has benefitted migrant-receiving countries, local elites and the government, but also poses serious long-term problems to migrants, Filipinos, and the country.
·newnaratif.com·
The Philippines' Dangerous Dependence on the Exploitation of its People – New Naratif
Laleh Khalili · In Clover: What does McKinsey do? · LRB 15 December 2022
Laleh Khalili · In Clover: What does McKinsey do? · LRB 15 December 2022
The primary product sold by all management consultants – both software developers and strategic organisers – is the...
The aim was to maximise profit, enrich management and shareholders, and circumscribe worker militancy. Outside the US, as the Cold War raged, management consultants were willing foot soldiers in the global battle for capitalism.
Bogdanich and Forsythe’s​ book is a damning account of the way McKinsey has made workplaces unsafe, ditched consumer protections, disembowelled regulatory agencies, ravaged health and social care organisations, plundered public institutions, hugely reduced workforces and increased worker exploitation.
·lrb.co.uk·
Laleh Khalili · In Clover: What does McKinsey do? · LRB 15 December 2022
The Foxconn uprising in Zhengzhou - Tempest
The Foxconn uprising in Zhengzhou - Tempest
Researcher Yige Dong explains the Foxconn iPhone factory uprising in China and its relationship to the broader uprising in China.
This has sparked a new wave of attention on China’s labor politics since the pandemic and provoked some response among overseas Chinese communities, though less prominent for now than the global diaspora mobilization in solidarity with the protester in Beijing’s Sitong Bridge last month. It provides a telling background to the broader social uprising in China sparked by the COVID-19 lockdowns.
·tempestmag.org·
The Foxconn uprising in Zhengzhou - Tempest
Negotiating Ideations: The Role of State-Led Identity-Making in the Progress of Women's Rights in Malaysia by Anis Farid, Isabel Chung, Sharifah Shazana Agha, Ren-Chung Yu :: SSRN
Negotiating Ideations: The Role of State-Led Identity-Making in the Progress of Women's Rights in Malaysia by Anis Farid, Isabel Chung, Sharifah Shazana Agha, Ren-Chung Yu :: SSRN
This article traces the progress of women’s rights in Malaysia by reference to law reforms between 2017 and 2022, from the position of a civil society organisation (CSO) advocating for those reforms and using a gender-focused lens.
However, upon closer inspection, we argue that the law reforms achieved were ones the state views as congruous with its wider identity-making project for citizens. Consequently, issues at odds with entrenched values imposed on citizens by dominant state narratives become difficult to reconcile, resulting in roadblocks and stalled progress.
·papers.ssrn.com·
Negotiating Ideations: The Role of State-Led Identity-Making in the Progress of Women's Rights in Malaysia by Anis Farid, Isabel Chung, Sharifah Shazana Agha, Ren-Chung Yu :: SSRN
How the West projected Hitler’s ‘hooked cross’ as the Swastika with the help of New York Times
How the West projected Hitler’s ‘hooked cross’ as the Swastika with the help of New York Times
The New York Times has distorted the image of Hindu holy symbol Swastika. The publication compared Hindu symbol with the Nazi Symbol.
It is imperative to note that the Nazi Party adopted the hooked cross (Hakenkreuz in German) as its emblem in 1920. There is no evidence that Hitler ever heard of the word “Swastika”. Hooked Cross had been a sacred symbol of Christianity since its inception in ancient days and it is very natural to find Hooked Cross symbols in old churches and chapels. The Christian symbol had nothing to do either with Hinduism or Swastika. It existed as an important symbol of Christendom since its very existence. It was found in early Christian Graves of Rome in the second century CE.
·tfipost.com·
How the West projected Hitler’s ‘hooked cross’ as the Swastika with the help of New York Times
fleur-flour-flah and ‘good’ english – More of A Comment
fleur-flour-flah and ‘good’ english – More of A Comment
it’s as much a historical artifact as the rhotic American accents probably resemble older forms of British accents, or the American habit to NOT pronounce the h in ‘herb’ unlike modern British (and that was, again,  another French thing).  It’s not wrong, and if monolinguals tell us otherwise, then they’re just being jerks and ignorant of their own history.
·moreofacomment.my·
fleur-flour-flah and ‘good’ english – More of A Comment
BFM: The Business Station - Podcast Morning Brief: Hate Speech And Extreme Violence Has No Place In Malaysia
BFM: The Business Station - Podcast Morning Brief: Hate Speech And Extreme Violence Has No Place In Malaysia
The police have warned Malaysian social media users against uploading content that would threaten public safety and order, after it came to public attention that there were Tik Tok clips bringing up the May 13 racial riots in relation to GE15. Munira Mustaffa, Executive Director of the Chasseur Group tells us the reason for the rise of such damaging rhetoric and if there are organised forces behind it.
·bfm.my·
BFM: The Business Station - Podcast Morning Brief: Hate Speech And Extreme Violence Has No Place In Malaysia
Data & Society — The Oxygen of Amplification
Data & Society — The Oxygen of Amplification
New Data & Society report recommends editorial “better practices” for reporting on online bigots and manipulators; interviews journalists on accidental amplification of extreme agendas
Offering extremely candid comments from mainstream journalists, the report provides a snapshot of an industry caught between the pressure to deliver page views, the impulse to cover manipulators and “trolls,” and the disgust (expressed in interviewees’ own words) of accidentally propagating extremist ideology.
·datasociety.net·
Data & Society — The Oxygen of Amplification
“Us,” “Them,” and the Problem with “Balkanization” | global-e journal
“Us,” “Them,” and the Problem with “Balkanization” | global-e journal
Even as globalization accelerates trans-global and supra-territorial connections, matrices of prejudice and stereotypes about 'the other' from past centuries remain, in old and new forms. This fact is borne out daily in crisis regions where ethnicity, migration, and the history of colonial and imperial adventure have left their legacies, including the Balkans. Various contemporary processes stimulate the appearance of new figures and stereotypes for ‘others’ on local, national, regional, international, and global levels.
·globalejournal.org·
“Us,” “Them,” and the Problem with “Balkanization” | global-e journal
Forgotten photos show how Kenyan archaeologists unearthed secrets of their own country | Archaeology | The Guardian
Forgotten photos show how Kenyan archaeologists unearthed secrets of their own country | Archaeology | The Guardian
Exhibitions in UK and Africa rewrite history by celebrating discoveries of overlooked black excavators in colonial era
Many of the Kenyan excavators, who would typically open the trenches and dig the various layers by following the various strata, had expert local knowledge about the ancient sites, including their geology, histories and oral traditions. This knowledge was highly prized by the European scholars, who rarely did any digging themselves. But it was colonial practice, to intentionally “forget” the contributions of Africans to African history, Abungu said. “And the scholars went along with that.”
·theguardian.com·
Forgotten photos show how Kenyan archaeologists unearthed secrets of their own country | Archaeology | The Guardian
The New Humanitarian | How India’s caste system keeps Dalits from accessing disaster relief
The New Humanitarian | How India’s caste system keeps Dalits from accessing disaster relief
Historically disenfranchised, they are denied aid and equal protection.
Historically marginalised, many of the 280 million Dalits that form 20% of India’s population today still live on the fringes of society. About a third of the population remains impoverished, according to the UN, and they often continue to be shunned by so-called oppressor castes who hold power at both the village and federal levels
·thenewhumanitarian.org·
The New Humanitarian | How India’s caste system keeps Dalits from accessing disaster relief
Crypto and other Web3 tech is being used experimentally on at-risk communities
Crypto and other Web3 tech is being used experimentally on at-risk communities
Refugees and low-income populations are at the frontline in absorbing the risks and failures of Web3 technological development such as cryptocurrencies.
These previously untested technologies are being trialled to deliver key services to marginalised groups in precarious socio-economic positions. These technologies do not address the root social and economic problems these groups are facing, and introduce a range of new risks to people who are already in disadvantaged positions.
·mctd.ac.uk·
Crypto and other Web3 tech is being used experimentally on at-risk communities
Kids who grew up with search engines could change STEM education forever - The Verge
Kids who grew up with search engines could change STEM education forever - The Verge
my age cohort really is the sandwich generation - we're just the IT Support generation
But the issue is likely not that modern students are learning fewer digital skills, but rather that they’re learning different ones. Guarín-Zapata, for all his knowledge of directory structure, doesn’t understand Instagram nearly as well as his students do, despite having had an account for a year. He’s had students try to explain the app in detail, but “I still can’t figure it out,” he complains.  “They use a computer one way, and we use a computer another way,” Guarin-Zapata emphasizes. “That’s where the problem is starting.” Ford agrees. “These are smart kids,” she says. “They’re doing astrophysics. They get stuff. But they were not getting this.”  Regardless of source, the consequence is clear. STEM educators are increasingly taking on dual roles: those of instructors not only in their field of expertise but in computer fundamentals as well.
·theverge.com·
Kids who grew up with search engines could change STEM education forever - The Verge