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Revolutionary process, political strategy, and the dilemma of power
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This article is published in Theory and Society.The article was published on 1977-09-01. It has received 48 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Dilemma & Political strategy.read more
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Constructing sustainable tourism development: the 2030 agenda and the managerial ecology of sustainable tourism.
TL;DR: The UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development sets a series of sustainable development goals (SDGs) to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure prosperity for all as discussed by the authors, which is the goal of the SDGs.
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The Morphology of Marronage
TL;DR: A number of texts have addressed desires for and iterations of freedom throughout the Black diaspora as mentioned in this paper, and conceptualizations of freedom are often employed and interrogated in critical scholars, although conceptualization of freedom is not often employed in critical research.
Management, business, anarchism
TL;DR: The field of critical management studies, regularly dated back to the publication of Mats Alvesson and Hugh Willmott's collection (1992), has drawn on left wing theoretical sources as well as heterodox empirical research in reflecting on and ultimately criticizing prevailing practices and discourses of management as mentioned in this paper.
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Prefigurative Politics between Ethical Practice and Absent Promise
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors disentangle prefiguration as a recursive temporal framing, unknowingly drawn from Christianity, in which a future radiates backwards on its past, and suggest conceiving of means-ends unity in terms of Bloch's 'concrete utopia', and associating it with 'anxious' and 'catastrophic' forms of hope.
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The entrepreneurial gender divide: Hegemonic masculinity, emphasized femininity and organizational forms
Diana M. Hechavarría,Amy Ingram +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the interplay among forms of entrepreneurship and the gendered entrepreneurial divide and find that women entrepreneurs are more likely to start social ventures than commercial ventures.