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Contribution of Remit Economy on Poverty Reduction in Nepal
Issue:
Volume 8, Issue 5, September 2020
Pages:
131-142
Received:
15 June 2020
Accepted:
2 July 2020
Published:
31 August 2020
Abstract: The contribution of remit economy and Poverty reduction in Nepal has analysis in this paper and how remittance income is contributing poverty reduction for employment generation. It is considered as the major component which has direct and indirect impact on macro-economic indicators and tried to explore the possibilities of utilizing remittances in the economic development of the country. When the remittance has increase on a family they have household facility with reflects the socio-economic differences. Such as, Land ownership, occupations incomes and expenditures are determinants for economic growth. Health related activities, educational status and sanitation are taken as human development indicator and information acquiring capacity, increase in awareness about the basic rights and participation in human development program as the basic indicators for empowerment and social inclusion. Productive utilization of remittances would be necessary for reducing poverty. It carried out discussed only poverty alleviation in relation to the economic growth. There is no doubt that remittance provides reliable source of foreign exchange. It could lead to stable macro-economic indicators and enhances living standard at the household level. Only addressing poverty relating remittances with standard of living would not satisfy the sustainability and economic growth but on the sustainability aspect at both national level and households' level is very scanty. Social impacts of migration, both positive and negative are lacking. The contribution of remit economy has increase of income and the trade deficit and naturally contributes to the Balance of Payments. It also helps to making trade balance and contributed in the development efforts on an average income, expenditure and the capital formation.
Abstract: The contribution of remit economy and Poverty reduction in Nepal has analysis in this paper and how remittance income is contributing poverty reduction for employment generation. It is considered as the major component which has direct and indirect impact on macro-economic indicators and tried to explore the possibilities of utilizing remittances i...
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Prof. dr. nob. Georg von Békésy, Nobel Laureate
Janos Vincze,
Gabriella Vincze-Tiszay
Issue:
Volume 8, Issue 5, September 2020
Pages:
143-146
Received:
13 July 2020
Accepted:
3 August 2020
Published:
3 September 2020
Abstract: Békésy organized his experiments with great care, and often sought the opinion of those around him. This points to a very important personality trait: I think he was fully aware of the limitations of his knowledge and was trying to expand them through discussions with others. Like Hungarian personalities who went abroad in general, he changed his first name to Georg (instead of György); he used the noble forename von characteristic for English, and this is how he appears in his dissertations. He used his surname in its Hungarian form, having accents on the letters é. In 1961, nobleman Georg von Békésy received the Nobel Prize in Medicine: “for his discoveries of the physical mechanisms of stimulation within the cochlea”. To be sure, Georg von Békésy is the only Nobel Laureate scientist in the entire history of the Nobel Prizes who bequeathed his collection of precious art objects and all the rest of his properties to the Nobel Foundation that he made his exclusive successor. For Békésy the Nobel Prize and the Nobel Foundation created by Alfred Nobel, were innovative products similar to Swedish steel. The essence of Békésy’s discovery is the clarification of the energy conversion process in the cochlea. He succeeded in designing measuring devices with which he could measure all the mechanical functions of the hearing organ, and express it with numerical data. At the end of the article we write the genealogy of Georg von Békésy.
Abstract: Békésy organized his experiments with great care, and often sought the opinion of those around him. This points to a very important personality trait: I think he was fully aware of the limitations of his knowledge and was trying to expand them through discussions with others. Like Hungarian personalities who went abroad in general, he changed his f...
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Moral Education and the Condition of Africa
Bakaye Poudiougo,
Sunil Kumar Saroha
Issue:
Volume 8, Issue 5, September 2020
Pages:
147-151
Received:
22 August 2020
Accepted:
1 September 2020
Published:
14 September 2020
Abstract: This manuscript explores the relations between ethical education from one point of view, and on the other, society, legislative problems, destitution and religion in Africa. This develops by looking at the theory and experience of good teaching, before considering principles of proper training and uprightness. The paper analyzes the moral formation in African communities and in religion from that point on. Finally, from one viewpoint, it challenges the connection between moral teaching in Africa, and legislative and destitution problems on the other. The paper presumes that there is a need for another world request given anything, in which the properties of the planet are truly widely and uniformly transmitted. We have the undertaking to use policy concerns, culture and faith to promote moral teaching to help all, so that we can understand the purpose. Young learner approaches, academics in African societies had a variety of tools at their disposal for effective ethical education, for example, we get the replication method, reiterate after us technique. We have several other strategies including such fictional stories, aphorisms, and warning and restriction. Multiple variables impacting children's spiritual education, e.g. in Nigeria, became parents' traditions, beliefs and spiritual beliefs. The concluded that each and every learning which would be stripped of ethics is inadequate therefore pointless since it is founded on human existence.
Abstract: This manuscript explores the relations between ethical education from one point of view, and on the other, society, legislative problems, destitution and religion in Africa. This develops by looking at the theory and experience of good teaching, before considering principles of proper training and uprightness. The paper analyzes the moral formation...
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The Conflict of Jurisdiction Between the Sending State of Foreign Military Presence and the International Criminal Court: Taking the Situation in Afghanistan as an Example
Issue:
Volume 8, Issue 5, September 2020
Pages:
152-160
Received:
21 August 2020
Accepted:
14 September 2020
Published:
24 September 2020
Abstract: In March 2020, the Appeal Chamber of the International Criminal Court formally authorized the Office of Prosecutor to investigate the situation in Afghanistan, and the most concern of the situation was the international crimes committed by the US military in Afghanistan. The International Criminal Court has been subject to disputes over the exercise of jurisdiction over non-parties in the United States, and in accordance with customary international law, military personnel enjoy Immunity Ratione Materiae in foreign courts, and in the case of Afghanistan, there is exclusive criminal jurisdiction granted to the United States by the US-Afghanistan bilateral Status of Forces Agreement, So that the jurisdiction of the United States and the International Criminal Court may conflict. Although military personnel’s criminal immunity may be able to adjust to the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court, when exclusive criminal jurisdiction based on bilateral treaties conflicts with the jurisdiction of an international court based on a multilateral convention, the Rome Statute, the International Criminal Court need to rely on treaty interpretation and treaty conflicts to solve the issue of jurisdiction.
Abstract: In March 2020, the Appeal Chamber of the International Criminal Court formally authorized the Office of Prosecutor to investigate the situation in Afghanistan, and the most concern of the situation was the international crimes committed by the US military in Afghanistan. The International Criminal Court has been subject to disputes over the exercis...
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Study on the Ethical Dilemma of the “Marginal People” in Tennessee Williams’ Plays
Issue:
Volume 8, Issue 5, September 2020
Pages:
161-167
Received:
20 July 2020
Accepted:
3 August 2020
Published:
24 September 2020
Abstract: Tennessee Williams (1911-1983) is an important playwright in the post-war American theatre. He wrote at least 70 plays in his life, totally winning him four New York Drama Critics Circle Awards, two Pulitzer Prizes and other various theatre awards. Unlike the great realist playwrights such as Eugene O’Neill and Arthur Miller who mainly focus on the tragedies of ordinary people, Williams turned his attention to “marginal people” who live solitarily and vulnerably in the dark corners of society, forgotten and even abandoned mercilessly by us. Taking them as eternal protagonists in his plays, Williams tells the tragic life of these neglected groups. In the light of Ethical Literary Criticism, this paper mainly analyzes the “marginal people” in Tennessee Williams’ the three most representative plays, The Glass Menagerie, A Streetcar Named Desire and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, from three aspects: the complicated ethical environments, the ethical identity crises, and the destructive ethical choices of the “marginal people”, the purpose of which is to reveal the root causes of the tragic life of the “marginal people” and Williams’ great ethical concern as a playwright. Williams hopes that we can be kind and tolerant to our compatriots, giving understanding and love to the absurd world and the meaning of life, so that the “marginal people” can be completely saved. At the same time, he also warns that those who are experiencing the marginalized experience cannot give up their own salvation——facing positively and re-embracing the world is the most correct choice.
Abstract: Tennessee Williams (1911-1983) is an important playwright in the post-war American theatre. He wrote at least 70 plays in his life, totally winning him four New York Drama Critics Circle Awards, two Pulitzer Prizes and other various theatre awards. Unlike the great realist playwrights such as Eugene O’Neill and Arthur Miller who mainly focus on the...
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