Given the definition of cultural policy as a domain in which values are constructed and negotiated, where relations of domination and subordination are defined and contested, "the report is seen as the understandings of isolation, fragmentation and overlap with the cultural disconnect constructed social divisions such as nationality, race, gender, ethnicity, religion, class, age classes, and / or sexuality (Bandy, 2004).
Hall, Rosemary (1996) suggested that "each [person] is a philosopher, and in accordance with the insistence that intellectual activity is fundamental to human experience, this session asked how the understanding of everyday outsiders could be considered social theories of alienation, fragmentation and disconnection. How do "outsiders", or subcultural / subordinates narrative identity of this critique of dominant or institutionalized relations exception? How do they conceptualize communities or areas of fragmented relations with the authorities? As disconnected and severed the relationship between agents and the communities to understand the historical context of contested cultural policy? As a cultural policy of isolation intersect with the political economy in what form, and Scott Thompson called "moral economy" of contested meaning? Moreover, as outsider critics of alternative discourses for inclusion, collaboration and democratic participation?
Given the identity of the category of built-in multi-dimensional relations of power (Wilmer, Martin, 2006), this session will address how identity is formed around the "isolation, fragmentation, and disable" Fashion arguments for inclusion and moral boundaries of areas of interaction, exchange and cooperation . Thus, the experts could also be explored, as anthropologists, we could bring our ideas about the exclusion and inclusion in our member communities to strengthen existing democratic struggle within them (Bandy, 2004).
More and more studies show the powerful effects of international organizations on issues of national policy, as well as the literature on international conflict is becoming more and more acceptance ...