Previous research suggests that pro-environmental groups in the Global South are strongly influenced by international organizations and monetary forces. However, scholars have not systematically examined the variety of transnational linkages that affect such nongovernmental organizations (NGOs). Drawing from the experiences of Taiwan's environmental NGOs (ENGOs), this paper theorizes four possible types of transnational linkages. Interviews with and archival data on a representative sample of 30 major ENGOs in Taiwan reveal only modest effects of international financial resources and direct connections to international organizational actors. Rather, Taiwan's ENGOs are mainly influenced by (1) the universalistic knowledge and practices carried by experts and professionals and (2) horizontal organizational learning and modeling facilitated by common organizational identities.
Research on the public image of lawyers often focuses on lawyers' role as advocates and neglects other representations. Based on the content analysis of 669 media reports of Chinese criminal cases between 1979 and 2009, this article provides a typology of lawyers' media images: as advocates, as experts and as suspects. Even when lawyers are characterized as defenders of suspects, media depictions of their roles are vacuous and lawyers may be considered unnecessary and dispensable. Furthermore, the characterization of lawyers in the case stories has a binary quality that is contingent upon the media's substantive judgment of case outcomes. With findings from the Chinese case, the article calls for more attention to lawyers' images in the media, both in China and in comparative research on the legal profession.
The term “child bride” refers to a girl under the age of 18 who is involved in a formal marriage or informal union. Child marriage with young girls is prevalent in several developing regions of the world, and the practice is regarded as a violation of human rights. The practice is related to adverse health, social, and economic consequences. Many intervention programs have been pursued to curb the practice, albeit with uncertain effectiveness. Girls' access to education, alongside socioeconomic development, is believed to be the most important means to end the practice.
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