1,084 results
Search Results
2. Disordered Eating, Agency, and Social Class: Elaine Mar’s Paper Daughter
- Author
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Rashedi, Roxanne N.
- Subjects
Other American Studies ,gender ,liminality ,agency ,disordered eating ,Chinese-American ,class ,immigrant ,consumption ,performance ,autonomy - Abstract
This paper examines the relationship between disordered eating and class identity in Paper Daughter: the memoir of Elaine Mar, a Chinese-American woman who emigrated with her family from the Toishan region of mainland China in 1972 to a working-class neighborhood in Denver, Colorado. Mar explores the relationship between bodily “excess,” as sociologist Beverly Skeggs describes, and class identity in Paper Daughter. A close examination of Mar’s disordered eating shows readers how her ED stems from a class inferiority complex.[i] Gendered as female, and classed as inferior due to her immigrant status and working-class background, classifies Mar as the “other.” Mar utilizes her ED because she believes it will shed off her “excess” of Skeggs’s “disgust”; that is, her low-class upbringing. In other words, disordered eating is a way for Mar to achieve the American dream: the upper-class American woman. This upper-class woman wears idolized brand-name lines that symbolize the American ideal (e.g. Izod shirts) but more importantly, this woman is afforded the opportunity to ponder and explore the world of American dieting.
- Published
- 2011
3. Practises and Processes of Symbolic Reproduction of Racial, Ethnic and National Boundaries in Low-Waged Workplaces.
- Author
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RYE, JOHAN FREDRIK, ANDERSSON, METTE, and O'REILLY, KAREN
- Subjects
EMIGRATION & immigration ,LABOR mobility ,WORK environment ,LABOR market ,RACIALIZATION - Abstract
The introduction present key research questions addressed by the Special Issue: What is the character of the symbolic reproduction of racial, ethnic and/or national boundaries and how are they interwoven into international migrants' practices, experiences, and strategies within Europe's lowwaged workplaces? The four IS papers address this question from different perspectives; three of them by drawing on materials from the food production industries in the Scandinavian countries and the UK, the last discussing how Polish labour migrant in Norwegian society are objects of 'gray racialization' setting them apart from the majority population. A main contribution of the SI lies in the bridging of disparate literature in the fields of labour markets, migration, and social and symbolic boundary processes: The in-depth qualitative analysis demonstrates how migrants working in low wage, low skill labour markets are the object of ongoing processes of othering along racial, ethnic and national lines. Various agents representing the majority society - the state, employers, trade unions and local communities - each in their own ways contribute to these processes and thereby to the reproduction of social inequalities. Combined, the SI papers also demonstrate the role the migrants themselves play in the production and reproduction of these dynamics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. "You Can't Write in Kaapse Afrikaans in Your Question Paper.... The Terms Must Be Right": Race- and Class-Infused nguage Ideologies in Educational Places on the Cape Flats.
- Author
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Cooper, Adam
- Subjects
AFRIKAANS language ,EDUCATIONAL ideologies ,CLASSROOMS ,KNOWLEDGE transfer ,EDUCATION & society - Abstract
Language is integral to educational processes because it forms the basis for classroom communication and the medium for knowledge transfer. However, language is imbued with race- and class-related ideologies: ideas about "proper" and "educated" uses of language. Language ideologies are shaped by the linguistic norms of powerful groups and are based on political rather than linguistic factors. In this paper, I explore how language ideologies operated in three educational sites on the Cape Flats. Multisite ethnography was used to research language ideologies in classrooms, amongst a hip-hop group, and at a youth radio show. Participants in the study spoke a variety of Afrikaans known as Kaapse Afrikaans, which differs from the standard Afrikaans inscribed in the school curriculum. The research showed that language ideologies were perpetuated through semiotic processes known as iconicity, recursiveness, and erasure. Through iconicity, Rosemary Gardens youths' language was inextricably linked to colouredness--a mixed race and language with low status attributed to both. Whereas standard Afrikaans was described as "pure, high, proper, and real," Kaapse Afrikaans was recursively depicted as "low, deficient and slang." These semiotic processes functioned to erase young people's use of language at schools, particularly repressing Kaapse Afrikaans in its written form. On certain occasions, the hip-hop group used language freely as they commented on their local environments. Powerful linguistic ideologies will continue to denigrate marginalised youth, even if radical teachers and hip-hop culture dismiss them. Educators should, therefore, both endorse the linguistic resources youth bring to classrooms and arm them with powerful forms of language and knowledge that hold power elsewhere. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The processes of inclusion and exclusion : The role of ethnicity and class in women’s relation with the accounting profession
- Author
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Hayes, Colleen and Jacobs, Kerry
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. ANALYSIS AND REVIEW ON FUZZY EVALUATION OF THE PERFORMANCE.
- Author
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JUNFENG YU, ZIJIANG YANG, JIANPING GUO, and LARYSA GLOBA
- Subjects
FUZZY mathematics ,FUZZY measure theory ,FUZZY sets ,SCIENCE databases ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,HUMAN activity recognition ,FUZZY logic - Abstract
Copyright of System Research & Information Technologies / Sistemnì Doslìdžennâ ta Ìnformacìjnì Tehnologìï is the property of Institute for the Applied System Analysis at the NTUU KPI and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Multiple disadvantages: class, social capital, and well-being of ethnic minority groups in the UK during the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Author
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Yaojun Li and Lin Ding
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,WELL-being ,MINORITIES ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,SOCIAL capital ,FINANCIAL stress - Abstract
Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic has caused untold damage to the socio-economic lives of people all over the world. Research has also demonstrated great inequality in the pandemic experience. In the UK as in many other countries, people from ethnic minority backgrounds and in workingclass positions have suffered disproportionately more than the majority group and those in salariat positions in terms of income loss, financial difficulty, and vulnerability to infection. Yet little is known about how people coped in the daily lives and tried to maintain their well-being during the most difficult days of the pandemic through social capital. Methods: In this paper, we draw data from the COVID-19 Survey in Five National Longitudinal Studies to address these questions. The survey covered the period from May 2020 to February 2021, the height of the pandemic in the UK. It contains numerous questions on contact, help and support among family, friends, community members, socio-political trust, and physical and mental health. We conceptualise three types of social capital and one type of overall well-being and we construct latent variables from categorical indicator variables. We analyse the ethnic and socio-economic determinants of the three types of social capital and their impacts on well-being. Results: Our analysis shows that social capital plays very important roles on wellbeing, and that ethnic minority groups, particularly those of Pakistani/Bangladeshi and Black heritages, faced multiple disadvantages: their poorer socio-economic positions prevented them from gaining similar levels of social capital to those of the white group. However, for people with the same levels of social capital, the effects on well-being are generally similar. Discussion: Socio-economic (class) inequality is the root cause for ethnic differences in social capital which in turn affects people's well-being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Scenes from the Class Struggle in Picture Books: Depictions of Housing and Home in Books for Young Children
- Author
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Terrile, Vikki C.
- Subjects
Original Paper ,Linguistics and Language ,History ,Picture books ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Lived experience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Media studies ,Homelessness ,Social class ,Education ,Socioeconomic status ,Language education ,Home ,Privilege (social inequality) ,Class ,Class conflict ,Diversity (politics) ,media_common - Abstract
While there is still much to be done, there have been tremendous strides made in increasing the diversity of children's literature; however one area that is often overlooked in these conversations is social class. From years of providing picture book story time to young children living in homeless shelters, it became obvious that picture books being published in the U.S. privilege the experiences of middle- and upper-class people, especially in their depictions of home and housing. Based on analysis of 185 picture books published in the U.S. between 1999 and 2019, I argue that home as typically represented in children's picture books presents a limited and privileged view that normalizes single-family homes, material possessions, and related middle-class experiences. Further, these books do not reflect the lived experience of the millions of American children in the United States experiencing homelessness and housing instability, as well as those who live in apartments, trailers and other types of homes that contemporary picture books would have us believe do not exist.
- Published
- 2021
9. 'Nothing will satisfy you but money' Debt, freedom, and the mid-atlantic culture of money, 1670–1764
- Author
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Daniel Johnson and Johnson, Daniel
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,History ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Visual Arts and Performing Arts ,Credit ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Debt ,Nothing ,Servitude ,Sociology ,media_common ,Philadelphia ,Land ,Keynesian economics ,Religious studies ,Petitions ,Mid-Atlantic ,Currency ,Labor ,Riots ,Debtor's prison ,Philosophy ,New York City ,Pamphlets ,Paper money ,Music ,Class - Abstract
Politics in British America often centered on the issue of currency. Competing ideas about the nature of money and what constituted just relations of credit and debt also pervaded everyday colonial culture. By the late seventeenth century, some mid-Atlantic colonists believed that colonial debt laws and powerful urban merchants’ monopolization of coin led to the appropriation of debtors’ land and labor. Assembly emissions of bills of credit in New York and Pennsylvania in the 1710s and 1720s eased many debtors’ burdens, but the creation of provincial paper monies enhanced rather than diminished money’s importance as an object of social and political controversy in the region. By the middle of the eighteenth century, supporters of paper money believed that bills of credit uniquely embodied liberty, possessing the power to maintain ordinary inhabitants’ independence. Monetary scarcity, by contrast, portended dispossession and bondage. This article analyzes the petitions, pamphlets, editorials, broadsides, and crowd actions that contributed to the creation of a distinctive culture of money in the mid-Atlantic between the 1670s and 1760s.
- Published
- 2021
10. Vapaaehtoisen vaaratapahtumajärjestelmän kehittäminen korkean kehitysasteen potilastietojärjestelmissä
- Author
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Palojoki, Sari, Skants, Noora, Reponen, Elina, Vakkuri, Anne, Saranto, Kaija, Vuokko, Riikka, Anatomian osasto, HUS Helsingin ja Uudenmaan sairaanhoitopiiri, and HUS Leikkaussalit, teho- ja kivunhoito
- Subjects
316 Hoitotiede ,Potilastietojärjestelmä ,Reporting ,Raportointi ,Luokitus ,Electronic Health Records ,Luokka ,Patient Safety ,Tieteelliset artikkelit / Scientific papers ,Classification ,Potilasturvallisuus ,Class - Abstract
Vaaratapahtumien raportointia pidetään potilasturvallisuutta parantavien toimien käynnistämisen kulmakivenä. Korkean kehitysasteen potilastietojärjestelmiin liittyvissä vaaratapahtumissa on tunnistettu tarve kehittää toimintaympäristöömme soveltuva luokitus, joka hyödyttäisi tapahtumien tunnistamista, rakenteista raportoimista ja analysointia. Tutkimuksella pyrittiin vaaratapahtumien raportointijärjestelmän käytön ja tiedon hyödynnettävyyden edistämiseen potilastietojärjestelmäturvallisuuden osa-alueella. Tavoitteena oli kuvata vaaratapahtumaluokituksen sisältöä ja perustella luokituskehitystyössä tehtyjä ratkaisuja, jotta raportointia voidaan toteuttaa kehittyneimpien potilastietojärjestelmien ongelmatilanteissa ja vaaratapahtumissa. Luokituskehityksen lähtökohtana olivat potilastietojärjestelmien virhetyyppien aiemmat tutkimustulokset, joissa vaaratapahtumailmoitusten kuvauksia analysoitiin ja luokiteltiin koskien välittömästi uuden potilastietojärjestelmän käyttöönoton jälkeistä kuutta kuukautta. Luokittelutyön ohjaavat periaatteet perustuivat luokituksen ominaispiirteisiin, käyttötarkoitukseen ja käytettävyyteen. Luokituksen 13 pääluokkaa kuvaavat korkean kehitysasteen potilastietojärjestelmän kliinisen käytön aikana syntyviä vaaratapahtumia, joista suurimmat luokat aineistossa olivat rajapinta-, käytettävyys-, työnkulku-, lääkitysosio- ja kirjaamisongelmat. Puolta luokituksen pääluokkaa täydentää 2-6 alaluokkaa, jolloin lopputuloksena oli 35 luokkaa. Tulokset kuvastavat sekä teoreettisia ja metodologisia tavoitteita luokituksen sisällölliseksi ja laadulliseksi kehittämiseksi että käytännöllisiä tavoitteita raportoinnin kehittämiseksi. Kliinisestä näkökulmasta laadituilla ongelmatyypin kuvauksilla on tarkoituksena ohjata tapahtumien luokittelemista käytännössä. Tutkimus tuotti teoreettis-käytännöllisen tuloksen luokitustutkimuksen alueella. Kehitettyä luokitusta voidaan soveltaa korkean kehitysasteen potilastietojärjestelmiin liittyvien vaaratapahtumien raportoinnissa ja analysoinnissa. Tuloksissa kuvataan luokkien erityispiirteet ja erottavat tekijät suhteessa muihin luokkiin perustellen tehtyjä ratkaisuja. Luokituksen käytön oletetaan tukevan vaaratapahtumien raportointia ja tiedon käyttämistä. Jatkossa edellytetään luokituksen systemaattista ylläpitoa ja kehittämistä empiiriseen aineistoon pohjautuen, jotta tiedon laatu kehittyisi edelleen tukemaan potilasturvallisuutta potilastietojärjestelmien käytössä., Patient safety incident reporting is currently considered a cornerstone of efforts to improve patient safety. For incidents related to high-maturity electronic health record systems (EHRs), there is a need to develop a classification appropriate to clinical operating environment that would benefit the identification of incidents and enhance structured reporting and analysis. The overall aim of the study was to advance use of a voluntary patient safety incident reporting system and to develop the usability of reports in the field of EHR safety. The aim was to categorize and reason patient safety incidents related to high-maturity EHRs so that the classification responds to the characteristics of errors in these systems. Previous research results on the error types in EHRs and incident reports were analyzed and classified for a six-month period immediately after the implementation of the EHRs. The guiding principles of the classification work were based on the features, usage and usability of the classification. The 13 main classes describe the incidents that occur during the clinical use of the advanced EHRs. The largest instance of classes in this dataset were interface, usability, workflow, medication section, and documentation problems. Half of the main classes are supplemented by 2 to 6 subclasses, resulting in 35 classes. The results reflect both theoretical and methodological objectives for the qualitative and contentual development of the classification and practical objectives for the development of reporting. From a clinical point of view, the problem type descriptions are intended to guide the classification of incidents in practice. The study produced a theoretical-practical result in the field of classification research. The classification can be applied to the reporting and analysis of incidents related to high-maturity EHRs. The results highlight the specific features of the category and the distinguishing factors in relation to the other categories, and reasoning for these outcomes. The use of classification is assumed to support incident reporting and use of data. In the future, systematic maintenance and development of the classification based on empirical data will be required in order to further develop the quality of data to support patient safety in the use of EHRs.
- Published
- 2022
11. Turning No Tides: Union Effects on Partisan Preferences and the Working-Class Metamorphosis.
- Author
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Hadziabdic, Sinisa
- Subjects
PARTISANSHIP ,WORKING class ,PANEL analysis ,LABOR union members ,METAMORPHOSIS ,CONTROL boards (Electrical engineering) ,LABOR unions - Abstract
Copyright of Max-Planck-Institut für Gesellschaftsforschung Discussion Papers is the property of Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
12. A Python Framework for Neutrosophic Sets and Mappings.
- Author
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Nordo, Giorgio, Jafari, Saeid, Mehmood, Arif, and Basumatary, Bhimraj
- Subjects
PYTHON programming language ,COMPUTER software - Abstract
In this paper we present an open source framework developed in Python and consisting of three distinct classes designed to manipulate in a simple and intuitive way both symbolic representations of neutrosophic sets over universes of various types as well as mappings between them. The capabilities offered by this framework extend and generalize previous attempts to provide software solutions to the manipulation of neutrosophic sets such as those proposed by Salama et al. [21], Saranya et al. [23], El-Ghareeb [7], Topal et al. [29] and Sleem [26]. The code is described in detail and many examples and use cases are also provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
13. Recognition and inequalities in older adults' sexuality in Chile.
- Author
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Gómez-Urrutia, Verónica, Gartenlaub, Andrea, and Tello-Navarro, Felipe
- Subjects
OLDER people ,LIFE cycles (Biology) ,CHI-squared test ,CLASS differences ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,OLDER men ,HUMAN sexuality - Abstract
Introduction: This paper explores older adults' perceptions on sexuality and affectivity in Chile, according to class and sex. Methods: The study is based on computer-assisted telephonic interviews with people aged 60 and over, men and women (n = 481). Data were analyzed using chi-squared tests and binary logistic regressions. Results and discussion: Maintaining an active sex life is important for older adults of both sexes, contradicting the commonsense view according to which the relevance allocated to sex decreases significantly with age. However, the data show significant differences in perceptions by sex, suggesting that gendered conceptions regarding sexuality are influential along the entire life cycle. There are also relevant differences according to class, revealing the inequalities present in the expression of sexuality in Chile. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. "The Humble Mahar Women Fall at Your Feet, Master." Portrayal of the Psyche and Suffering of Mahar Women in Baby Kamble's The Prisons We Broke.
- Author
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Verma, Priya, Saraswat, Surbhi, and Datta, Antara
- Subjects
PRISONS ,DALIT women ,HUMAN sexuality ,FEMININITY ,SISTERHOODS - Abstract
This article delves into the nature of suffering as experienced by Mahar women struggling with the implemented difficulties by the prevailing patriarchal ideology rooted in Brahminism. Baby Kamble dislikes the humanitarian aversion to agony and disparity. She is sensitive to the predicament of Dalit women and conscious of their sufferings. She has managed to dredge into the psyche of Mahar women, prioritizing sisterhood and Dalit femininity over individual suffering. As a woman writer, Kamble concedes that her primary task is to promote women's emancipation and eradicate untouchability. She propitiously manages to portray Mahar women and their wounded selves. Utilizing Paik's theory of Incremental Intersecting Technologies about caste, class, gender, sexuality, and agency as the framework, the paper seeks to answer the questions: How much consideration is given to the caste system, and what intersectional aspects have been integrated into discussions about Dalit women in the last twenty years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Policrisis y metamorfosis del capitalismo turístico.
- Author
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Bianchi, Raoul V. and Milano, Claudio
- Abstract
Copyright of Pasos: Revista de Turismo y Patrimonio Cultural is the property of Universidad de La Laguna, Instituto Universitario de Ciencias Politicas y Sociales and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Student leadership: Participation of the representative council of learners in the management of school violence in high school.
- Author
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Eke, Chidi Idi
- Subjects
SCHOOL violence ,STUDENT leadership ,BUSINESS schools ,STUDENT participation ,PARENTING education ,PARTICIPATION ,DATING violence - Abstract
School violence has been on the increase over the past few years, despite several interventions put in place by school management, the Department of Education and parents. Nonetheless, school violence remains a debilitating factor to safe and secure schools. It is within this context that this paper examines the participation of Representative Council of Learners (RCLs) in the management and reduction of school-based violence in high schools and their participation in school governance as stipulated in the South African Schools Act (SASA) Act. No 84 of 1996. Insights for this paper were drawn from twelve participants at two high schools; six participants were selected from each school. Semi-structured interviews were employed for data collection and content analysis employed to analyse collected data for the paper. A purposive case study approach was adopted in the study to achieve the objective of the paper. The core melodies that emerged from the outcomes include that Representative Council of Learners (RCLs) serve as a vital information gathering tool for school managers; Most times the Representative Council of Learners are the first school management arm to intervene in chaotic incidents before school managers arrive and some Representative Council of Learners serve as role models to other learners influencing them positively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Electoral patterns and voting behavior of Bihar in Assembly elections from 2010 to 2020: a spatial analysis
- Author
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Biswas, Firoj
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. The Other Dimensions of Dalit Oppression: Tracing Intersectionality through Ants among Elephants.
- Author
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Sen, Arundhati
- Subjects
DALITS ,SOCIAL hierarchies ,INTERSECTIONALITY ,GENDER role - Abstract
This paper demonstrates how gender abuse is not merely restricted to hierarchical gender oppression but also operates within an intersectional framework where gender is intertwined with hierarchical caste exploitation. While revisiting White bourgeois feminism, bell hooks emphasizes the incorporation of different marginal perspectives to make feminism an all-encompassing radical movement, accessible to everyone. Inspired by the lens that hooks uses to interpret Black feminism and the Indian scholars who approach Dalit feminism from an intersectional standpoint, I analyze Sujatha Gidla's autobiography Ants among Elephants (2017), a family story of a lower-middleclass rural South Indian Dalit woman. I argue for the need to bring different axes of oppression--such as inter-caste and intra-caste dimensions along with linguistic and regional hierarchies--into conversation with each other. The primary focus of my analysis of the autobiography are three topics--the narrative voice, the author's personal experience, and the intersectional aspect of domination in Dalit women's experience as recounted in the text. My paper highlights the literary aspect of the text by tracing Dalit rage in the narratorial voice that undercuts the mostly objective family narrative, following hooks' reconceptualization of Black rage. Dalit representation is shaped and informed by the psychological consequence of internalized inferiority as a result of looking at themselves and being looked at by others only in terms of absence. Bearing in mind that every strand in the interlocked webs of oppression critically informs the other, ignoring any one strand at the cost of another might render the task of liberation truncated and incomplete. This study, therefore, brings to the fore the need to address interlocking strands of oppression if a struggle for the liberation of any marginalized group can have a real impact on society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
19. The Impact of Religion and Provision of Information on Increasing Knowledge and Changing Attitudes to Organ Donation: An Intervention Study
- Author
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Ferid Krupic
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,Tissue and Organ Procurement ,media_common.quotation_subject ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Intervention ,Organ transplantation ,Organ donation ,Education ,Religiosity ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Information ,Qualitative research ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Everyday life ,General Nursing ,media_common ,Sweden ,Original Paper ,Religious studies ,General Medicine ,Organ Transplantation ,Focus group ,Tissue Donors ,Transplantation ,Religion ,Family medicine ,Happiness ,Female ,Psychology ,Class - Abstract
One of the most significant developments in recent history has probably been organ donation and organ transplantation. They are frequently the only treatment available in certain cases. However, there is an ever-increasing discrepancy between the number of people needing transplantation and the organs available, because the decision to donate an organ is up to each individual. The study aims to assess the impact of the intervention on knowledge, attitudes and practices on organ donation among religious immigrants in Sweden. Data were collected through three group interviews using open-ended questions and qualitative content analysis. Thirty-six participants, 18 males and 18 females from six countries, participated in the focus group interviews. The analysis of the collected data resulted in two main categories: “Religion in theory and practice” and “More information—more knowledge about organ donation” including seven subcategories. Understanding of religion and religiosity, happiness by taking the class, the practice of religion in everyday life, the overcoming the prejudices in religion, having more information about organ donation and the donations process, as well as that the increased information changes people’s minds, were some of things the informants emphasised as predictors of the decision of organ donation. A class dealing with religion, the religious aspects of organ donation and the way the Swedish healthcare system is organised increased people’s knowledge and changed their attitudes so they became potential organ donors. More intervention studies are needed in every field of medicine to build confidence and give time to educate and discuss issues with potential organ donors in Sweden.
- Published
- 2019
20. Place, Class, and the Destruction of the American Dream in The Great Gatsby From the Perspective of Space.
- Author
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Yue Wu and Jinsong Shen
- Subjects
AMERICAN Dream ,UPPER class ,SOCIAL classes ,SOCIAL space ,GROUP identity ,PUBLIC spaces ,ARISTOCRACY (Social class) - Abstract
This study is a spatial analysis of The Great Gatsby (1925). This novel presents the power game among various white classes in American society in the context of the Roaring Twenties, with obvious spatial characteristics. The geographical distribution between East Egg, West Egg, and the Valley of Ashes presents the high-and-low-class distinction of different classes in social space. The upper classes practice class oppression and exploitation through space, while the lower classes also use space to resist oppression and climb the class ladder. This paper draws on French philosopher Henri Lefebvre's spatial ideas, especially the spatial triad, to explore the close connection between space and class in the novel. The Great Gatsby encompasses various class groups in white society, including the hereditary aristocracy like the Buchanans, the new money represented by Gatsby, and the lower class represented by the Wilsons. To modify the spatial order, different classes use space as a medium to preserve their class identity and seek their social presence, which reproduces the illusion of the American Dream of the Jazz Age and reveals Fitzgerald's humanistic concern for people in spatial relations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Towards a Theology of Class Struggle: A Critical Analysis of British Muslims' Praxis against Class Inequality.
- Author
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Chaudhry, Sharaiz
- Subjects
PRAXIS (Process) ,POWER (Social sciences) ,INCOME inequality ,ISLAMIC theology ,LIBERATION theology ,SOCIAL conflict - Abstract
The primary goal of Liberation Theology is to change the material conditions of marginalised and oppressed groups in society. Within Islamic Liberation Theology, however, issues related to class and economic inequality are notably missing. This paper seeks to begin this conversation and highlight the necessity of addressing economic exploitation, which affects most of the world's population and Muslims disproportionately. Using a praxis-based methodology, it centres the interpretation of activists from Nijjor Manush, a British Bengali activist group, and seeks to understand how Islam is used as a liberative tool to combat class oppression. Through interviews and focus groups, an alternative and revolutionary Islam emerges. Echoing a Marxist understanding of class, it sees exploitation as an inherent part of the current capitalist system and recognises the necessity of people seizing economic power. This overarching objective is the lens through which activism in the here and now is interpreted and tactics decided. Establishing economic justice therefore means trying to secure "non-reformist reforms" in the short term, which resist the logic of capital and secure the interests of the marginalised, while working towards the ultimate goal of ending economic exploitation and, by extension, abolishing class. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The Brethren in Scotland: A Historical Overview during the Long Twentieth-Century.
- Author
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Dickson, Neil
- Subjects
TWENTIETH century ,BROTHERS ,SCHISM ,VARIEGATION - Abstract
The Brethren were pervasive in Lowland Scottish society during the twentieth century. At the beginning of the century in Scotland, they had spilt into three main sections: the Open Brethren, the Exclusive Brethren, and the Churches of God. Schism was a recurring feature in the last two sections, and this paper traces the history of the various secessions and offers an account of why they were prone to division. Using the sociological typologies of sect and denomination, this paper examines the relationship between the Brethren and Scottish culture and society, including social class, use of leisure, and withdrawal and engagement in the cultural and business worlds, noting commonalities and variegations across the various streams. The final sections examine the growth and decline of the various streams and the reasons for both. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Grad kao metafora reda: zabrana noćne prodaje alkohola kao sredstvo purifikacije javnog prostora.
- Author
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Vukićević, Jelena
- Abstract
Copyright of Issues in Ethnology Anthropology is the property of Issues in Ethnology Anthropology and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. ЖОО СТУДЕНТТЕРІНІҢ ТЕХНИКАЛЫҚ ҚҰЗЫРЕТТІЛІКТЕРІН ҚАЛЫПТАСТЫРУДЫҢ ДИДАКТИКАЛЫҚ ШАРТТАРЫ
- Author
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Наурызбаева, Г. Қ., Габдуллина, Г. Л., and Рыстыгулова, В. Б.
- Abstract
Copyright of Recent Contributions to Physics is the property of Al-Farabi Kazakh National University and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Reading Teeth: Ivory as an Artifact of Classed Whiteness.
- Author
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SZCZYGIELSKA, MARIANNA
- Subjects
IVORY ,REFRACTION (Optics) ,BIOMATERIALS ,EXTINCT animals ,TEETH ,MATERIAL culture ,RACIAL differences - Abstract
While artifacts made of ivory fill the shelves and storage rooms of museum collections across the world, ever more stringent legal measures restricting or banning the ivory trade have turned these objects into troublesome treasures. Ivory is a biological material derived from the tusks and teeth of several extant and extinct animals. The physical and aesthetic properties of elephantine ivory in relation to its use and symbolic significance shaped the material cultures of classed whiteness at the turn of the twentieth century. Ivory from elephant tusks displays a characteristic macroscopic motif known as the Schreger pattern, which is often used by conservators and forensic researchers as an identifying characteristic First described by German odontologist Bernhard Schreger in 1800, this pattern of crossing dark and bright lines is attributed to an optical phenomenon of light refraction. By proposing a refractive reading of ivory, this article explores the role of animal - derived materials in the construction of human identities. This method of analysis allows the properties of ivory-luster, brilliance, whiteness, and toughness-to be seen as agentive material properties that historically co-produced human racial and classed ideals. Analyzing nineteenth- and early twentieth-century sources in dental anatomy, ivory commerce, and technical microscopy permits an unraveling of this animal material's ties to specific colonial regimes of trade and resource extraction, and its technical role in precursors to materials science. This paper is part of a special issue entitled "Making Animal Materials in Time," edited by Laurence Douny and Lisa Onaga. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Situated drinking: The association between eating and alcohol consumption in Great Britain.
- Author
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Warde, Alan, Sasso, Alessandro, Holmes, John, Hernández Alava, Monica, Stevely, Abigail K., and Meier, Petra S.
- Subjects
ALCOHOL drinking ,SECONDARY analysis ,CLASS differences ,INGESTION ,FOOD consumption - Abstract
Aims: This paper examines the co-occurrence of drinking alcohol and eating in Great Britain. Applying a practice-theoretical framework, it attends primarily to the nature and characteristics of events – to social situations. It asks whether drinking events involving food are significantly different from those without, whether differences are the same at home as on commercial public premises, and whether differences are the same for men and women. The focus is especially on episodes of drinking with meals at home, an infrequently explored context for a substantial proportion of contemporary alcohol consumption. Data: Employing a secondary analysis of commercial data about the British population in 2016, we examine reports of 47,645 drinking events, on commercial premises and at other locations, to explore how eating food and consumption of alcoholic beverages affect one another. Three types of event are compared – drinking with meals, with snacks, and without any food. Variables describing situations include group size and composition, temporal and spatial parameters, beverages, purposes, and simultaneous activities. Basic sociodemographic characteristics of respondents are also examined, with a special focus on the effects of gender. Results: Behaviours differ between settings. The presence of food at a drinking episode is associated with different patterns of participation, orientations, and quantities and types of beverage consumed. Gender, age, and class differences are apparent. Conclusions: Patterns of alcohol consumption are significantly affected by the accompaniment of food. This is a much-neglected topic that would benefit from further comparative and time series studies to determine the consequences for behaviour and intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Class, Migration And Bordering at Work: The Case of Precarious Harvest Labour In The Uk.
- Author
-
O'REILLY, KAREN and SCOTT, SAM
- Subjects
PRECARIOUS employment ,COVID-19 pandemic ,NEOLIBERALISM ,LABOR market ,DATA analysis - Abstract
This paper draws on symbolic bordering perspectives as a conceptual frame to highlight practices that shape the reproduction, justification, masking and distancing of precarious work. Via a case-study of the UK harvest labour market in 2020-2021, at a time of Brexit and COVID-19, we use media, employer and locally-based worker insights to show how us-them bordering practices are embedded within low-wage horticultural work. Three interrelated everyday bordering tropes are identified from the analysis of the data. First, while migrant harvest work is celebrated as valuable and essential, it is also portrayed as work achieved by, and suitable for, a constantly shifting, multi-dimensional, and therefore ambiguously defined 'other.' These 'others' and their work are notably valued in so far as they perform their work in particular ways that define them as 'good neoliberal agents.' Finally, a particular focus at the height of COVID-19, was on how low-wage 'others' were portrayed as providing service and duty to align with a national 'community of shared values.' These interrelated symbolic forms of bordering help to mask the exploitative nature of low-wage work and perform an important role in contemporary (transnational) class production/reproduction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Young Masculinities and Right-Wing Populism in Australia.
- Author
-
Nilan, Pam, Roose, Josh, Peucker, Mario, and Turner, Bryan S.
- Subjects
MASCULINITY ,SEXUAL orientation ,GENDER identity ,STEREOTYPES ,POLICY sciences - Abstract
This paper offers insights into the nexus of youth, masculinity, and right-wing populism in Australia. Here, we make reference to a wide body of international literature that suggests some affinity between disenfranchised (white) working-class young men and radical right ideas. Survey data were collected for a project on masculinity and the far right in Australia. A total of 203 young male informants worked primarily in 'blue collar' sectors of the Australian labour force. Some survey responses located them partly or potentially within the field of the populist right-wing, with many expressing anti-government sentiments and the discourse of white male victimhood. The majority were nostalgic for stereotypical masculinity. While right-wing populist movements across the world certainly differ, they often share a discourse promoting traditional gender roles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The development of lower vocational schools in Niš from the end of the 19th century until 1914
- Author
-
Pešić Miroslav D. and Ranđelović Vojin N.
- Subjects
the niš trade youth ,the women's society ,association ,class ,History of scholarship and learning. The humanities ,AZ20-999 - Abstract
This paper provides a brief overview of the development of lower vocational schools in Niš from their establishment until 1914, i.e., until the beginning of the First World War. In that period, there were three lower vocational schools in Niš: the Trade School of the Niš Trade Youth, the Women's Workers' School of the Women's Society, and the General Vocational Sunday-Holiday School. Despite the challenges it encountered during its establishment, the Trade School of the Niš Trade Youth began its work in 1893. As early as 1895, the Niš Trade Youth joined forces with the craftsmen, and the association became known as the Niš Trade-Craft Youth. The association and the school were suspended from 1897 to 1901 due to disagreements between merchants and craftsmen, but they continued to operate under the old name. The Women's Workers' School was founded in 1883 by the Niš branch of the Women's Society through the use of its own finances. It was the women's worker's school for embroidery, white linen, and dresses, where the majority of classes were focused on professional subjects and practical work. The General Vocational Sunday-Holiday School was established in 1903 as an evening, weekly holiday general-type school. The General Vocational Sunday-Holiday School aimed to develop competent craftsmen-masters from students through theoretical, professional, and practical instruction. This paper considers the establishment of these schools, the problems they had to face, and their significance for the development of the city of Niš
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. TRANSICIONES FRAGMENTADAS DE LA ESCUELA AL TRABAJO. EL CASO DE JÓVENES DE DOS MUNICIPIOS DEL ESTADO DE PUEBLA EN EL CENTRO DE MÉXICO.
- Author
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Flores Morales, Maria de Lourdes and Rivermar Pérez, María Leticia
- Subjects
SCHOOL dropouts ,YOUNG adults ,SCHOOL-to-work transition ,RURAL population ,RURAL women ,FRAGMENTED landscapes - Abstract
Copyright of Profesorado: Revista de Currículum y Formación del Profesorado is the property of Profesorado: Revista de Curriculum y Formacion del Profesorado and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Resisting from Below: A Critical Reading of Female Subaltern Voices in Mahasweta Devi's Short Story Giribala and Baby Halder's Autobiography A Life Less Ordinary.
- Author
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Dawar, Richa
- Subjects
INTERSECTIONALITY ,SOCIAL stratification ,WOMEN household employees ,SOCIAL conditions of women ,GENDER differences (Sociology) - Abstract
The socio-economic marginalization faced by the subaltern domestic worker woman is a unique position in which class, caste and gender intersect to create a multiply marginalized subject who is marked by a sense of precariousness experienced on a daily basis. In the short story "Giribala'' written by the renowned writer and activist Mahasweta Devi, and in the autobiography A Life Less Ordinary by Baby Halder, the central female characters are subaltern women who fight against gender based and economic marginalization to develop an individual identity. This paper closely analyses the intersectional nature of the overlapping marginalizations faced by subaltern women like the fictional character Giribala and the real person Baby, to draw parallels in the challenges they face from their unique socio-economically subaltern position. This paper focuses on the power struggle of negotiating/creating a space for themselves by the women subjugated by the male-dominated social structures and enquires whether it is even a possibility for a woman belonging to the economically marginalized class. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
32. From Enviable Other to One of Us?: Class, Militarized Masculinity and Citizenship among Korean Study Abroad Men.
- Author
-
Hee Jung CHOI
- Subjects
FOREIGN study ,CITIZENSHIP ,MILITARY service ,MASCULINITY ,KOREANS ,ORGANIZATIONAL citizenship behavior ,MASCULINE identity - Abstract
Drawing on in-depth interviews, this paper shows how study abroad men with upper-class backgrounds manage their image as enviable others, particularly in the context of their military experiences and understanding of military service. They view military service as a useful way to secure militarized masculine citizenship and launder their contaminated image as enviable others in order to live and work in South Korea. This understanding of military service as an individualized benefit deviates from the dominant construction of military service as a patriotic duty expected of all male citizens; at the same time, the meanings and values study abroad men attach to militarized masculine citizenship reveal the powerful workings of the triangular relationship between men, military service, and citizenship in Korea. The findings here complicate the commonly understood association between Korean men, military service, and citizenship, revealing the highly classed as well as gendered nature of military service and the meanings/values of militarized masculine citizenship. Furthermore, the role of American education and English skills within the military and beyond also reveals the ongoing effects of US imperialism and the American military presence in Korea. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. ONTOLOGICAL MODEL FOR DATA PROCESSING ORGANIZATION IN INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION NETWORKS.
- Author
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GLOBA, L. S., GVOZDETSKA, N. A., and NOVOGRUDSKA, R. L.
- Subjects
INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,ELECTRONIC data processing ,INFORMATION networks ,TELECOMMUNICATION systems ,INFORMATION resources - Abstract
Copyright of System Research & Information Technologies / Sistemnì Doslìdžennâ ta Ìnformacìjnì Tehnologìï is the property of Institute for the Applied System Analysis at the NTUU KPI and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. DUGI ŽENSKI MARŠ: RADNIČKI POKRET U ISTORIJI IDEJNIH I DRUŠTVENIH SUKOBA.
- Author
-
Lalatović, Jelena
- Subjects
SOCIAL history ,INTELLECTUAL history ,WORLD War II ,HISTORY of feminism ,WOMEN'S history ,FEMINISM ,COMMUNISM ,GENDER inequality - Abstract
Copyright of Genero is the property of Genero and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. 'Six packs and big muscles, and stuff like that'. Primary school-aged South African boys, black and white, on sport.
- Author
-
Bhana, Deevia
- Subjects
SPORTS participation ,BOYS ,SPORTS ,ETHNOLOGY methodology ,GENDER ,ETHNOLOGY ,SCHOOLBOYS ,CLASS analysis ,GENDER mainstreaming - Abstract
This paper explores the salience of sport in the lives of eight-year-old and nine-year-old South African primary school boys. Drawing on ethnographic and interview data, I argue that young boys' developing relationship with sport is inscribed within particular gendered, raced and classed discourses in South Africa. Throughout the paper I show differences and durability of meanings across the social sites that affect and position blacks, white, boys and girls. It is argued that young boys' early association with sport is centrally about identity and doing sport, or at least establishing interest in sport is one important way in claiming to be a real boy. The findings have implications for the call by the South African Government to get the nation to play. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Diversified Organizational Inequality Regimes and Ideal Workers in a "Growth-Driven," "Diverse," "Flexible" Australian Company: A Multilevel Grounded Theory.
- Author
-
Turnbull, Beth, Graham, Melissa, and Taket, Ann
- Subjects
GROUNDED theory ,RACIAL inequality ,EQUALITY ,SUBSIDIARY corporations ,CRITICAL theory - Abstract
Interacting global, societal and organizational contexts produce unique organizational inequality regimes. This paper aims to understand multilevel processes influencing gendered, classed, raced and aged inequality regimes and worker hierarchies within "ComCo", an Australian subsidiary of a multinational company. Our qualitative critical feminist-grounded theory approach triangulated organizational documentation, employee interviews and open-ended questionnaire responses. The emergent theory suggested that ComCo's globally and societally embedded neoliberal-capitalist–masculine growth imperative produced no longer simplistically one-sided, but multifaceted and diversified masculine–individual–white and feminine–collaborative–colored growth mechanisms, including ideal workers broadening from quantitatively extreme to qualitatively conformant qualities and practices, to constitute not merely unencumbered masculine, but all workers, as existing for company growth. However, feminine–collective–colored mechanisms, co-opted to supporting growth, remained subordinated to masculine–individual–white mechanisms constructed as more effective at delivering growth, reinforcing ComCo's inequality regimes and worker hierarchies despite diversity initiatives. Organizations must identify and address processes reinforcing inequality regimes to genuinely promote employment equity and diversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The Posthuman and Irish Antigones: Rights, Revolt, Extinction.
- Author
-
Remoundou, Natasha
- Subjects
ANTIGONE (Mythological character) ,POSTHUMANISM ,IRISH drama ,HUMAN rights ,GENDER identity - Abstract
Copyright of Clotho is the property of University of Ljubljana, Faculty of the Arts and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. El rumor y las representaciones de clase, género y religión en los orígenes de la Revolución tunecina.
- Author
-
SOCÍAS BAEZA, Javier
- Subjects
ARAB Spring Uprisings, 2010-2012 ,STREET vendors ,PROVINCIAL governments ,RUMOR ,GENDER - Abstract
Copyright of Revista de Estudios Internacionales Mediterraneos is the property of Taller de Estudios Internacionales Mediterraneos and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Embodying entrepreneurship : everyday practices, processes and routines in a technology incubator
- Author
-
Murray, Grant, Carter, Chris, and Kornberger, Martin
- Subjects
entrepreneurship ,technology incubators ,class ,identity ,visual ,space - Abstract
The growing interest in the processes and practices of entrepreneurship has been dominated by a consideration of temporality. Through a thirty-six-month ethnography of a technology incubator, this thesis contributes to extant understanding by exploring the effect of space. The first paper explores how class structures from the surrounding city have appropriated entrepreneurship within the incubator. The second paper adopts a more explicitly spatial analysis to reveal how the use of space influences a common understanding of entrepreneurship. The final paper looks more closely at the entrepreneurs within the incubator and how they use visual symbols to develop their identity. Taken together, the three papers reject the notion of entrepreneurship as a primarily economic endeavour as articulated through commonly understood language and propose entrepreneuring as an enigmatic attractor that is accessed through the ambiguity of the non-verbal to develop the 'new'. The thesis therefore contributes to the understanding of entrepreneurship and proposes a distinct role for the non-verbal in that understanding.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Mediterráneo(s) Queer. Una lectura interseccional del litoral de Alicante.
- Author
-
Parra-Martínez, José, Pastor-García, Carlos, Gilsanz-Díaz, Ana, and Gutiérrez-Mozo, María-Elia
- Subjects
VIOLENCE against LGBTQ+ people ,PHYSICAL geography ,LGBTQ+ communities ,CULTURAL geography ,INFORMATION sharing ,HARASSMENT ,GEOGRAPHY - Abstract
Copyright of Revista INVI is the property of Universidad de Chile and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Learning for the Future beyond COVID-19: A Critical Alternative to the Neoliberal Model of Development.
- Author
-
Neilson, David
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,NEOLIBERALISM ,COVID-19 ,IDEOLOGICAL conflict - Abstract
This paper reviews how COVID-19 became a global pandemic, why we now have to live with it, and what needs to be done to stop viruses going global in the future. Specifically, it argues that the still prevailing neoliberal model of development combined with related forms of class structure and ideological struggle all but guaranteed that the priorities of global capital and its agents, along with COVID-19, would win out in the end. Vaccinations have become the only path for resolving the tension between neoliberal capitalism and COVID-19 suppression. However, they take time to develop, are hampered by the capitalist model of vaccine production and distribution, and face a resistant alienated precariat. As a critical alternative, this article explores the neoliberal model of development's democratic socialist transformation with particular reference to the prevention of global pandemics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Transgression of Race, Gender, and Class
- Author
-
Subrata Chandra Mozumder
- Subjects
transgression ,race ,gender ,class ,Mary Ann Shadd ,A Plea for Emigration ,Language and Literature - Abstract
This paper aims to explore Mary Ann Shadd’s transgression of race, gender, and class boundaries by employing a close reading of the text, A Plea for Emigration. I will explore the triangular relationship between race, class, and gender seen in the text from intersectional feminist perspectives. My contention is that, through her activism by pen, especially in A Plea for Emigration, Shadd exposes the feminist voice that enables her to protest against racism, slavery, gender stratification, and marginalization based on class hierarchy. In other words, I claim that Shadd’s transgression of the borders of race, gender, and class lies in her activism and ideology as a woman, black, and marginalized. This paper will, therefore, show that Mary Ann Shadd strongly transgresses the borders of race, gender, and class as the first black woman who owned and edited a newspaper, inspired American blacks towards freedom, confronted her contemporary male leaders, exposed the female gaze during a period of history when the male gaze was predominant and authoritative, became a public speaker making the world listen to her while working with the so-called socially aesthetic people despite being a “negro”.
- Published
- 2023
43. An introduction to the basic elements of the caste system of India
- Author
-
Vina M. Goghari and Mavis Kusi
- Subjects
caste ,class ,South Asia ,India ,Dalit ,justice ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Oppression, systemic bias, and racism have unfortunately long been part of the human experience. This paper is a review of basic elements of the Indian caste system, understanding its impact on the daily lives of different caste members, the role of colonialism in perpetuating the caste system, the Indian reservation system for mitigating disadvantages created by the caste system, and how categorization and labels can affect individual identity. This paper then discusses the global relevance of the caste system and its impact on mental health and psychological functioning. In India, the caste system is a comprehensive, systematized, and institutionalized form of oppression of members of the lower castes, particularly the Dalits. Formalized during the British colonial period, the caste system brings together two related Indian concepts of varna and jāti to create four social orders and multiple subunits. Sitting outside the traditional four orders are the Dalits, who experience social, economic, and religious discrimination due to an inherited status related to traditionally polluting occupations. Since the caste system extends beyond India to other South Asian countries, as well as to communities around the world that are home to the Indian diaspora, the inequities created by the caste system are a global issue. India’s affirmative action system provides important insights to policy makers, as well as researchers in the social sciences for how to counteract the effects of systematized oppression. Collectively, this can aid in a better understanding of the effects of discrimination and oppression on identity, self-esteem, and mental health, and how we can develop more targeted policies and procedures in our own local contexts.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Increasing Pathways to Leadership for Black, Indigenous, and other Racially Minoritized Women.
- Author
-
Motapanyane, Maki and Shankar, Irene
- Abstract
Copyright of Atlantis: Critical Studies in Gender, Culture & Social Justice / Études Critiques sur le Genre, la Culture, et la Justice is the property of Mount Saint Vincent University and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
45. Learning in a time of cholera: Imagining a future for public education.
- Author
-
Wrigley, Terry
- Subjects
CHOLERA ,PUBLIC education ,NEOLIBERALISM - Abstract
This article considers some theoretical resources for resistance to neoliberalised schooling and develops principles for reimagining the common school. Whilst relevant internationally, it is situated in the particular context of England, as a global epicentre of school reform – a marketised and largely privatised system where the net of surveillance and control is tightly woven from assessment data, inspections and performance pay, and where the curriculum has been systematically divorced from young people's life experience and concerns. To clarify the meaning of this crisis, the paper draws on some key ideas from the Marxist tradition, particularly class and alienation, situating neoliberal policy within the crises of late capitalism. The paper looks in two directions for resources to help overcome the current impasse. Firstly, it highlights the strengths of more creative and emancipatory pedagogies in earlier decades of English curriculum development, including the value of learners' experience, vernacular language, dialogic teaching and play. Secondly it examines the northern European paradigm of curriculum construction focused on more holistic human development (Bildung), focusing particularly on the work of Wolfgang Klafki. The value of this theorisation of curriculum and pedagogy is highlighted through contrasts with the current drive towards a 'knowledge-based curriculum'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Parallels between Real and Fictional Women's Modes of Resistance to Injustice and Oppression.
- Author
-
Brziaková, Katarína
- Subjects
COMPARATIVE method ,OPPRESSION ,FICTIONAL characters ,WOMEN'S rights ,STEREOTYPES ,FAMILY roles - Abstract
The position of women in society has always been a sensitive topic as women have had to fight for their rights and recognition for centuries and this fight, evidently, has not reached its (happy) end yet. There were many rules, norms and laws limiting the rights and roles of women in families and in society, in general, determining every aspect of the society and its hierarchy and thus, making women's lives insecure. In adopting a comparative approach, the paper aims at deciphering and identifying any inclinations to or attempts at resistance against the injustice that was generally accepted as natural, and against the long-established and deeply rooted stereotypes. To this purpose, it presents the fictional world of literature represented by the works of Jane Austen, more particularly by the way her fictional female characters inhabiting the English countryside struggled with the hardships brought upon them by the rules and limitations women were subject to in the real world and Austen's attempts at slipping in her own standpoints, which often did not conform with the generally accepted rules and views. This fictional world is then confronted with the real-world and personal experience of the writer Beatrix Potter who, though of a younger generation, had to fight hard for her personal and professional independence and recognition. The findings are briefly supported by references to other female writers by emphasizing the similarities in their lives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
47. NOSTALGIA, KITSCH AND THE GREAT RECESSION IN MARGARET ATWOOD'S THE HEART GOES LAST AND WESTWORLD (SEASON 1).
- Author
-
KOWAL, EWA
- Subjects
- ATWOOD, Margaret, 1939-, HEART Goes Last, The (Book), WESTWORLD (TV program)
- Abstract
The paper is a comparative study of Margaret Atwood's 2015 dystopian novel The Heart Goes Last and the 2016 HBO science-fiction TV series Westworld (Season 1) created by Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy. Drawing upon Susan Faludi's The Terror Dream and Marita Sturken's Tourists of History, the paper focuses on the American frontier myth, and the concepts of nostalgia and kitsch (in particular, Sturken's symbol of the snow globe) to analyse both works as cultural reactions to the recent Great Recession. While both analysed works can be said to reflect an anxiety about the growing class gap and express resentment against the rich, they respond differently to the popular demand for comfort in times of crisis. While Westworld uplifts with a vicarious experience of the underdog's emancipation, Atwood's satire ironically withholds a happy ending, providing readers with a lesson and a challenge instead. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. СИМВОЛІЧНА ЛОГІКА: ПОВЕРНЕННЯ ДО ВИТОКІВ. СТАТТЯ ІII. ПОХІДНІ ЛОГІСТИЧНІ КАТЕГОРІЇ
- Author
-
Кохан, Я. О.
- Abstract
The paper is the Part III of the large research, dedicated to both revision of the system of basic logical categories and generalization of modern predicate logic to functional logic. We determinate and contrapose modern fregean logistics and proposed by the author ultrafregean logistics, next we descibe values and arguments of functions, arguments of relations, relations themselves, sets (classes) and subsets (subclasses) as derivative categories (concepts) of ultrafregean logistics. Logictics is a part of metalogic, independent of semantics. Fregean logictics is a metalogical theory, based on the quadruple
; it generates predicate logic. Ultrafregean logictics is based on the quadruple , where the notion a function is a generalization of the notion of a predicate and the notion of representation is a generalization of the notion of equality; this logictics generates functional logic. For the completely correct denotation of the functional values we need the chorchian symbolics with parenthesis. Predicates are usually identified with relations. A relation is the derived and even definable category of ultrafregean logictics. Namely, relations are representations by functions (of one of their arguments). We show that Frege could realy establish this definition and the notion (category) of representation but, unfortunately, rejected this course of thought. Next, we show that every n-ary relation can be solved for some its argument via some (n-1)-ary function. A set, or class, is a derived and not definable category of ultrafregean logictics. The universal way to introduce the sets is Frege's abstraction principle. We formulate this principle for functional logic and show that the notion of a set is a quantified notion, so there is the dual existential notion of a nonempty subset, involved by the same abstraction principle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Use of Unified Modeling Language in the Development of Object-Oriented Information Systems.
- Author
-
LUPASC, Adrian
- Subjects
UNIFIED modeling language ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,OBJECT-oriented methods (Computer science) ,INFORMATION architecture - Abstract
The architecture of object-oriented information systems determines the use of modern and high-performance design methods, through which they can be properly modeled, based on the most appropriate modeling principles. Thus, Unified Modeling Language ensures the understanding of the semantics of the system by materializing the decisions taken in specifying its objective components. It also allows the development and use of visual modeling, as it ensures the approach to the development of complex information systems through attached diagrams (models) in the context of real world ideas. These models ensure the understanding of the semantics of these types of systems, the communication between the actors involved or analysts. In this context, this paper highlights the processes and activities specific to the design and implementation of object-oriented information systems through the Unified Modeling Language. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Why Faculty Underestimate Low-Income Students' Family Responsibilities.
- Author
-
Pierce, Elizabeth
- Subjects
FAMILY structure ,LOW-income students ,LOW-income college students ,POOR people ,MORAL norms ,HONESTY ,SUCCESS - Abstract
Low-income college students face costly moral choices between pursuing their personal academic success and fulfilling their family responsibilities. They almost certainly face these choices more frequently and at greater personal cost than their faculty recognize. This article explores the sources and nature of that professorial lacuna; the article argues that this moral oversight results from the fact that middle-class people and low-income people often practice family in subtly but significantly different ways. They tend to emphasize different moral norms (independence vs. mutual aid) which shape the qualitative nature of college students' obligations within their families. They also tend to utilize different family structures (nuclear vs. complex and extended) which create quantitative differences in the number of people to whom family responsibilities can attach. The paper ends with a practical implications section that discusses ways to address this lacuna so instructors can gain insight about their students' familial obligations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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