15,974 results on '"Nationality"'
Search Results
2. Windrush members' encounters with the 'hostile environment' and a deficit of citizenship: Centring an agentive citizenship experience
- Author
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Storey, Lia
- Published
- 2024
3. Artificial intelligence, datafication and exploring the minimum content of nationality
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Tucker, Jason
- Published
- 2024
4. 'Jus tribalis': Statelessness, ethnicity and registration in Kenya
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Balaton-Chrimes, Samantha
- Published
- 2024
5. 'Habbal et al v Argentina': The inter-American Court of Human Rights' test on arbitrary deprivation of nationality
- Author
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Recalde-Vela, Maria Jose
- Published
- 2023
6. Nationality and the right to enter: Assessing the impact of refusal of entry for the purpose of statelessness determination
- Author
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Manzotti, Cecilia
- Published
- 2023
7. Friendship matters: indirect effect of social support from friends on depressive symptoms and loneliness among university students.
- Author
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Kulari, Genta, Ribeiro, Luísa, and Tomé Pires, Catarina
- Subjects
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FOREIGN study , *SOCIAL support , *MENTAL depression , *LONELINESS , *FOREIGN students , *COLLEGE students - Abstract
Despite the growing number of international students in Portugal, there is a scarcity of quantitative research regarding how international and Portuguese students experience higher education. This study aimed to analyse the indirect effect of social support from friends on the relationship between depressive symptoms and loneliness among Portuguese and international students. Furthermore, the study proposed nationality as a moderator variable of the proposed mediation model. The survey data sample consisted of 940 participants (470 Portuguese and 470 international students) enrolled in a private university in Lisbon, Portugal, from January to May 2023. The bootstrap result for the indirect effect of social support from friends was significant, indicating that friends’ social support mediated the relationship between depressive symptoms and loneliness. Moreover, the results showed that the nationality of the students moderated the direct association between social support from friends and loneliness. No moderation effect was found in the indirect association (via social support from friends) between depressive symptoms and loneliness. This research advances our understanding of friends’ social support among university students of different nationalities while providing empirical data associated with depressive symptoms and loneliness. Moreover, the study delves into possible strategies to combat the expression of depressive symptoms and further loneliness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. The fastest nonprofessional age group IRONMAN triathletes in the world originate from Europe.
- Author
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Knechtle, Beat, Villiger, Elias, Weiss, Katja, Valero, David, Rosemann, Thomas, Nikolaidis, Pantelis T., Vancini, Rodrigo Luiz, Andrade, Marilia Santos, and Thuany, Mabliny
- Abstract
It is well known that elite athletes of specific ethnicities and/or nationalities dominate certain sports disciplines (e.g., East Africans in marathon running). However, we do not know the nationalities of the fastest non-professional IRONMAN triathletes. Therefore, this study intended to identify the fastest athletes by country of origin competing in IRONMAN triathlon events, focusing on non-professional age group triathletes. Data from all IRONMAN age group athletes competing worldwide between 2002 and 2022 in all official IRONMAN races were collected. Sex, age group, country of origin of the athletes, location and year of the event, split times, overall race times, and transition times were obtained. Additionally, the dataset was augmented with specific data (i.e. event characteristics such as temperatures for water and air and course characteristics for all three split disciplines) related to the different race locations. We limited the analysis to the top 150 countries by participation (i.e. countries with at least 13 successful finishers records in the sample). A total of 677,320 records of IRONMAN age group triathletes originating from 150 different countries and participating in 443 races over 65 different locations were analyzed. European countries such as Germany, Austria, Denmark, Belgium, Switzerland, Norway, Czechia, Estonia, and Slovenia have the fastest IRONMAN age group athletes. IRONMAN Hawaii, IRONMAN Vitoria-Gasteiz and IRONMAN Hamburg are the fastest races. Hilly running and cycling race courses led to slower race times, while flat surfaces, rolling cycling and ocean swimming led to faster race times. Optimal water temperatures were found at 23–25 °C and optimal air temperature ranged between 19–21 and 25–28 °C. The fastest IRONMAN age group triathletes from European countries such as Germany, Austria, Denmark, Belgium, Switzerland, Norway, Czechia, Estonia, and Slovenia. With the presented results for optimal air and water temperatures and description of the optimal cycling and running course characteristics, IRONMAN age group athletes might be able to select an IRONMAN race with the best conditions in order to achieve a fast IRONMAN race time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Analysis of the 10-day ultra-marathon using a predictive XG boost model.
- Author
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Knechtle, Beat, Villiger, Elias, Valero, David, Braschler, Lorin, Weiss, Katja, Vancini, Rodrigo Luiz, Andrade, Marilia S., Scheer, Volker, Nikolaidis, Pantelis T., Cuk, Ivan, Rosemann, Thomas, and Thuany, Mabliny
- Subjects
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MACHINE learning , *RUNNING races , *ULTRAMARATHON running , *RUNNERS (Sports) , *BOOSTING algorithms , *RUNNING speed - Abstract
Objective: Ultra-marathon running races are held as distance-limited or time-limited events, ranging from 6 h to 10 days. Only a few runners compete in 10-day events, and so far, we have little knowledge about the athletes' origins, performance, and event characteristics. The aim of the present study was to investigate the origin and performance of these runners and the fastest race locations. A machine learning model based on the XG Boost algorithm was built to predict running speed from the athlete´s age, gender, country of origin, country where the race takes place, the type of race and the kind of running surface. The model explainability tools were then used to investigate how each independent variable would influence the predicted running speed. Results: The model rated the origin of the athlete as the most important predictor, followed by age group, running on dirt path, gender, running on asphalt, and event location. Running on dirt path led to a significant reduction of running speed, while running on asphalt showed faster running speeds compared to other surfaces. Most athletes came from USA, followed by Russia, Germany, Ukraine, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia. Most of the runners competed in USA. The fastest 10-day runners were from Finland and Israel. The fastest 10-day races were held in Greece. Conclusions: Most 10-day runners originated from USA, but the fastest runners originate from Finland and Israel. The fastest race courses were in Greece. Running on dirt paths leads to a significant reduction in running speed while running on asphalt leads to faster running speeds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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10. THE ISSUE THAT BORDERS COULD NOT SOLVE: THE DISPUTE OVER NATIONALITY BETWEEN THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE AND MONTENEGRO.
- Author
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TEMİZER, Abidin and SERBESTOĞLU, İbrahim
- Subjects
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RELIGIOUS identity , *PROPERTY rights , *CITIZENSHIP , *WAR , *HISTORIOGRAPHY , *OTTOMAN Empire - Abstract
The independence of Balkan states is considered to be the partition of the Ottoman Empire in Turkish historiography. However, as can be seen in the example of Montenegro, Balkan states established an administration separate from the Ottoman Empire and defined their people as Montenegrins. On the other hand, Ottomans considered the Montenegrins, who were not the subject of any dispute, as Ottoman citizens; they did not restrain their property rights or prevent them from working. This situation continued until the Treaty of Berlin which was signed in 1878. The official independence of Montenegro after the Treaty of Berlin changed the lives of Montenegrins and the Ottomans living in Montenegro. The nationality of which state would the people whose lands were on the other side of the border prefer? How would they decide about their nationality? Would their choice of nationality lead to denial of their property rights? Or was it an obligation to choose nationality? In the face of these questions to which the public sought answers, both states' rulers prioritized protecting their sovereignty and did not want to behave unjustly towards their citizens. For this reason, they sometimes ignored border violations. Just as the Ottomans refrained from interfering with the Montenegrins in areas such as property, taxation, and work-life unless there were extraordinary situations, Montenegrins also did not interfere with the Ottoman subjects living in their lands. This article focuses on the issues of nationality between the two states in the period from the independence of Montenegro with the Treaty of Berlin in 1878 until the end of World War I. The article shows that in a period when people mostly preferred nationality within the framework of religious affiliations, property, taxation, and economic conditions were also effective in choosing nationality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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11. OSMANLI DEVLETİ'NDE FAALİYET GÖSTEREN NESTLÉ & ANGLO-SWISS CONDENSED MILK COMPANY'NİN BİRİNCİ DÜNYA SAVAŞI'NDAKİ TABİİYET MESELESİ.
- Author
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AKAY, Tolga
- Subjects
WORLD War I ,DUAL nationality ,RECIPROCITY theorems ,TRADEMARK application & registration ,CURFEWS ,OTTOMAN Empire - Abstract
Copyright of Marmara University Journal of Turkology / Marmara Türkiyat Araştırmaları Dergisi is the property of Marmara 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
- 2024
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12. Sports Media Research in the Slovenian Context: Mapping Trends and Suggestions for the Future.
- Author
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Poteko, Kaja
- Subjects
SPORTS journalism ,MEDIA studies ,SOCIAL context ,UNIVERSITY research ,SPORTS - Abstract
This article provides an overview and analysis of how the study of sport at the intersection with the media has developed in the Slovenian context over the last three decades. The first part of the article briefly explains the importance and role of sport and media in the broader social context. By looking in particular at sports journalism and introducing the Slovenian context, the purpose of the study is clarified. The second part identifies and reviews all academic research contributions published on the highlighted intersection and during the selected period. Based on a quantitative and qualitative analysis of the most frequently addressed aspects of the sports media system, the main research topics identified and the media outlets studied, the main findings are summarized and highlighted. While studies addressing different aspects of nationality predominate, attention to gendered nationalism is highlighted as particularly valuable in the context of studies focusing on gender and its intersections. Event-oriented and decontextualized sports content is problematized in the context of recent studies focusing on some aspects of sports journalism. In the final section of the article, some guidelines are formulated to encourage further research in (and of) this geographical area (and beyond). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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13. Transdisciplinarity for Transformation
- Author
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Regeer, Barbara J., Klaassen, Pim, and Broerse, Jacqueline E. W.
- Subjects
Transdisciplinary ,Transformation ,Developing ,Nationality ,Sustainable Transformation Processes ,Transitions ,Designing Transformative Transdisciplinary Processes ,Sustainable Transitions ,Sustainability ,Societal Challenges ,Human geography ,Society and culture: general ,Geography ,Sociology ,Comparative politics ,Social welfare and social services - Abstract
This open access book presents state-of-the-art insights on transdisciplinary work towards societal transformation. It provides theoretical and practical guidance and tools, applicable across diverse empirical settings. The book supports researchers and practitioners, especially those early in their careers, to navigate dilemmas inherent in transdisciplinarity for transformation. The book serves as a valuable resource for (graduate) educational programs in any field open to transformation-oriented transdisciplinary collaboration. It comprises three sections: Design & Evaluation; Diversity & Inclusion; Roles & Competences. Each section includes a chapter on theoretical advancements, multiple empirical chapters presenting insights from various fields and contexts, and practical guidance conducive to engaging in high-quality, just and equitable transdisciplinary processes directed at sustainable transformation.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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14. From "Made In" to Mukokuseki: Exploring the Visual Perception of National Identity in Robots.
- Author
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Seaborn, Katie, Kotani, Haruki, and Pennefather, Peter
- Subjects
ROBOT design & construction ,GROUP identity ,CULTURAL identity ,VISUAL perception ,SOCIAL impact ,ETHNICITY - Abstract
People read human characteristics into the design of social robots, a visual process with socio-cultural implications. One factor may be nationality, a complex social characteristic that is linked to ethnicity, culture, and other factors of identity that can be embedded in the visual design of robots. Guided by social identity theory (SIT), we explored the notion of "mukokuseki," a visual design characteristic defined by the absence of visual cues to national and ethnic identity in Japanese cultural exports. In a two-phase categorization study (\(n=212\)), American (\(n=110\)) and Japanese (\(n=92\)) participants rated a random selection of nine robot stimuli from America and Japan, plus multinational Pepper. We found evidence of made-in and two kinds of mukokuseki effects. We offer suggestions for the visual design of mukokuseki robots that may interact with people from diverse backgrounds. Our findings have implications for robots and social identity, the viability of robotic exports, and the use of robots internationally. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
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15. The image of the Russian people in Notes from a Dead House by F. M. Dostoevsky
- Author
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Yang, Jinghong
- Subjects
f. m. dostoevsky ,notes from a dead house ,nationality ,pochvennichestvo ,russian people ,orthodoxy ,russian idea ,spirituality ,Language and Literature - Abstract
In modern cultural processes, the problems of the essence of the mentality of the Russian people in Dostoevsky’s artistic works are acquiring critical importance. The article provides a detailed analysis of the images of the Russian people and pictures of their life created by F. M. Dostoevsky in Notes from a Dead House, and reveals the origin of the ideas of Pochvennichestvo in Dostoevsky’s work of the early 1860s. The following main typological groups of images of the people are distinguished: the types of “meek” and “fierce”, “tormentors” and “victims”, “self willed” and “weak-hearted”. It is concluded that Dostoevsky affirmed the religious tolerance inherent in Russian Orthodox culture and called on the Russian people to take on the mission of the messiah. In his opinion, “Europeanized” Russian intellectuals are morally lost souls, temporarily cut off from the roots of the people as a result of the reforms of Peter the Great, who were destined to merge with the people. He opposed the “Blame circumstances” form and utilitarianism, and called for a return to art itself. Although Dostoevsky did not hide the obvious cruelty, barbarity and backwardness of Russian peasant life, he still believed that the noble Christian virtues of mercy and self-sacrifice remained at the core of peasant life. He believed in the spiritual strength and moral power of the Russian people and saw the way of salvation for a developed personality in uniting with the people. The significance of the work lies in the in-depth and detailed understanding of the problem of people and nationality in Dostoevsky’s works. The results of the work can be used in the study of Dostoevsky’s oeuvre in universities.
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- 2024
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16. Investment Migration from the Standpoint of International and EU Law
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Vesna Ćorić, Fernanda Florentino Fernandez Jankov, and Ana Knežević Bojović
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investment migration ,citizenship by investment ,residence by investment ,international law ,european union ,nationality ,genuine link ,eu citizenship ,sincere cooperation ,International relations ,JZ2-6530 ,Political science (General) ,JA1-92 - Abstract
Investment migration programmes are used by over eighty states globally and pose serious security and criminal risks. Their existence is additionally complex in the EU, as EU citizenship opens up its internal market and grants a set of political rights. Relying predominantly on the normative-legal method, the authors analyse the compatibility of investment migration with international and EU law. The purpose of this analysis is twofold. First, it determines whether national autonomy in citizenship matters is subject to limitations by international and EU law since they impact the legality of investment migration. Second, implications of the Nottebohm case are analysed to determine the relevance of the genuine link criterion for the international recognition of nationality. It was concluded that the genuine link criterion does not affect the legality of investment migration in international and EU law. Instead, legality is achieved if investment migration programmes comply with rules on combating corruption, money laundering, and tax evasion. While authors give due regard to the autonomy of EU law, the need to avoid the danger of the “vertical aspect” of international law fragmentation, i.e., incoherence between EU and international law, and to avoid the creation of an imbalanced legal environment is considered a priority.
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- 2024
- Full Text
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17. The fastest 24-hour ultramarathoners are from Eastern Europe
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Beat Knechtle, David Valero, Elias Villiger, Volker Scheer, Katja Weiss, Pedro Forte, Mabliny Thuany, Rodrigo Luiz Vancini, Claudio Andre Barbosa de Lira, Pantelis T. Nikolaidis, Nejmeddine Ouerghi, and Thomas Rosemann
- Subjects
Ultra-endurance ,Nationality ,Origin ,Performance ,Machine learning ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Ultramarathon running is of increasing popularity, where the time-limited 24-hour run is one of the most popular events. Although we have a high scientific knowledge about different topics for this specific race format, we do not know where the best 24-hour runners originate from and where the fastest races are held. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the origin of these runners and the fastest race locations. A machine learning model based on the XG Boost algorithm was built to predict running speed based on the athlete´s age, gender, country of origin and the country where the race takes place. Model explainability tools were used to investigate how each independent variable would influence the predicted running speed. A sample of 171,358 race records from 63,514 unique runners from 73 countries participating in 24-hour races held in 57 countries between 1807 and 2022 was analyzed. Most of the athletes originated from the USA, France, Germany, Great Britain, Italy, Japan, Russia, Australia, Austria, and Canada. Tunisian athletes achieved the fastest average running speed, followed by runners from Russia, Latvia, Lithuania, Island, Croatia, Slovenia, and Israel. Regarding the country of the event, the ranking looks quite similar to the participation by the athlete, suggesting a high correlation between the country of origin and the country of the event. The fastest 24-hour races are recorded in Israel, Romania, Korea, the Netherlands, Russia, and Taiwan. On average, men were 0.4 km/h faster than women, and the fastest runners belonged to age groups 35–39, 40–44, and 45–49 years. In summary, the 24-hour race format is spread over the world, and the fastest athletes mainly originate from Eastern Europe, while the fastest races were organized in European and Asian countries.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. The evolution of the national composition of Saratov province in the first half of the 1920s
- Author
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Averyanova, Anna Nickolaevna
- Subjects
population census ,saratov province ,ethnos ,nationality ,language ,national structure ,autonomy ,History (General) ,D1-2009 - Abstract
The article examines the changes in the national composition of Saratov province in the first half of the 1920s based on the materials of the All-Russian Census of 1920, the All-Union Urban Census of 1923 and the first All-Union Population Census of 1926. The factors influencing the evolution of the national structure of the region are being studied. The conclusion is made about the formation in the main features of the ethnic map of the Saratov region. The position is put forward on the development and conduct of the first censuses as the “golden” period of Soviet statistics, which had a huge impact on the country’s modernization policy.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The fastest 24-hour ultramarathoners are from Eastern Europe.
- Author
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Knechtle, Beat, Valero, David, Villiger, Elias, Scheer, Volker, Weiss, Katja, Forte, Pedro, Thuany, Mabliny, Vancini, Rodrigo Luiz, de Lira, Claudio Andre Barbosa, Nikolaidis, Pantelis T., Ouerghi, Nejmeddine, and Rosemann, Thomas
- Subjects
MACHINE learning ,SCIENTIFIC knowledge ,ULTRAMARATHON running ,COUNTRY of origin (Immigrants) ,RACE ,AGE groups - Abstract
Ultramarathon running is of increasing popularity, where the time-limited 24-hour run is one of the most popular events. Although we have a high scientific knowledge about different topics for this specific race format, we do not know where the best 24-hour runners originate from and where the fastest races are held. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the origin of these runners and the fastest race locations. A machine learning model based on the XG Boost algorithm was built to predict running speed based on the athlete´s age, gender, country of origin and the country where the race takes place. Model explainability tools were used to investigate how each independent variable would influence the predicted running speed. A sample of 171,358 race records from 63,514 unique runners from 73 countries participating in 24-hour races held in 57 countries between 1807 and 2022 was analyzed. Most of the athletes originated from the USA, France, Germany, Great Britain, Italy, Japan, Russia, Australia, Austria, and Canada. Tunisian athletes achieved the fastest average running speed, followed by runners from Russia, Latvia, Lithuania, Island, Croatia, Slovenia, and Israel. Regarding the country of the event, the ranking looks quite similar to the participation by the athlete, suggesting a high correlation between the country of origin and the country of the event. The fastest 24-hour races are recorded in Israel, Romania, Korea, the Netherlands, Russia, and Taiwan. On average, men were 0.4 km/h faster than women, and the fastest runners belonged to age groups 35–39, 40–44, and 45–49 years. In summary, the 24-hour race format is spread over the world, and the fastest athletes mainly originate from Eastern Europe, while the fastest races were organized in European and Asian countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Discrimination Against Puerto Ricans in the Puerto Rican Housing Market: Evidence From a Preregistered Audit Experiment.
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PUERTO Ricans , *POSTCOLONIALISM , *TAX havens , *ETHNIC discrimination , *HOUSING market - Abstract
Do locals discriminate against themselves by favoring foreigners with higher expected purchasing power? Drawing on theories of prejudice, discrimination, and colonialism, I argue that in colonized and post-colonial countries, local home sellers discriminate against local potential homebuyers while favoring foreigners with expected higher purchasing power, anticipating a more profitable transaction. I support this argument with evidence from a preregistered online audit study targeting discriminatory attitudes toward local home buyers. In the study, fictitious home buyers with distinctive language and ethnic names emailed 1,512 home sellers (realtors and homeowners) across all municipalities in Puerto Rico. Home sellers reported more houses available to Americans and invited them to more house showings than Puerto Ricans. My estimates indicate that ethnic discrimination exists in the Puerto Rican housing market. These findings provide new insights into ethnic dynamics in colonized and post-colonial societies and underscore concerns about recent legislation that turned Puerto Rico into a tax haven. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Governing Access to Nationality Through Paperwork: The Discretionary Uses of Documentation for Naturalisation in Belgium, France and the United Kingdom.
- Author
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Sredanovic, Djordje and Fargues, Émilien
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PUBLIC prosecutors , *OFFICES , *DISCRETION , *DOCUMENTATION , *EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
ABSTRACT In this paper, we examine the discretionary uses of documentation in the implementation of naturalisation through a comparative perspective focusing on Belgium, France and the United Kingdom. We investigate the organisational and professional factors that are likely to impact variation in the uses of discretion based on documentation. Belgium, France and the United Kingdom represent three interesting case studies involving different actors with different mandates. In Belgium, municipal agents are responsible for a mandatory check of applicants' documents before transferring the naturalisation application to public prosecutors. While only the latter have the mandate to check that the legal requirements are met, most municipal agents are involved in the examination of the requirements. In France, before the digitisation of nationality acquisition in 2023, the initial acceptance of an application involved prefectural agents who had the power to refuse application registration if the documentation was deemed insufficient or ‘non‐compliant’. In the United Kingdom, ‘Nationality Checking Services’ (NCS) were available until 2019 in local register offices for an optional check of the application before the transfer to the Home Office, which remains the decision‐making body on nationality applications. As United Kingdom law regulates strictly immigration advice, NCSs were often unwilling to express themselves on the chances of an application. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork consisting of interviews with implementation agents in the three countries and observations of their interactions with applicants, this paper contributes to shedding light on what drives variations in the governance of access to nationality through paperwork. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Negotiated Identity: A Study of Bangladeshi Migrants in Eastern India.
- Author
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Ray, Chandrika and Mohanty, Tanaya
- Subjects
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GROUP identity , *IDENTITY (Psychology) , *REFUGEES , *BORDER crossing , *NEGOTIATION - Abstract
AbstractThis paper is an exploratory study on the Bangladeshi immigrants who have crossed the border between India and Bangladesh during two historical points of time. The central focus of the paper is to understand the process of identity constitution and reconstitution among these immigrants over different generations. It’s based on the focused ethnographic study of the community with tools of FGD and interview-schedule. The paper attempts to grasp different aspects of the identity construction of the community. It tries to capture the “trilemma” of negotiating identities of the Bangladeshi immigrants in Odisha, an eastern province of India. This trilemma unfolds with different levels of negotiations pertaining to their status of Refugees questioning their conception of nation and citizenship, fitting into a distinguished host identity and connecting with their Bengali community. The study tries to put a direction of these multiple negotiations into the arena of the Diasporic-cultural community by contesting the term refugee. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Belonging in French North Africa: Debating the Citizenship of Tunisian Jews.
- Author
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Marglin, Jessica M.
- Subjects
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TUNISIAN Jews , *CITIZENSHIP , *JEWS , *MUSLIMS , *MODERNITY - Abstract
At the dawn of the twentieth century, French-educated Jews and Muslims in Tunisia debated the nature of Jews' citizenship as part of a broader conversation on colonial policy. A group of Jews known as La Justice argued that Jews were not Tunisian nationals; rather, they had always been considered foreigners according to Islamic law. The Jeunes tunisiens (Young Tunisians), reform-minded Muslims, countered that Jews in Tunisia were full citizens, equal to Muslims. This episode contradicts much of the narrative about Jews and modernity, especially regarding the nature of emancipation. For some Jews under French colonial rule in Tunisia, being foreign was preferable to being full members of the Tunisian nation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Self-determination and Integration: A Site of Negotiation and a Village Named Panbari.
- Author
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Saikia, Prarthana
- Abstract
The demand for self-determination of various nationalities has been central to the sociopolitical and cultural life of Assam, a northeastern state of India. The Statutory Autonomous Councils formed under the State Act are a non-territorial arrangement to address the question of self-determination without marking boundaries between co-habiting communities and therefore are a unique model of integration. However, this has led to conflicting situations reflecting how 'integration' emerges as a site of negotiation, redefines inter-community relationships, and challenges the state's intervention in the matter. Drawing from a village study, this article endeavours to probe self-determination as a tool of (dis)integration, as a site of negotiation and argues that the various ways of addressing the question of self-determination adopted by the new nation-state ultimately affect the historically produced inter-community relationships. Methodologically, the article seeks to revisit the promises of 'village study' through the multicultural habitat named Panbari, a village in the northeast of Assam, and reflects how the every day in a small village establishes a guiding conversation with the everyday in a multicultural nation-state of India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Intersectionality in Transnational English Teaching: Exploring the Dynamics of Privilege and Disadvantage in Korean ELT.
- Author
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Kudaibergenov, Meerbek
- Subjects
ENGLISH teachers ,FOREIGN language education ,RACE ,INTERSECTIONALITY ,TEACHERS - Abstract
This article explores the niche occupied by transnational English teachers within the context of Korean ELT. Employing intersectionality theory as an analytic framework, the study examines the lived experiences of Leo (pseudonym), a German national who taught English in Korea circumventing legal restrictions against non-native English-speaking teachers. Through an analysis of Leo's narrative, this research elucidates the complex dynamics of privilege and disadvantage prevalent in the Korean ELT industry. The findings underscore the significance of nationality, race, and marital status in securing a teaching position, revealing a persistent preference for Caucasian teachers and the perpetuation of White supremacy in ELT. Leo's experiences shed light on broader issues of power imbalances, exploitation, and identity tensions that transnational teachers encounter. These findings contribute to a nuanced understanding of the niche occupied by transnational English teachers and provide insights for the development of inclusive and equitable policies and practices in foreign language education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Statelessness: A Radical Rethinking of the Dominant Citizenism Paradigm.
- Author
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Kochenov, Dimitry V.
- Subjects
CITIZENSHIP ,STATELESSNESS ,WORLD citizenship ,SCHOLARLY method ,REFUGEES - Abstract
A new approach to statelessness has emerged in the literature on the topic. Taking citizenism as a starting point and pioneered by Swider and Bloom, this approach offers a completely fresh paradigm for studying and understanding the statelesseness phenomenon. In the contemporary global context where citizenships are deeply unequal and racialized, the focus on rights invites us to dismiss the baseless presumption that fighting statelessness is always in the interests of the populations concerned, let alone that it is directly connected to the protection of human and citizenship rights. It is the world's inequitable neo-feudal citizenism arrangement that is a problem, not the fact that some people do not fit neatly into the citizenism hierarchy and find themselves in a position of statelessness. Shedding light on the role of citizenship and statelessness in the world today as tools of preservation of racialized hierarchies and inequitable exclusion of most of the world's population from rights at home and abroad, the new scholarship questions the UN High Commissioner for Refugees's mission and actions in this domain and takes issue with the self-serving parochialism of dominant Western citizenship and statelessness literatures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Quase brancos quase pretos de tão pobres? Nacionalidade, raça e os brasileiros na Missão das Nações Unidas de Estabilização do Haiti.
- Author
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Xavier do Monte, Izadora
- Subjects
- *
MILITARY personnel , *NATIONAL territory , *HAITIANS , *HELMETS , *ARMED Forces - Abstract
Based on semi-directive interviews with Brazilian blue helmets who participated in MINUSTAH (Mission de Nations Unies pour la Stabilisation en Haïti) and direct observation in Port-au-Prince, the article seeks to analyze the ways in which Brazilian military personnel mobilize national categories to apply them to peace operation contexts, and how they make nationality exist by using elements of "Brazilianness" to justify their actions. "Brazilianness" is what provides references and intelligibility that allow political actors to explain why and how they do what they do. In doing so, they reinforce and keep alive certain ideas about the nation and nationality. Contrary to some of the literature on the subject, I propose that the discourse on a "Brazilian success" in the UN mission is linked to a particular form of "colonialism of power". The article is structured in two parts: the first offers a brief explanation of MINUSTAH and what Brazil's engagement in the mission was like, especially from the point of view of decision-makers. The second presents the results of my fieldwork, analyzing how the Brazilian military personnel interviewed show that they understand the mission and the Haitians from the point of view of colonial logics that establish racial divisions within the national territory and between Brazilians. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Strengthening Brand Equity in Hotel Chains: Insights from Emerging Vs. Developed Economies.
- Author
-
Gil-Saura, Irene, Ruiz-Molina, Maria-Eugenia, Moise, Mihaela-Simona, and Marín-García, Antonio
- Subjects
- *
BUSINESS planning , *HOTEL guests , *COUNTRY of origin (Immigrants) , *BRAND equity , *COVID-19 pandemic , *CUSTOMER cocreation - Abstract
Today, many consumers seek to stay in environmentally sustainable hotels. Moreover, the tourism industry is one of the most impacted by the COVID-19 outbreak. In this increasingly competitive environment, companies in general, and hotels in particular, must offer unique experiences through value co-creation. The purpose of this work is to analyze the impact of "green" practices and value co-creation on brand equity, evaluating the moderating role of the consumer's nationality in the setting of hospitality companies. From a personal survey of 309 hotel guests in Valencia (Spain) and 302 guests in Bogotá (Colombia), evidence is obtained on the existence of some differences depending on the guest's country of origin, thus allowing hotel managers to have a better knowledge when designing their corporate strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Social representations of citizenship among Argentine adolescents: Between civic engagement, rights and nationality.
- Author
-
Bruno, Daniela Silvana and Barreiro, Alicia
- Subjects
- *
YOUNG adults , *COLLECTIVE representation , *POLITICAL participation , *SEMI-structured interviews , *TEENAGERS - Abstract
Citizenship as an object of study goes beyond the mere recognition of formal rights and responsibilities and includes cultural and social practices in different spheres. In this sense, the exercise of citizenship is linked to different forms of political participation. Recent studies show that young people are distanced from traditional political participation and prefer alternative civic practices. Within this framework, the present study aims to investigate the social representations of citizenship of Argentinean adolescents (N = 32) aged between 16 and 18. To this end, participants were asked to elaborate a narrative about their experiences with citizenship in the framework of semi-structured interviews guided according to the Piagetian clinical method. The results obtained allow the construction of four analytical categories intended to describe how these adolescents represent citizenship: civic engagement, rights, nationality and voting. It is concluded that there is a plurality of social representations of this object, and it is necessary to elucidate their development, maintenance and transformation processes in future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Forcible Protection of Nationals Abroad: The Doctrine's Hegemonic Use.
- Author
-
Pervou, Ioanna
- Subjects
- *
RUSSIA-Ukraine Conflict, 2014- , *CITIZENS , *WAR , *HEGEMONY , *SOVEREIGNTY , *CHARTERS - Abstract
During the last few years Russia has repeatedly evoked the doctrine of the protection of nationals abroad in all cases when it has resorted to the use of force. Russia's invocation of this doctrine has been harshly criticized, mainly because it has been deemed as a neo-hegemonic interpretation thereof. That is, several deprecating remarks over Russia's policy have been made, given that it has treated the doctrine as a tool to achieve its neo-imperialistic goals, in essence repudiating all the legal developments that had taken place from 1945 onwards. The invasions of Georgia in 2008 and Ukraine in 2014 further resulting in Crimea's illegal annexation, as well as the 2022 ongoing war against it, all relied more or less on the alleged danger to Russian nationals in the invaded areas. This paper will explore Russia's invocation of the doctrine in the ongoing war against Ukraine. It will examine whether there are sufficient legal bases on these grounds, and it will demonstrate how Russia disregards the doctrine's interpretation after the entry into force of the UN Charter promoting a hegemonic reading thereof. It will argue that the state's policy shows the emergence of a new pattern regarding the forcible protection of its nationals abroad, which has endured for the last two decades. Finally, it will propose that continuity in such state practice is a constant threat to the former Soviet Union countries' sovereignty, while it questions the very notion of their citizens' nationality rights. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. INVESTMENT MIGRATION FROM THE STANDPOINT OF INTERNATIONAL AND EU LAW.
- Author
-
ĆORIĆ, Vesna, FERNANDEZ JANKOV, Fernanda FLORENTINO, and BOJOVIĆ, Ana KNEŽEVIĆ
- Subjects
EUROPEAN Union citizenship ,POLITICAL autonomy ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,EUROPEAN Union law ,INTERNATIONAL law ,ORGANIZATIONAL citizenship behavior - Abstract
Copyright of Review of International Affairs (04866096) is the property of Institute of International Politics & Economics 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
32. RuPaul's Drag Race: Queer authenticity and strategic Westernness.
- Author
-
Willard, Zane Austin and Dubrofsky, Rachel E
- Subjects
DRAG shows ,GENDER identity ,REALITY television programs ,RACE ,NATIONAL character ,WHITE privilege - Abstract
We analyze RuPaul's Drag Race: UK vs The World (UKVTW), part of the larger RuPaul's Drag Race franchise—one of the most popular current media representations of queerness. UKVTW features participants from different countries competing to be "Queen of the Mother-Tucking World." We examine the intersection of queerness and whiteness, exploring the tension between national identity, racialization, and drag performance. Building on scholarship about reality TV and authenticity, we argue the series queers conventional notions of authenticity in reality TV by privileging fluid gender identities. Developing the notion of "strategic Westernness" we examine how the series presents a postracial imaginary that obfuscates race by foregrounding nationality: seemingly progressive representations of gender ultimately privilege white and Western participants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Konsep Negara dan Politik Kebangsaan Soekarno.
- Author
-
Pratama, Adrian Ichsan, Saebani, Beni Ahmad, and Nasrudin, N.
- Subjects
POLITICAL philosophy ,STATE power ,NATION-state ,SOVEREIGNTY ,PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
Copyright of Jurnal Ilmu Hukum, Humaniora dan Politik (JIHHP) is the property of Dinasti Publisher 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
34. CORPORATE GOVERNANCE AND FIRM'S VALUE: AN EMPIRICAL STUDY IN LISTED COMPANIES IN THE EMERGING MARKET.
- Author
-
Mukhtaruddin, Saftiana, Yulia, Susanto, Hendra, Teguh, Muhammad, and Kalsum, Umi
- Subjects
CORPORATE governance ,EMERGING markets ,ENTERPRISE value ,HUMAN rights ,SOCIAL services ,PUBLIC welfare - Abstract
The incorporation of corporate governance (CG) in Indonesian society necessitates consideration of the socio-cultural values that exist and evolve within individual lives. The foundation of the Indonesian state, Pancasila, embodies the socio-cultural ideals of the Indonesian people. The five CG-relevant Pancasila principles are divinity, human rights, nationality, leadership, and social welfare. Pancasila corporate governance (PCG) is CG that incorporates Indonesian cultural values. The association between PCG and firm value (FV) is investigated in this study. Up to 66 samples were collected for the years 2009 through 2018 after the sample was chosen based on specific criteria. The declaration of the five Pancasila principles serves as a proxy for PCG. Tobin's Q serves as a gauge for a company's worth. Multiregression analysis was employed in data analysis. This study concluded that while nationality and divinity had no effect on FV, human rights, leadership, and social welfare did have a substantial impact on FV. The single most important factor in the creation of corporate governance is the national culture and values. It stems from national cultures and beliefs that permeate the community and have an impact on relationships within it. It is expected to be a norm in the neighborhood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Storia identitaria contro storia critica. Ragionamenti dentro la «fabbrica del sentimento nazionale».
- Author
-
Brusa, Antonio
- Abstract
Dans la fabrique du sentiment national. L'Histoire à l'école depuis 1945 is an important book, which disproves the commonplace according to which the renationalisation of history curricula -- a phenomenon presents throughout the world and in Europe in particular -- is a reaction to globalist, empathic and intercultural pedagogies. In reality, the self-centred view has never left European classrooms, even if it has had to come to terms with a critical approach since 1945. It is therefore necessary for the didactic scholar to revise his or her tools of analysis, and for the academic historian to take an interest in the historical education of citizens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Le Spectre de Targowica : La Trahison dans les imaginaires polonais du XIXe siècle. Widmo Targowicy : Zdrada w polskich wyobraźniach XIX wieku
- Author
-
Arthur Kula
- Subjects
Independence ,Sovereignty ,Imaginary ,Betrayal ,Treason ,Nationality ,History (General) ,D1-2009 - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Impact of organizational trust on organizational commitment: the moderating effect of national identity
- Author
-
Abdullah M. Alomran, Tarek Sayed Abdelazim Ahmed, and Ayman Mounir Kassem
- Subjects
Organizational trust ,organizational commitment ,nationality ,competence ,integrity ,transparency ,Social Sciences - Abstract
AbstractThe main objective of this study is to examine the moderating effect of employees’ national identity on organizational trust and organizational commitment among employees in hotel establishments in the Hail region, of Saudi Arabia. A conceptual model was developed to find a mechanism through which organizational trust impacts organizational commitment dimensions through the factor of national identity. Multiple statistical analyses were applied to test the hypotheses developed in this study using structured equation modelling. These hypotheses were tested through a survey questionnaire. Measurements of organizational trust and organizational commitment were developed. 212 employees from 20 hotels in Hail, Saudi Arabia, voluntarily participated in the current study. Their responses were examined using linear regression, confirmatory factor analysis and structural equation modelling. The findings reveal that organizational trust is a positive predictor of all types of organizational commitment (affective, continuance, and normative). The results also indicate that nationality does not significantly moderate the impact of organizational trust on either affective commitment or normative commitment. However, it significantly moderates the relationship between organizational trust and continuance commitment. This study may assist managers in better understanding the importance of organizational trust and organizational commitment. Cultivating a trusting environment can help increase employees’ trust in their establishments, which can lead to better levels of organizational commitment and improved job performance, which can be reflected positively in their profitability. The study highlights that hotel establishments should emphasize organizational-trust-related dimensions, including competence, dependability, integrity, and transparency, as they can lead to the organizational commitment of employees and their intention to continue with their establishments.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Biased teacher expectations of students with migration backgrounds: Analysis with nationality stereotype clusters
- Author
-
Neuenschwander, Markus P. and Garrote, Ariana
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Standardised integration requirements for naturalisation: less rights and less discretion? A qualitative meta-analysis of ethnographic studies of naturalisation procedures in Europe
- Author
-
Djordje Sredanovic
- Subjects
Citizenship ,Nationality ,Implementation ,Discretion ,Integrationism ,Integration ,Social Sciences ,Communities. Classes. Races ,HT51-1595 ,Urban groups. The city. Urban sociology ,HT101-395 ,City population. Including children in cities, immigration ,HT201-221 - Abstract
Abstract Since the late 1990s and early 2000s, in what can be called an ‘integrationist wave’, standardised integration requirements for naturalisation have become increasingly common in Europe. To examine the impact of such measures, I combine original ethnographic data on institutions involved in the implementation of citizenship policies in Belgium and the UK with a qualitative meta-analysis of existing ethnographic studies of the implementation of citizenship policies. I show how, in addition to introducing new obstacles to naturalisation, standardised requirements have also reduced the discretion inscribed in earlier procedures, albeit not uniformly across different cases. The integrationist wave could thus be understood not simply as the introduction of restrictive notions of integration, but also as the systemisation of earlier evaluation practices. I further show signs of a more recent tendency for states to retreat from examining the integration of candidates to citizenship, outsourcing the evaluation directly or indirectly to private actors.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Analysis of the fastest backstroke age group swimmers competing in the World Masters Championships 1986–2024
- Author
-
Mielad Fariod, Aldo Seffrin, Marilia Santos Andrade, Mathias Wilhelm, Katja Weiss, Wais Ahmad, Sascha Moreitz, Arkadiusz Stanula, Pantelis T. Nikolaidis, Thomas Rosemann, and Beat Knechtle
- Subjects
Age group athlete ,Master swimmer ,Nationality ,Origin ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Backstroke has been thoroughly investigated in the context of sports science. However, we have no knowledge about the nationalities of the fastest age group backstroke swimmers. Therefore, the present study intended to investigate the nationalities of the fastest backstroke swimmers. For all World Masters Championships held between 1986 and 2024, the year of competition, the first and last name, the age, and the age group, and both the stroke and the distance were recorded for each swimmer. Descriptive data were presented using mean, standard deviation, maximum and minimum values, and confidence intervals. The top ten race times for each swimming distance and sex were identified for descriptive purposes. Nationalities were then grouped into six categories: the top five nationalities with the most appearances in the backstroke swimming top ten times by distance each year and one group consisting of all other nationalities. The Kruskal–Wallis test compared nationality differences, followed by Bonferroni-adjusted pairwise comparisons to identify specific distinctions. Between 1986 and 2024, most age group backstroke swimmers (39.6%) competed in the 50 m event (11,964, 6206 women, and 5,758 men), followed by the 100 m event (32.3%, n = 9764, 5157 women, and 4607 men), and the 200 m event (28.1%, n = 8483, 4511 women, and 3,972 men). Germany had the highest number of top ten female swimmers in the 50 m backstroke distance. Brazil had the highest number of top ten male swimmers in the same distance. The USA had the highest number of female and male swimmers among the top ten in the 100 m and 200 m backstroke distances. Germany and Great Britain were the only countries with swimmers in the top ten for all female backstroke distances. Brazil, the USA, Italy, and Germany were the countries that had swimmers in the top ten for all male backstroke distances. In summary, the fastest backstroke age group swimmers originated from Germany, Brazil, USA, Great Britain, and Italy, where differences between the sexes and race distances exist.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Doctrine of Domicile as a Personal Connecting Factor in Conflict of Laws in Tanzania: An Examination of Abdalla Hamid Mohamed v. Jasnena Zaludova [1982] TZHC 14
- Author
-
Moh'd Masoud Khartoum
- Subjects
domicile ,residence ,nationality ,connecting factors ,permanent home ,personal law ,conflict of laws ,Social Sciences - Abstract
In Tanzania, and all over the world, including Tanzania Zanzibar, courts of laws have considered domicile as an important connecting factor in the determination of various disputes brought before the court of laws in cases relating to conflict of laws, especially on issues relating to jurisdiction of the courts and capacity to marry in various marital disputes. In a most cases, the courts attempt to investigate how far and the extent to which domicile may be considered as the connecting factor in settling issues of validity of marriages or determination of divorce cases between disputants. Legal speaking, when a person files a lawsuit in a court of law relating to a conflict of laws, one of the interesting questions the court would wish to test is how the matter in question is connected or linked with the domicile of the disputant. It is on this basis that this research article discusses domicile as a personal connecting factor in conflict of laws disputes in Tanzania, with special attention to the above-stated case law, as decided by the Zanzibar courts. The decision by the Zanzibar courts, as discussed in this article, has laid a basic foundation on the domicile as the connecting factor in conflict of laws. The article further examines the extent to which domicile was considered as connecting factor by the Zanzibar courts in determining above selected case law in conflict of laws.
- Published
- 2024
42. The Сategory of Nationality of Literature as a Subject of Comprehension in the History of Russian Criticism of the 19th Century
- Author
-
Alexey V. Svyatoslavsky and Nguyen Thi Thu Ngan
- Subjects
nationality ,folk ,russian literary criticism ,aesthetic category ,ethnicity ,v. g. belinsky ,a. s. khomyakov ,slavophiles ,westerners ,populism ,“narodnitchestvo ,Slavic languages. Baltic languages. Albanian languages ,PG1-9665 - Abstract
The article examines the history of the formation of the concept of “nationality” as an aesthetic category in Russian criticism of the 19th century. The research attempts to identify certain constants in understanding nationality as an ethnic-social concept and aesthetic category in fiction and to trace its transformations in changing historical conditions concerning certain ideological discourses and cultural paradigms. The works of V. G. Belinsky, A. S. Khomyakov, N. A. Dobrolyubov, I. V. Kireevsky, N. A. Berdyaev, N. K. Mikhailovsky, the correspondence of P. A. Vyazemsky and articles by A. S. Pushkin demonstrates some examples of understanding nationality. Despite the variety of approaches to the interpretation of nationality in later times, the most adequate remains the thoughts contained in the works of Belinsky and the Slavophiles.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Canadian and US controversies are problems for India
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Bhutan will rely most on foreign investors for key hub
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Contested citizenship and statelessness in question : an anlysis of cases of overseas Taiwanese people and Tibetan exiles in Taiwan
- Author
-
Chen, Jing-han, Shaw, Jo, and Woodman, Sophia
- Subjects
citizenship ,statelessness ,Tibetan exiles ,Taiwanese identity ,identity ,legal consciousness ,legal mobilisation ,nationality ,performative citizenship ,contested citizenship - Abstract
For years, overseas Taiwanese and Tibetan exiles have faced constant identity difficulties as a result of their contested citizenship. Citizenship is a complex status containing socio-legal meanings. It may denote a membership between people and the state and "the right to have other rights (Arendt, 1961)." Even though citizenship is crucial for people to access rights, it can also be fluid and unstable, especially for those related to contested sovereignty states. This socio-legal research analyses the contested citizenship and the predicaments faced by those without full citizenship, by focusing on the cases of the Tibetan exiles in Taiwan and the overseas Taiwanese. Taiwanese people face denial of citizenship randomly when travelling across national borders, while Tibetan exiles confront confusion about citizenship during the process of migration to Taiwan. The unstable and liminal character of citizenship may cause statelessness due to the geopolitical power between China and Taiwan and the conflicts of self-identification among these ethnic groups. To show how individuals experience and react to the debates on citizenship, I conducted semi-structured interviews with people who struggled with the uncertainty of citizenship in the process of travel, migration and settlement; the stories depict people's agency and the legal mobilisation through which they exercise citizenship acts countering the challenges of liminal citizenship in social movements and daily lives. Current research fails to reflect on the issue of statelessness in the context of the long-standing instability and tensions connected to Taiwan's international standing, the controversies and conflicts within Taiwan itself, and the relevant concrete true-life experiences of actual stateless persons. My research fills this gap by highlighting the productive character of statelessness for people who are therefore able to eschew an undesired legal identity and to maintain the possibility of regaining the desired one. Thus, with the fluid citizenship status, statelessness may be used not just as an equivalent to lack of citizenship, but as an expression of people that is cultivated from the lack of full citizenship for demanding different identities. For a better understanding to the complexity of citizenship, I apply Nancy Fraser's theories of justice to examine recognition, redistribution and representation of citizenship, and then discuss how these three dimensions are constructed in today's democratic regime to dynamically formulate citizenship not only by the legal system or bureaucracy which presents state power, but also by the people.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Misinterpretation and Misplacement in Intercultural Theatrical Communications between China and Japan: Ichikawa Sadanji's and Morita Kanya's Kabuki Tours in 1920s China.
- Author
-
Gao, Yang
- Subjects
- *
CULTURAL identity , *MODERNITY , *REALISM , *COSMOPOLITANISM ,JAPANESE theater - Abstract
In the 1920s, Ichikawa Sadanji and Morita Kanya conducted two rounds of kabuki tours in China, which clearly revealed the mechanism of misinterpretation and misplacement in the (re)construction of the cultural identities of Chinese and Japanese theatre. Both had been modelled upon each other in the context of intercultural communications in the early twentieth century. Some Chinese theatre critics indicated that Chinese xiqu should absorb the values of modernity identified by them in the Morita troupe's kabuki performances. In contrast, Ichikawa Sadanji's tours in Northeast China and his subsequent visit to Beijing inspired kabuki to imbibe a new spirit of the times from Chinese xiqu , an impure 'Eastern Spirit' paradoxically manifested in a 'purified' theatrical Chineseness. The positive aspect of 'misplaced misinterpretations' by kabuki and xiqu of each other's cultural images and values lies in the fact that it afforded the two theatre traditions a huge momentum for assimilating each other's 'Otherness' to break their own tradition's exclusiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Estudos comparativos sobre cidadania e nacionalidade nas constituições monárquicas e no constitucionalismo americano no Século XIX.
- Author
-
Oliveira Freire, Leonardo, Ribeiro Rosário, José Orlando, and de Alcaniz Santos, Daniel Augusto
- Abstract
Copyright of Cadernos de Dereito Actual is the property of Asociacion Xuristas en Accion 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
48. Analysis of the fastest backstroke age group swimmers competing in the World Masters Championships 1986–2024.
- Author
-
Fariod, Mielad, Seffrin, Aldo, Andrade, Marilia Santos, Wilhelm, Mathias, Weiss, Katja, Ahmad, Wais, Moreitz, Sascha, Stanula, Arkadiusz, Nikolaidis, Pantelis T., Rosemann, Thomas, and Knechtle, Beat
- Subjects
AGE groups ,WORLD championships ,SWIMMERS ,LONG distance swimming ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,SPORTS sciences - Abstract
Backstroke has been thoroughly investigated in the context of sports science. However, we have no knowledge about the nationalities of the fastest age group backstroke swimmers. Therefore, the present study intended to investigate the nationalities of the fastest backstroke swimmers. For all World Masters Championships held between 1986 and 2024, the year of competition, the first and last name, the age, and the age group, and both the stroke and the distance were recorded for each swimmer. Descriptive data were presented using mean, standard deviation, maximum and minimum values, and confidence intervals. The top ten race times for each swimming distance and sex were identified for descriptive purposes. Nationalities were then grouped into six categories: the top five nationalities with the most appearances in the backstroke swimming top ten times by distance each year and one group consisting of all other nationalities. The Kruskal–Wallis test compared nationality differences, followed by Bonferroni-adjusted pairwise comparisons to identify specific distinctions. Between 1986 and 2024, most age group backstroke swimmers (39.6%) competed in the 50 m event (11,964, 6206 women, and 5,758 men), followed by the 100 m event (32.3%, n = 9764, 5157 women, and 4607 men), and the 200 m event (28.1%, n = 8483, 4511 women, and 3,972 men). Germany had the highest number of top ten female swimmers in the 50 m backstroke distance. Brazil had the highest number of top ten male swimmers in the same distance. The USA had the highest number of female and male swimmers among the top ten in the 100 m and 200 m backstroke distances. Germany and Great Britain were the only countries with swimmers in the top ten for all female backstroke distances. Brazil, the USA, Italy, and Germany were the countries that had swimmers in the top ten for all male backstroke distances. In summary, the fastest backstroke age group swimmers originated from Germany, Brazil, USA, Great Britain, and Italy, where differences between the sexes and race distances exist. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Standardised integration requirements for naturalisation: less rights and less discretion? A qualitative meta-analysis of ethnographic studies of naturalisation procedures in Europe.
- Author
-
Sredanovic, Djordje
- Subjects
DISCRETION ,ETHNOLOGY ,ORGANIZATIONAL citizenship behavior ,CITIZENSHIP ,RIGHTS ,CONTRACTING out - Abstract
Since the late 1990s and early 2000s, in what can be called an 'integrationist wave', standardised integration requirements for naturalisation have become increasingly common in Europe. To examine the impact of such measures, I combine original ethnographic data on institutions involved in the implementation of citizenship policies in Belgium and the UK with a qualitative meta-analysis of existing ethnographic studies of the implementation of citizenship policies. I show how, in addition to introducing new obstacles to naturalisation, standardised requirements have also reduced the discretion inscribed in earlier procedures, albeit not uniformly across different cases. The integrationist wave could thus be understood not simply as the introduction of restrictive notions of integration, but also as the systemisation of earlier evaluation practices. I further show signs of a more recent tendency for states to retreat from examining the integration of candidates to citizenship, outsourcing the evaluation directly or indirectly to private actors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. MULTIVARIATE ANALYSIS OF DISCRIMINATION AND SOCIAL INDICATORS IN THE WESTERN BALKANS COUNTRIES.
- Author
-
MALJICHI, Driton, ATANASOV, Petar, ADEMI, Kajdafe, and MALJICHI, Drita
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL indicators , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *SEX discrimination , *PREJUDICES , *ENVIRONMENTAL indicators ,WESTERN countries - Abstract
Discrimination as a phenomenon has an adverse effect on society and produces prejudice and negative views about a certain situation, which makes diversity seem more like a problem than a strength. The primary objective of this research project is to evaluate (a) the relationship between a respondent’s ancestry and discrimination categories, and (b) the association between discrimination based on gender, age and nationality with health and happiness. The main results stem from descriptive statistical operations and regression analysis of the tenth round of European Social Survey (ESS) data regarding the Republic of North Macedonia, Montenegro and Serbia. Our analysis shows that happiness is more stable and predictive measure when it comes to social indicators analysis. Health is also impacted more by other social and environmental indicators, such as genetic predisposition, pollution, hospital conditions, doctors’ qualifications, and stress. Roma are the most vulnerable category among all categories of discrimination in the three countries under investigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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