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‘Skylarking’: Homosexual Panic and the Death of Private Kovco
Robert E. Payne (https://openalex.org/A5001559028)
1,970
This essay analyses key examples of language used during the recent case Private Jake Kovco, first Australian solider to die Australia’s military involvement in Iraq. Kovco died not combat but his barracks room, shot head by own pistol. In particular, considers implications inquiry being told that may have accidentally himself while joking with roommates ‘in a female/homosexual way’, gun held ‘almost say this is so gay I would rather be dead’. Payne revisits Sedgwick’s concept ‘homosexual panic’ argue erasure homophobia from record incident (euphemised as ‘skylarking’) contributes normalisation an unworthy source social and political panic, precisely because ‘systemic function’ Sedgwick attributes homosexual panic reinforcing heterosexual masculine entitlement.
article
en
Panic|Entitlement (fair division)|Moral panic|Politics|Shot (pellet)|Sociology|Psychoanalysis|Psychology|Law|Criminology|Political science|Psychiatry|Anxiety|Chemistry|Mathematics|Mathematical economics|Organic chemistry
https://doi.org/10.5130/csr.v14i2.2070
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1979653793', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.5130/csr.v14i2.2070', 'mag': '1979653793'}
Iraq
C144024400
Sociology
Cultural Studies Review
‘Smelling’ diasporic: bargaining interactions and the problem of politeness
Lauren Wagner (https://openalex.org/A5004784886)
2,021
Abstract While post-migrant generation Moroccans from Europe often are able to converse competently enough in Moroccan languages bargain shops during visits Morocco, many report that they not given the ‘local’, ‘right’ prices because ‘smelled’ as outsiders. During fieldwork following these diasporic visitors several participants strategically shopped for goods with a ‘local’ friend or family member who might negotiate on their behalf price. This strategy was seen way circumvent ameliorate ways client be negatively categorized an outsider, especially terms of his her language use. Yet, examining events recorded detail indicates clients bargaining themselves competent speakers, but sometimes skillfully politely. In moments, proxy bargainers intervene when debate and tension increases do adequately perform politeness – specifically by deploying religious speech soften minimize tension. Analysis interactions how branching linguistic practice contrasts communicative skills mobile populations subtle, place-based competences, mismatch between can mark visitors.
article
en
Converse|Politeness|Negotiation|Linguistics|Sociology|Social psychology|Psychology|Gender studies|Political science|Law|Epistemology|Philosophy
https://doi.org/10.1515/applirev-2020-0070
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3210780806', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1515/applirev-2020-0070', 'mag': '3210780806'}
Morocco
C144024400
Sociology
Research Publications (Maastricht University)|Data Archiving and Networked Services (DANS)
‘Smooth Operator?’ The Propaganda Model and Moments of Crisis
Des Freedman (https://openalex.org/A5084892943)
2,009
The propaganda model is a powerful tool for explaining systematic flaws in media coverage. But does it explain the cracks and tensions within commercial that are capable of arising at moments political crisis elite disagreement? To what extent privilege flawless structuralist account power expense focusing on contradictory dynamics inside capitalist media? This article looks key moment where critical content was generated by mainstream organization: coverage run-up to Iraq War British tabloid paper, Daily Mirror 2003. It reflects consequences such resisting corporate asks whether suggests need revision or, rather, provides further validation its relevance.
article
en
Mainstream|Elite|Privilege (computing)|Relevance (law)|Moment (physics)|Power (physics)|Politics|Sociology|Media studies|Political economy|Political science|Positive economics|Economics|Law|Physics|Classical mechanics|Quantum mechanics
https://doi.org/10.16997/wpcc.124
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2168116078', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.16997/wpcc.124', 'mag': '2168116078'}
Iraq
C144024400
Sociology
Westminster papers in communication and culture|Goldsmiths (University of London)
‘Snatched by Destiny's Hand’: Obituaries and the Making of Class in Modern Egypt
Hussein Omar (https://openalex.org/A5021319014)
2,017
Abstract This article examines the newspaper obituary as a source for historians of late 19th and early 20th century Egypt. Long utilized by genealogists, these sources have been neglected historians, number reasons. Rather than read them an uncritical reflection social relations, genealogists have, ought to engage with critically way understanding how individuals imagined themselves their worlds. The argues that reading writing obituaries was one ways in which previously differentiated divided Egyptian elite began imagine itself belonging single, horizontal class. It further demonstrates can be used chart mobility context where surnames were neither heritable nor standardised. Obituaries provide unique insights into transformations independent political ruptures around state archives are organised official histories written. shows sociocultural developments (such rise Islamic modernism) reflected transformed through, obituaries. Discourses ‘good Muslim death’ inscribed indeed prescribed through this form, even it came under increasing attack at turn being un‐Islamic. Aside from opening up new methodological avenues history class, gender beyond state, emphasises importance death historical subject enquiry its own right.
article
en
Destiny (ISS module)|Politics|Elite|Reading (process)|Sociocultural evolution|Context (archaeology)|History|Aside|Sociology|State (computer science)|Subject (documents)|Social class|Genealogy|Literature|Aesthetics|Gender studies|Law|Political science|Art|Anthropology|Physics|Archaeology|Algorithm|Astronomy|Library science|Computer science
https://doi.org/10.1111/hic3.12380
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2621372352', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/hic3.12380', 'mag': '2621372352'}
Egypt
C144024400
Sociology
History Compass|Oxford University Research Archive (ORA) (University of Oxford)
‘So Much Wasted’
Patrick L. Anderson (https://openalex.org/A5026072119)
2,010
In So Much Wasted, Patrick Anderson analyzes self-starvation as a significant mode of staging political arguments across the institutional domains clinic, gallery, and prison. Homing in on those who starve themselves for various reasons cultural contexts which they do so, he examines diagnostic history anorexia nervosa, fasts staged by artists including Ana Mendieta Marina Abramović, hunger strike initiated Turkish prisoners. explores what it means prison when one performs refusal to consume strategy negation or resistance, ways that self-starvation, project aimed, however unconsciously, toward death, produces violence, suffering, disappearance, loss differently from other practices. Drawing work Martin Heidegger, Sigmund Freud, Giorgio Agamben, Peggy Phelan, others, considers how subject is refigured relation larger ideological drives, state. The ontological significance performance disappearance constitutes calls “politics morbidity,” embodied, interventional embrace mortality not destructive, but rather radically productive stagings formations subjectivity objecthood, presence absence, life death are intertwined.
book
en
Prison|Subjectivity|Ideology|Politics|Psychoanalysis|Subject (documents)|Sociology|Psychology|Criminology|Aesthetics|Art|Law|Political science|Epistemology|Philosophy|Library science|Computer science
https://doi.org/10.1215/9780822393290
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4248207869', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1215/9780822393290'}
Turkey
C144024400
Sociology
Duke University Press eBooks
‘So long, and thanks for all the fish?’ Examining the built and cultural heritage of the Jaffa port redevelopment
Nufar Avni (https://openalex.org/A5069150886)
2,017
‘Heritage’ is a term that ambiguous in the best of circumstances; however, it becomes even more so urban environments where conflicts identity and culture are pivotal, as Israel’s mixed Israeli-Palestinian cities. In this paper, I examine recent redevelopment Jaffa port, Israel. Jaffa’s ancient port has had significant role facilitating industry, commerce social ties area, recently been remodelled by city cultural entertainment hub. Through interviews with key stakeholders observations, heritage using two broad categories: built environment heritage, including practice fishing. argue while efforts have made to conserve waterfront’s resulted an artificial space does not speak local interpreted community, fishermen. The case study suggests attention should be paid delicate planners change politically culturally contested environment.
article
en
Redevelopment|Port (circuit theory)|Cultural heritage|Entertainment|Identity (music)|Industrial heritage|Cultural heritage management|Space (punctuation)|Political science|History|Sociology|Geography|Economy|Environmental ethics|Archaeology|Aesthetics|Engineering|Law|Art|Electrical engineering|Linguistics|Philosophy|Economics
https://doi.org/10.1080/13527258.2017.1317647
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2607056310', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/13527258.2017.1317647', 'mag': '2607056310'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
International Journal of Heritage Studies|Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research)
‘Social Distancing’ and Hierarchies of Belonging: The Case of Displaced Population from Donbas and Crimea
Viktoriya Sereda (https://openalex.org/A5010087992)
2,020
Following the 2013–2014 protests against then Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych, Russia’s annexation of Crimea and armed conflict in Donbas, one major challenges for society has been displacement over two million its inhabitants. In 2015, at peak displacement, Ukraine found itself among five countries world, after Yemen, Syria, Iraq Nigeria, with highest number internally displaced persons (IDPs) associated violence, it continues to rank Europe. Very little research done provide a detailed analysis how living outside country claim negotiate their belonging aftermath Revolution Dignity ensuing war. Feeling is constructed through relational process self- external categorisation depends on acknowledgement by other members chosen group, therefore this essay also examines strength regional specificity social distancing towards different groups IDPs.
article
en
Ukrainian|Internally displaced person|Dignity|Distancing|Displaced person|Political science|Population|Negotiation|Forced migration|Refugee|Gender studies|Political economy|Geography|Sociology|Law|Demography|Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)|Medicine|Disease|Pathology|Infectious disease (medical specialty)|Philosophy|Linguistics
https://doi.org/10.1080/09668136.2020.1719043
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3010681178', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/09668136.2020.1719043', 'mag': '3010681178'}
Iraq|Syria|Yemen
C144024400
Sociology
Europe-Asia Studies
‘Soldiers of Christ arise’: Religious Nationalism in the East Midlands during World War I
Stuart Bell (https://openalex.org/A5057241398)
2,014
A notable feature of the war was alacrity with which vast majority population became supportive Britain’s engagement in conflict. Most church leaders acted similarly and Church played an important role promoting moral case for declaration war. primary cause belief that Britain, whose political ecclesiastical were all children Victorian self-confidence optimism, had a special God’s purposes humanity. Once declared, this led to Britain being seen as new Israel, God indubitably on her side. Physical spiritual conflated, singing ‘Soldiers Christ, arise’ similar hymns reflected this. As number casualties grew, identification conflict ‘Holy War’ exemplified by representation fallen martyrs. The Edwardian ideals chivalry, fair-play, justice, sacrifice undergirded support Christian ethical basis. Drawing largely sources from counties Nottinghamshire Derbyshire, it is shown nationalism First World War cannot properly be understood without taking very seriously its religious dimension.
article
en
Nationalism|Sacrifice|Politics|Chivalry|Religious studies|History|Spanish Civil War|Population|Protestantism|Law|Sociology|Political science|Ancient history|Philosophy|Archaeology|Demography
https://doi.org/10.1179/0047729x14z.00000000042
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2067445816', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1179/0047729x14z.00000000042', 'mag': '2067445816'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
Midland History
‘Solid’ modernity and ‘liquid’ modernity
Paul Michael Garrett (https://openalex.org/A5090637102)
2,018
In recent years, questions related to modernity have, on occasions, dwelt the notion that we have shifted from a period of ‘solid modernity’ one ‘liquid modernity’. The main sociologist associated with this theorisation is Zygmunt Bauman. He was born in Poland 1925 but left late 1960s and arrived – after short stays Israel, Canada Australia at University Leeds, where, 1990, he an Emeritus Professor. Until his death, early 2017, Bauman exceptionally prolific, influential and, final controversial (Tester, 2004). Attention directed having worked for Poland’s intelligence services end Second World War until 1953 (Edemariam, 2007; Ramesh, 2010). Irrespective precise accuracy such reports, it impossible comprehend Bauman’s role without locating context civil war erupted following liberation Nazi rule (Tester Jacobsen, 2005). However, also criticised alleged lack scholarly detail later work. Derbyshire (2004, p 49), example, ‘theoretical impressionism’, maintaining apparent reliance ‘nothing more substantial than articles Guardian Observer colour supplements’ ‘objectionable’. Perhaps there some truth critique, ‘defence morally committed sociology’ compelling serious. Indeed, contributions should be taken into account, albeit critically, any book seeking address social theory work (see Smith, M., 2011).
chapter
en
Modernity|Nothing|Guardian|Nazism|Context (archaeology)|Spanish Civil War|Period (music)|Sociology|Psychoanalysis|Art history|History|Law|Art|Political science|Philosophy|Aesthetics|Epistemology|Politics|Psychology|Archaeology
https://doi.org/10.51952/9781447341925.ch003
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4289763548', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.51952/9781447341925.ch003'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
Policy Press eBooks
‘Someone to Talk to’: A Short-Term Tele-Therapy Intervention with Older People during the Coronavirus Pandemic
Kopel Eliezer (https://openalex.org/A5037458748)|Cigal Knei-Paz (https://openalex.org/A5058495719)|Lilach Zvi (https://openalex.org/A5035706821)|Itiya Schnall (https://openalex.org/A5048722601)|Tamar Gitlitz (https://openalex.org/A5090877287)|Belle Gavriel‐Fried (https://openalex.org/A5050960898)
2,021
Abstract The Coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) and its concomitant social isolation have affected older citizens more than any other sector of the population. This article describes theoretical practical principles a short-term tele-therapy intervention model developed implemented as pilot project during to support residents community, who faced variety needs stemming from lockdowns isolation. was directed in collaboration with faculty members university school work workers municipal services Israel, conducted by first year students part their field experience. combined Perlman’s problem solving, telephone crisis strengths-based approach. Participants indicated that they benefitted programme felt therapeutic relationships were meaningful. These outcomes reports suggest this type is successful can be applied people crises or populations, communities countries experience students.
article
en
Intervention (counseling)|Social isolation|Pandemic|Isolation (microbiology)|Social work|Population|Psychology|Crisis intervention|Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)|Gerontology|Public relations|Sociology|Medicine|Nursing|Social psychology|Political science|Disease|Psychiatry|Environmental health|Pathology|Law|Infectious disease (medical specialty)|Microbiology|Biology
https://doi.org/10.1093/bjsw/bcab206
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3208266756', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/bjsw/bcab206', 'mag': '3208266756'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
The British Journal of Social Work
‘Someone’s been sleeping in my bed!’ Parental satisfaction associated with solitary and parent–child co‐sleeping in Israeli families with young children
Daphna Dollberg (https://openalex.org/A5003078862)|Orly Shalev (https://openalex.org/A5053026449)|Pascale Chen (https://openalex.org/A5067439353)
2,010
The study examined differences in parental satisfaction associated with solitary and parent–child co‐sleeping a sample (N = 61) of Israeli families children ranging age from 12 to 48 months (M 28.04, SD 10.71). Questionnaire data regarding the family sleeping arrangement, child temperament (Infant Characteristics (ICQ)), breastfeeding history sleep control attitudes were collected. Differences reported between parents, as well mothers fathers examined. Results showed that 50 (82%) 41 (73.2%) satisfied their arrangement. However, was significantly higher compared co‐sleeping. Mothers equally History extended frequent dissatisfaction, for alike. implications these findings rearing practices are discussed.
article
en
Psychology|Breastfeeding|Developmental psychology|Temperament|Demography|Pediatrics|Personality|Medicine|Social psychology|Sociology
https://doi.org/10.1080/03004430802524966
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2014986304', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/03004430802524966', 'mag': '2014986304'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
Early Child Development and Care
‘Something from nothing’—constructing Israeli rurality
Elissa Rosenberg (https://openalex.org/A5061485067)
2,018
This paper analyses the debates regarding native versus non-native plantings in Israeli kibbutz and their role reinvention of rural landscape. Based on assumption that th...
article
en
Nothing|Rurality|Geography|Sociology|History|Aesthetics|Political science|Art|Epistemology|Philosophy|Law|Rural area
https://doi.org/10.1080/01426397.2018.1472752
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2884096175', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/01426397.2018.1472752', 'mag': '2884096175'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
Landscape Research
‘Something new begins’ – religious Zionism in the 2013 elections: from decline to political recovery
Anat Roth (https://openalex.org/A5074317218)
2,015
Habayit Hayehudi party was one of the most noteworthy phenomena general elections held in Israel 2013. In 2009 party's main predecessor only won three seats, and polls conducted first half 2012 cast doubt upon its chances passing minimum threshold. Defying these predictions, 12 seats to become fourth largest Knesset party. This article's primary claim is that success derived from leaders' ability cater aspirations needs ensuing traumatic 2005 Gaza disengagement replace feelings distress disorientation with a positive momentum.
article
en
Knesset|Disengagement theory|Politics|Zionism|Political science|Feeling|Political economy|General election|Momentum (technical analysis)|Law|Sociology|Psychology|Social psychology|Economics|Parliament|Gerontology|Medicine|Finance
https://doi.org/10.1080/13537121.2015.1008238
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2022633801', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/13537121.2015.1008238', 'mag': '2022633801'}
Gaza|Israel
C144024400
Sociology
Israel Affairs
‘Something of You that You Couldn’t Tell Me with Words’: Music, Affect, and Social Change in Gregory Maguire’s I Feel Like the Morning Star and Emma Trevayne’s Coda
Elizabeth Braithwaite (https://openalex.org/A5014753942)
2,015

 ‘Music’, laments eighteen-year-old Anthem in Emma Trevayne’s Coda (2013), ‘used to be a voice against injustice. And now it is the injustice’ (p. 89, emphasis original). The capacity of music change people’s psychological and physiological states major part how dystopian authorities post-disaster society into which was born keep control over their citizens. This ability that has influence people individually or as group also an important mechanism, however, overthrow those same authorities. Music tool for facilitating action injustice explored Gregory Maguire’s I Feel Like Morning Star (1989), from quotation title this paper taken. Various real-world examples show been closely entwined with social revolution, such British monarch James Stuart seventeenth century (see Harol 2012, p. 583), twentieth-century civil rights movement America Friedman xv), 2011 toppling President Zine el Abidine Ben Ali Tunisia, removal authority Husni Mubarak Egypt LeVine 794). Anthem’s statement about invites reader see young man’s struggle repressive Corporation long line revolutions played role. Both tonal-rhythmic patterns coded by given culture ‘music’ Elliot 2000, 85) can inspire individual bringing closer sense who they intuit themselves intrapersonal interpersonal communication at level deeper than words, positions involved challenge stultifying life- threatening dystopia live.
article
en
Injustice|Anthem|Singing|History|Media studies|Coda|Sociology|Art|Art history|Law|Aesthetics|Political science|Management|Economics
https://doi.org/10.21153/pecl2015vol23no2art1115
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4206927823', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.21153/pecl2015vol23no2art1115'}
Egypt|Tunisia
C144024400
Sociology
Papers
‘Son of Arabia, son of Nazareth, and my son’: Herut’s stand on the imposition of the Military Government 1948-1966
Maya Mark (https://openalex.org/A5029508940)
2,021
This article focuses on the campaign waged by Herut, a right-wing National-Liberal party and its leader, Menachem Begin, to abolish Military Government imposed Arab citizens of Israel between years 1948-1966. The draws multiple sources that have not yet been studied analyze Herut’s struggle for annulment Government, while placing it in broad historical political context. It shows Herut derived certain benefits campaigning Government. However, also establishes paid price campaign, suffering criticism from within camp wrestling with allegations left-wing camp. analysis illuminates liberal ideological foundations movement has held sway over four decades, affirming commitment values, belief founding father, civic equality Jews Arabs Israel.
article
en
Annulment|Politics|Law|Context (archaeology)|Ideology|Government (linguistics)|Criticism|Political science|Sociology|Political economy|History|Philosophy|Linguistics|Archaeology
https://doi.org/10.1080/00263206.2021.1965994
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4232351607', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/00263206.2021.1965994'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
Middle Eastern Studies
‘Sonic Jihad’: Black popular music and the renegotiation of Muslim identities in Post 9/11
Katy Khan (https://openalex.org/A5080571399)
2,007
ABSTRACT On 11 September, 2001 the American Twin Towers and Pentagon became targets of what President George W. Bush described as an act terrorism on people. The so-called ‘War Terror’ that ensued established a new world order in which America reserved right to militarily intervene any country pursuit terrorists. Taliban Afghanistan fell. Saddam Iraq was hanged. Muslims all over enemies and/or were perceived potential State. official media created continued reproduce images Arabs their Muslim religious identities objects attack derision. However, black popular singers have generated counter-culture, seeking provide ‘alternative viewpoints’ identities. This paper analyses lyrics Paris, one most music icon. Paris's musical compilation ‘Sonic Jihad’ has been received defying White America's blanket Islam under guise fighting ‘war terror.’ argues through music, offer critique policies victimise general particular. applies Antonio Gramsci's concept subaltern agency analysis music. aim is explore how construct cultural suggest exists liminal space characterised by resistance, but also incorporation dominant systems. Paris’ must be viewed instance used produce contestatory knowledge maps out horizons for production learning from perspective Black Muslim.
article
en
Lyrics|Subaltern|Popular music|Terrorism|Islam|Musical|Sociology|Popular culture|Gender studies|Media studies|History|Law|Political science|Literature|Art|Politics|Archaeology
https://doi.org/10.1080/18125980802298609
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2002861108', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/18125980802298609', 'mag': '2002861108'}
Iraq
C144024400|C203133693
Sociology|Terrorism
Muziki
‘Sound Health Starts from Education’: the social construction of obesity in Iranian public health discourse
Shiva Nourpanah (https://openalex.org/A5082871148)|Fiona Martin (https://openalex.org/A5088329692)
2,015
This paper presents the results of a study exploring official public health discourse surrounding obesity in Iran. Data were obtained from Iranian Government agency website responsible for health. Our contributes to knowledge about social construction issues general, and particular, developing country that subscribes sociocultural norms political economy regime proclaimed be very different those secular liberal democracies. analysis reveals noteworthy differences parallels between discourses emanating officials neoliberal West currently taking shape context. While notable lack emphasis on consumption as tool lifestyle change well distinctive anxieties regarding modernization technology characterize Iran was noted, so promotion individual behaviour change. We discuss implications these findings make recommendations further research strategies being undertaken address other non-Western contexts.
article
en
Public health|Agency (philosophy)|Health promotion|Sociocultural evolution|Political science|Context (archaeology)|Public sphere|Modernization theory|Politics|Government (linguistics)|Sociology|Economic growth|Social science|Medicine|Geography|Economics|Linguistics|Philosophy|Nursing|Archaeology|Law
https://doi.org/10.1080/09581596.2015.1123809
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2289718215', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/09581596.2015.1123809', 'mag': '2289718215'}
Iran
C138816342|C144024400|C185618831
Health promotion|Public health|Sociology
Critical Public Health
‘Sounds of War’
Asa Briggs (https://openalex.org/A5074273422)
1,995
Abstract This chapter examines the pattern of broadcasting after autumn 1940 and second winter World War 2. It discusses how responded to Germany's victory in East Africa Iraq deployment German troops North February 1941. highlights Haw-Haws' decision reveal his true identity British public as being William Joyce describes government's reaction learning Haw-Haw's identity. mentions disappointment with Broadcasting Corporation for failing provide an up-to-date war broadcast which led audience listen Haw-Haw.
chapter
en
Disappointment|German|Victory|Corporation|Broadcasting (networking)|Government (linguistics)|Identity (music)|Political science|Media studies|History|Law|Sociology|Art|Psychology|Archaeology|Politics|Computer science|Social psychology|Computer network|Linguistics|Philosophy|Aesthetics
https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780192129567.003.0012
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2505197704', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780192129567.003.0012', 'mag': '2505197704'}
Iraq
C144024400
Sociology
Oxford University Press eBooks
‘Sovereign Democracy’: Russian Response to Western Democracy Promotion in the Post-Soviet Space
Anirban Chatterjee (https://openalex.org/A5091630470)
2,023
Russia became apprehensive after the outbreak of Colour Revolutions in three former Soviet republics. Post-revolution, Russia’s foreign policy general and its outlook toward West particular transformed significantly. Russian response to Western democracy promotion more pronounced. Against this backdrop, concept Sovereign Democracy has be understood. It aims not only defend regime from meddling but also undertake a vigorous international campaign assert great power status. This article deals with meaning rationale as nuanced way. The study attempts deal following research questions: How does perceive react Revolutions? enables restructure challenge democracy-promotion agenda post-Soviet space? do political institutions historical narratives anti-Westernism allow respond Lastly, whether Putin is able reshape public opinion favor having an alternative model against dominant one favorable justify actions Georgia, Ukraine, Syria.
article
en
Democracy|Democracy promotion|Sovereignty|Political science|Political economy|Foreign policy|Politics|Public opinion|Sovereign state|Promotion (chess)|Power (physics)|Law|Sociology|Democratization|Physics|Quantum mechanics
https://doi.org/10.1177/09735984231179257
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4385494849', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/09735984231179257'}
Syria
C144024400
Sociology
Jadavpur Journal of International Relations
‘Sovereignty Entrepreneurs’ and the Production of State Power in Two Central African Borderlands
Julian Hollstegge (https://openalex.org/A5080896961)|Martin Doevenspeck (https://openalex.org/A5024486161)
2,017
This article advances a subaltern geopolitics of sovereignty production at the borders DR Congo – supposedly most fragile and South Sudan youngest state in Africa. Moving beyond critiques representing postcolonial statehood terms ‘lack’ ‘failure’, we localise ground analysis by drawing on Butler’s figure ‘petty sovereign’‘ to analyse agency border officials Congo/Rwanda Sudan/Uganda who refer as ‘sovereignty entrepreneurs’: who, tasked with managing controlling border, constant face-to-face negotiations closely linked resource competition prescribe, set decide conditions crossing. It is argued that context Sudan, where states’ claims territorial face similar internal external challenges, work entrepreneurs, characterised ability tax, threaten discipline impunity, represents form sovereign power renders state’s capacity act excessively visible its borders.
article
en
Sovereignty|State (computer science)|Geopolitics|Subaltern|Context (archaeology)|Political economy|Political science|Power (physics)|Law|Sociology|Politics|Geography|Physics|Algorithm|Quantum mechanics|Computer science|Archaeology
https://doi.org/10.1080/14650045.2017.1359160
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2748713855', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14650045.2017.1359160', 'mag': '2748713855'}
Sudan
C144024400
Sociology
Geopolitics
‘Speaking in One's Own Voice’: Representational Strategies of Alevi Turkish Migrants on Open‐Access Television in Berlin
Kira Kosnick (https://openalex.org/A5033115791)
2,004
The article takes up current scholarly and policy discussions on mass media minority participation in Western Europe, where the prerogative of letting minorities ‘speak their own voice’ occupies a central place. presents activities Turkish Alevi migrants at local open‐access television station Berlin, problematises notion ‘voice’ with regard to cultural representations programmes Internet publications. It is argued that productions employ range representational strategies can be understood only if transnational context taken into account. Confronting hegemonic discourses tied two different nation‐states which ascribe diverging negative meanings Muslims, producers are shown exploit this divergence attempts construct positive images Alevilik.
article
en
Turkish|Prerogative|Context (archaeology)|Hegemony|Sociology|Media studies|Divergence (linguistics)|Gender studies|Political science|Linguistics|Law|History|Philosophy|Archaeology|Politics
https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183042000245651
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2014017600', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183042000245651', 'mag': '2014017600'}
Turkey
C144024400
Sociology
Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
‘Spiritual Risk’: A Parental Perception of Risk for Children in the Ultra-Orthodox Jewish Community
Yochay Nadan (https://openalex.org/A5081652701)|Netanel Gemara (https://openalex.org/A5037539517)|Rivka Keesing (https://openalex.org/A5018214159)|Esther Bamberger (https://openalex.org/A5012312191)|Dorit Roer‐Strier (https://openalex.org/A5079903406)|Jill E. Korbin (https://openalex.org/A5062522581)
2,018
Abstract This article addresses child protection in close-knit religious communities. Specifically, it presents the findings of a qualitative research project that examined Ultra-Orthodox Jewish parents’ perceptions and ascribed meanings risk based on fifty in-depth interviews with parents from Israel USA. Here, we hone one key theme emerged our analysis interviews, which interviewees themselves referred to as ‘spiritual risk’. ‘Spiritual risk’ is complex construct comprising following three interrelated dimensions: (i) decline observance Torah commandments, (ii) violation socio-cultural norms rules (iii) spiritual beliefs, including sense connection G-d. In eyes parents, these dimensions constitutes child. can be consequence parental maltreatment result children adolescents moving away world leaving their community. The results this study advocate context-informed religious-sensitive prevention intervention programmes. They also highlight need include context competency training professionals working diverse
article
en
Judaism|Context (archaeology)|Psychology|Social psychology|Theme (computing)|Construct (python library)|Perception|Spirituality|Risk perception|Qualitative research|Intervention (counseling)|Developmental psychology|Sociology|Medicine|Social science|History|Alternative medicine|Psychiatry|Archaeology|Pathology|Neuroscience|Computer science|Programming language|Operating system
https://doi.org/10.1093/bjsw/bcy092
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2900754614', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/bjsw/bcy092', 'mag': '2900754614'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
The British Journal of Social Work
‘Spiritual security’ as a (meta-)political strategy to compete over regional leadership: formation of Morocco’s transnational religious policy towards Africa
Salim Hmimnat (https://openalex.org/A5075144560)
2,018
This paper examines the formation process and evolution of Morocco's transnational religious policy toward Africa. Stemming from a pragmatic vision functioning through multiple complex mechanisms tools, this tends to serve ambitious geostrategic goals that range enhancing regional influence in Africa, providing assistance several African countries need rehabilitate their own establishments back up institutional capacity-building prevent growing extremist ideologies region. Built on basis common cultural heritage doctrinal choices historically associate ‘Moroccan Islam’ ‘Sub-African Islam’, would bring Morocco about meta-political strategy revamp Morocco–Africa relations beyond selective bilateralism (‘Rabat-Dakar axis’) which has determined for decades ago. Additionally, it lead kind ‘spiritual security-based integration’ between North West Yet, endeavour, face many challenges difficulties, especially sharp competition by some Middle Eastern countries, continually seek, likewise, increase spiritual continent.
article
en
Islam|Politics|Bilateralism|Ideology|Foreign policy|Political science|Face (sociological concept)|Political economy|Development economics|Sociology|Multilateralism|Geography|Law|Economics|Social science|Archaeology
https://doi.org/10.1080/13629387.2018.1544073
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2901617713', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/13629387.2018.1544073', 'mag': '2901617713'}
Morocco
C144024400|C47768531
Development economics|Sociology
Journal of North African Studies
‘Squealing like a pig’
Linnie Blake (https://openalex.org/A5000262872)
2,013
This chapter explores the remarkable cinematic resurgence of hillbilly horror in years since 9/11. For as George W. Bush pits ostensible civilisation United States (US) against oriental barbarism terrorist threat, providing himself process with justification for both invasion Afghanistan and Iraq introduction a range ‘homeland security’ measures that have restricted US civil liberties an effectiveness would made Nixon proud, new generation film makers brought next hillbillies to cinema screens. Engaging traumatic inheritance 9/11 though horror, like Trauma Studies itself, is concerned complex relation between knowing not truth, seeing wounds inflicted on national psyche by recent events. later emphasizes sub-genre, comes encapsulate all archaic disorder, medieval darkness, anti-classical savagery pantheistic paganism American other threat alike while making amply apparent simultaneously repressive oppressive qualities everyday civilised life.
chapter
en
Barbarism|Psyche|Homeland|Terrorism|Civilization|History|Literature|Art|Aesthetics|Law|Philosophy|Politics|Political science|Archaeology|Epistemology
https://doi.org/10.7765/9781847791627.00014
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2245690140', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.7765/9781847791627.00014', 'mag': '2245690140'}
Iraq
C203133693
Terrorism
Manchester University Press eBooks
‘Stand by your man’ or: How feminism was framed in the DSK affair
Kathy Davis (https://openalex.org/A5044536248)
2,012
Most of us get pulled into public debates at one time or another, perhaps more often than we would like. It can be tedious having to respond pesky reporters looking for quickand-dirty sound bites on questions that you feel you’ve already answered a million times before. On the other hand, there may when ask yourself why no seems interested in addressing those issues which are still so urgent. And, course, all familiar with irritation accompanies spokeswomen who mobilized by media represent ‘voice feminism’ concerning thought ‘relevant women’ (sexuality and children, but never economic crisis NATO intervention Libya). Nevertheless, commitment feminism will probably cannot afford miss chance provide critical perspective relevant world outside academy. Needless say, this is an endeavour fraught problems pitfalls. A recent example how difficult it feminists engage real-life concerns through so-called DSK affair former IMF leader contender presidency France, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, was accused attempting rape West African immigrant chamber maid luxury hotel New York City. While case has received considerable attention across globe, seem odd come back it. After all, as I write this, US district attorney dismissed charges against Strauss-Kahn based abysmal lack credibility accuser. So, devote editorial longer viewed straightforward sexual violence women even class, race gender (in)justice, despite obvious power inequalities embedded? The extensive coverage Europe, where responses were mixed. How could such important powerful politician stupid? Another drearily story (shades Bill Clinton, Ruud Lubbers Roman Polanski) man ‘zipper problem’. ‘We’ – here discussion took predictably European slant also little sceptical about ‘puritanism’ Americans who, after have always made big deal out politicians’ proclivities. Where respect individual privacy value highly? ‘perp walk’ marched off jail handcuffs before flashing 425888 EJWXXX10.1177/1350506811425888DavisEuropean Journal Women’s Studies
article
en
Feminism|Sociology|Political science|Gender studies|Aesthetics|Art
https://doi.org/10.1177/1350506811425888
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2066185439', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/1350506811425888', 'mag': '2066185439'}
Libya
C144024400
Sociology
European Journal of Women's Studies
‘State Feminism' dan Perjuangan Wanita di Tunisia Pasca Arab Spring 2011
Mohd Irwan Syazli Saidin (https://openalex.org/A5018616372)|Nur Amira Alfitri (https://openalex.org/A5002771533)
2,020
Over the last decade, Arab Spring phenomenon in Middle East and North Africa has brought significant transformation towards Tunisia’s political landscape. During 14 days of street protest, Tunisian women have played critical roles assisting their male counterparts securing ultime goal revolution – regime change. This article argues that after 2011 revolution, new government gradually adopted principal idea state feminism, which emphasizes on role ruling via affirmative action supporting agenda women’s rights. In so doing, this examines connection between feminism plight struggles Tunisia and, looks into impact top down polices, approaches improving status women. concludes post revolutionary era experienced a trajectory social freedom,the country recorded spike increase number active female lawmakers, executives, politicians, electoral candidates emergence human right groups, gender activists feminist movements. All these ‘women’s actors’ directly involved process drafting constitution, resulted acknowlegdement rights protection 46 2014 Nobel Peace Price Award 2015.
article
en
Feminism|State (computer science)|Government (linguistics)|Politics|Middle East|Gender studies|Political science|Constitution|Sociology|Political economy|Law|Linguistics|Philosophy|Algorithm|Computer science
https://doi.org/10.24035/ijit.18.2020.181
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3120489335', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.24035/ijit.18.2020.181', 'mag': '3120489335'}
Tunisia
C144024400
Sociology
International journal of Islamic thought|UKM Journal Article Repository (Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia)
‘State of exception’ or ‘state in exile’? The fallacy of appropriating Agamben on Palestinian refugee camps
Dag Tuastad (https://openalex.org/A5023542805)
2,016
To refer to Palestinian refugee camps as states of exception, appropriating the paradigm Giorgio Agamben, is definitely tempting. Agamben argues that in times crisis, individual rights citizens are diminished and entire categories people kept outside political system. Nevertheless, there flaws applying Agamben’s perspective on camps. It acquits camp residents from autonomy over their own agency. Historically, Lebanon, experienced an almost limitless access free organisation. But this has not been converted into development representative, legitimate structures.
article
en
State of exception|Refugee|Politics|Palestinian refugees|State (computer science)|Autonomy|Agency (philosophy)|Fallacy|Political science|Palestine|Law|Perspective (graphical)|Sociology|Political economy|Social science|History|Philosophy|Epistemology|Ancient history|Algorithm|Computer science|Artificial intelligence
https://doi.org/10.1080/01436597.2016.1256765
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2564741023', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/01436597.2016.1256765', 'mag': '2564741023'}
Lebanon
C144024400
Sociology
Third World Quarterly|Duo Research Archive (University of Oslo)
‘States’ of Scarcity: Water, Space, and Identity Politics in Israel, 1948–59
Samer Alatout (https://openalex.org/A5035583714)
2,008
Between 1948 and 1959, perceptions of Israeli water resources changed dramatically from a strong belief in abundance the prestate period to an equally unequivocal scarcity after 1959. This paper tells story how Israel came be constructed as scarce. On substantive level, dismantling network emergence, instead, centralization, which helped construct all following: resource ‘fact’; centralized policy-making institutions most ‘efficient’; technologies ‘appropriate’; national space only source identity; scale management ‘necessary’; state ‘legitimate’; legal precedents for use apparatus surveillance, discipline, control over resources; and, consequently, form citizenship that is seen at once heroic disciplined. theoretical this I argue ontological distinction often assumed between scientific (eg scarcity) political nation-state) fields practice exaggerated, especially literature on politics Israel. further demonstrate technoscientific debates about availability, efficient its utilization, appropriate are constitutive relations power government themselves implicated construction style government.
article
en
Scarcity|Water scarcity|Politics|Government (linguistics)|State (computer science)|Identity (music)|Water resources|Political economy|Political science|Construct (python library)|Sociology|Public administration|Business|Economics|Law|Market economy|Ecology|Linguistics|Philosophy|Physics|Algorithm|Computer science|Acoustics|Biology|Programming language
https://doi.org/10.1068/d1106
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2035881117', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1068/d1106', 'mag': '2035881117'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
‘Stay Calm and Carry On?’ Adventurers in the Neighborhood of Joy and Machetes
Sébastien Bachelet (https://openalex.org/A5010863144)
2,014
Abstract “Adventurers” is the nickname that “irregular” sub‐Saharan migrants—in Morocco and beyond—have given to themselves. Heroic discourses surrounding migrants’ journeys their exploits towards Fortress Europe are antithesis of what Hage (2009) describes as “heroism stuckedness”; a conservative governmentality which delegitimizes impatience disruption in permanent time crisis. “Boatpeople,” “illegal migrants,” who do not “wait out” crisis, perceived hordes savages assaulting Europe. This photo‐essay aims depict liminality complex agency marginal neighborhood Morocco, Douar Hajja. A poor over‐crowded part Rabat, Hajja where im/mobility grounded result Europe's externalization border controls. It space constant (re)making establishment fully realized they wait decide whether stay go on, or return. Though legally materially marginalized, migrants engage socio‐political activities: organize life collective houses, open businesses, set up political organizations.
article
en
Liminality|Antithesis|Politics|Adventure|Agency (philosophy)|Sociology|Political science|Political economy|History|Law|Art|Social science|Literature|Anthropology|Art history
https://doi.org/10.1002/j.sda2.20140401.0013
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2942445150', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1002/j.sda2.20140401.0013', 'mag': '2942445150'}
Morocco
C144024400
Sociology
Student anthropologist|Edinburgh Research Explorer (University of Edinburgh)
‘Staying-In’ or ‘Breaking-Out’? How Immigrant Entrepreneurs (do not) Enter Mainstream Markets
Michael Parzer (https://openalex.org/A5035221098)
2,016
This article examines how immigrant entrepreneurs ‘break-out’ of their reliance on co-ethnic markets by becoming attractive to customers beyond own ethnic community. So far, break-out has been considered mainly an economically driven and consciously implemented strategy. By drawing upon interviews with small business owners in the Turkish food retailing sector Vienna, as well crowd-sourced reviews about businesses online platforms, I want complement this view two aspects: First, there is considerable evidence that entrepreneurs’ market orientation shaped social embeddedness which expressed referring contradictory contexts different expectations – not only those community but also majority Second, using example entrepreneur’s urban neighbourhood, it suggested solely result a deliberately adopted strategy, rather outcome factors far control individual entrepreneur.
review
en
Embeddedness|Immigration|Mainstream|Ethnic group|Entrepreneurship|Turkish|Neighbourhood (mathematics)|Ethnic community|Business|Marketing|Sociology|Public relations|Political science|Social science|Law|Mathematical analysis|Linguistics|Philosophy|Mathematics|Finance|Anthropology
https://doi.org/10.3790/soc.66.2.159
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2605877024', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.3790/soc.66.2.159', 'mag': '2605877024'}
Turkey
C144024400
Sociology
Sociologus
‘Stepbrothers from the Middle East’: negotiations of racial identity among Jewish-Israeli immigrants in Toronto
Tamir Arviv (https://openalex.org/A5044046118)
2,017
This paper explores the complex negotiations of racial identity experienced on migration. Working from a series 48 interviews with racially diverse Israeli immigrants to Toronto, and drawing literature assimilated Canadian-born Jewish population, I contrast histories Canadian Jews – groups whose identities have historically crossed intersections race, ethnicity religion. By exploring participants’ accounts being differently whitened blackened in Israel their own interpretations responses these processes, expose spatial contingencies hierarchies, meanings identifications. also introduce under-studied Mizrahi/Sephardi community who are demographically prevalent yet largely unknown North America, subject ethno-cultural tensions both spaces into discussions Jewishness.
article
en
Judaism|Immigration|Ethnic group|Gender studies|Negotiation|Identity (music)|Sociology|Population|Race (biology)|Ethnology|Anthropology|History|Demography|Social science|Physics|Archaeology|Acoustics
https://doi.org/10.1080/14649365.2017.1323344
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2611233677', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14649365.2017.1323344', 'mag': '2611233677'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
Social & Cultural Geography
‘Still Lives’
Ella Parry Davies (https://openalex.org/A5035994680)
2,020
This chapter discusses an artistic project devised amidst conditions of transnational displacement in the Middle East, and through it reflects on role played by care cooperation politics art making. Dima el Mabsout’s Fleeing Forgetting (2015) addressed transformation urban spaces Lebanon new populations Syrian refugees, resulted a collection almost two hundred photographs taken refugee children Beirut. The explores order to think performances that subtended this project, broader questions these pose about scholarship migration. While visual analysis images may celebrate their qualities as objects, perceptual coordinates offered performance emphasise social aesthetic perform depend upon. thus problematises historical tendency some theory associate migration with positively valenced notions transgression liminality conversely stillness stasis unfreedom. proposes instead ‘care-fully’, recognising struggles for continuity interdependence within specific experiences displacement.
chapter
en
Liminality|Scholarship|Refugee|Forgetting|Displacement (psychology)|Sociology|Politics|Aesthetics|Gender studies|Political science|Art|Psychology|Law|Psychoanalysis|Cognitive psychology
https://doi.org/10.7765/9781526146816.00019
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3165602976', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.7765/9781526146816.00019', 'mag': '3165602976'}
Lebanon|Syria
C144024400
Sociology
Manchester University Press eBooks
‘Stir Over a Low Flame’
Hanna Yablonka (https://openalex.org/A5026227498)
1,999
What were the conditions under which immigrant Holocaust survivors integrated into Israeli society? An answer to this requires an analysis of discrepancy between ideology behind issue and ways in immigrants accepted reality. The fact that they Jewish meant admitted country by law; ideologically too, welcomed — general attitude was it their right return land forefathers. No doubt existed as loyalty state Israel, although no definition made form take. Moreover, for strategic political reasons, desperate need new immigrants. Leaders Yishuv well public opinion formers constantly mentioned importance immigration stressed at head nation’s agenda. population on whole agreed.1
chapter
en
Loyalty|Immigration|Ideology|Judaism|Politics|The Holocaust|Political science|Public opinion|State (computer science)|Population|Law|Political economy|Sociology|History|Demography|Archaeology|Algorithm|Computer science
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-14152-4_6
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2486496175', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-14152-4_6', 'mag': '2486496175'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
Palgrave Macmillan UK eBooks
‘Stop, Revive, Survive’
Ghil’ad Zuckermann (https://openalex.org/A5056310254)
2,020
This chapter introduces revivalistics, a new trans-disciplinary field of enquiry, and explores lessons from Israeli that are applicable to the reclamation empowerment Aboriginal languages in Australia elsewhere. Any language reawakening should involve long period thoroughly observing, carefully listening custodians, learning, mapping characterizing specific Indigenous community. Only then can one inspire assist. That said, this proposes there linguistic constraints (as seen Hebrew reclamation) all revival attempts. Mastering them would be useful endangered languages, particularly revival. The practical tool: quadrilateral Language Revival Diamond (LARD), featuring owners, linguistics, education, public sphere. Each these four core quadrants is necessary reviving any language.
chapter
en
Custodians|Indigenous|Empowerment|Linguistics|Sociology|Political science|Engineering|Law|Philosophy|Ecology|Biology
https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199812776.003.0006
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3036614218', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199812776.003.0006', 'mag': '3036614218'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
‘Strangely Easy to Obtain’: Canadian Passport Security, 1933–73
Steven Hewitt (https://openalex.org/A5032273456)
2,008
Since December 1999 when an Algerian member of Al Qaeda was arrested at the US border carrying a fraudulently obtained Canadian passport, issue passport security has been widely discussed. However, controversy is nothing new. This article explores long history misuses passports, which began in early 1930s, and efforts by government to combat these abuses. These involved considerable debate within government, specifically between Royal Mounted Police Department External Affairs, over what measures were acceptable. Ultimately, discussions around have relevance debates present biometric passports identity cards.
article
en
Government (linguistics)|Nothing|Political science|National security|Law|Relevance (law)|Al qaeda|Public administration|Terrorism|Philosophy|Linguistics|Epistemology
https://doi.org/10.1080/02684520802137014
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1986030307', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/02684520802137014', 'mag': '1986030307'}
Algeria
C203133693
Terrorism
Intelligence & National Security
‘Strangers in the City?’
Élisabeth Crouzet-Pavan (https://openalex.org/A5086918562)
2,021
Recent publications on Venice have started looking at the history of migration from Dalmatia, Albania and Greece to Venice. The migrants came Balkans ravaged by wars poverty metropolis which needed men for its army rowers galleys. increased influx began in decade between 1430 1440 due Turkish threat. This chapter concerns itself with manner affected urban tissue fifteenth century. Which parts were inhabited migrant groups what can this tell us about socio-anthropological makeup city? After all, impact was demographic socio-economic. More specifically, foundation particular confraternities be linked ethnic groups. demonstrates cult certain saints devotional practices including translation relics affirmed as Mediterranean powerhouse.
chapter
en
Fifteenth|Turkish|Cult|Ethnic group|Ancient history|Poverty|Geography|History|Ethnology|Political science|Law|Philosophy|Linguistics
https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108886987.019
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3142748035', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108886987.019', 'mag': '3142748035'}
Turkey
C189326681
Poverty
Cambridge University Press eBooks
‘Strategic (dis)obedience’: Female entrepreneurs reflecting on and acting upon patriarchal practices
Salvador Barragán (https://openalex.org/A5032792986)|Murat Şakir Eroğul (https://openalex.org/A5080717429)|Caroline Essers (https://openalex.org/A5066939127)
2,018
It has been suggested that entrepreneurship is a form of emancipation and social change for women. We adopt more comprehensive view by considering micro‐emancipation at the level both agency identity women entrepreneurs in patriarchal Islamic societies. borrow from organization studies literature to draw on notions dynamic ongoing process between dominators (i.e., men family) dominated entrepreneurs). In this active obedience are intertwined. For purpose, we contextualize study United Arab Emirates, where family regulate women's identity. The not only gatekeepers societal culture, but also potential supporters navigate arrangements. By adopting an interpretive approach, analyse narratives Emirati female their early stages becoming entrepreneur who engage strategic (dis)obedience. article contributes context gender entrepreneurship.
article
en
Emancipation|Obedience|Agency (philosophy)|Sociology|Entrepreneurship|Gender studies|Identity (music)|Context (archaeology)|Narrative|Patriarchy|Political science|Social science|Law|Politics|Paleontology|Linguistics|Philosophy|Biology|Physics|Acoustics
https://doi.org/10.1111/gwao.12258
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2907374093', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/gwao.12258', 'mag': '2907374093'}
United Arab Emirates
C144024400|C2781153986
Emancipation|Sociology
Gender, Work & Organization
‘Street-Level Justifications’: Service Providers Mediating Refugee Reception in the Urban Context of Istanbul
Ayşen Üstübici (https://openalex.org/A5057406922)
2,020
Abstract This article discusses the mediating role of service providers between citizens and refugee reception policies. Based on an analysis interviews with local government officials NGO workers observations in two districts Istanbul, I examine ‘street-level justifications’ that use to counter anti-refugee resentments expressed by citizens. The suggests as street-level bureaucrats endeavour justify their work refugees through three types discursive strategies; cultural similarity, call for empathy, pragmatic explanations. Such strategies constantly re-defining us them, bear implications social cohesion. offers a meso-level policies Turkish context highlights limits initial hospitality. findings have wider other contexts where settlement displaced or migrant populations is rather nascent, are top-down bureaucratic structures mediate among populations, citizens, resources available them.
article
en
Refugee|Hospitality|Context (archaeology)|Bureaucracy|Sociology|Service provider|Immigration|Government (linguistics)|Public relations|Empathy|Settlement (finance)|Political science|Service (business)|Politics|Tourism|Social psychology|Business|Law|Geography|Psychology|Linguistics|Philosophy|Archaeology|Marketing|Finance|Payment
https://doi.org/10.1093/jrs/feaa061
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3092517997', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/jrs/feaa061', 'mag': '3092517997'}
Turkey
C144024400
Sociology
Journal of Refugee Studies
‘Street-level’ agents operating beyond ‘remote control’: how overseas liaison officers and foreign state officials shape UK extraterritorial migration management
Nicole Ostrand (https://openalex.org/A5008345609)|Paul Statham (https://openalex.org/A5031839830)
2,020
ABSTRACTExtraterritorial migration management perspectives on how states try to enforce immigration controls beyond their juridical borders are strongly influenced by ‘remote control’ metaphors. This is conceptually limited and outdated. Most research fails sufficiently acknowledge agency a destination state's officials acting abroad, foreign officials, when evaluating extraterritorial measures ‘outcomes’. We study UK liaison officers specifically, they see efforts implement control through interactions with state officials. Our approach links inter-state relations the social world of on-the-ground ‘street-level’ between abroad counterparts. The empirical analysis draws from original interviews official sources. compare factors accounting for UK's activities perceived ‘outcomes’ across USA, France, Thailand, Egypt Ghana. Findings show results very long chain decisions actions, actors, operating at different institutional-levels, uncontrollable local circumstances abroad. Realising goals depends officers’ agency, ‘soft power’ over officials’ willingness cooperate. Meanwhile ‘feedbacks’ importantly influence Home Office decision-making. Against simplistic one-way causality control’, this control’.
article
en
Agency (philosophy)|Immigration|State (computer science)|Control (management)|Political science|Public relations|Public administration|Business|Sociology|Law|Economics|Management|Social science|Algorithm|Computer science
https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183x.2020.1782729
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3037783861', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183x.2020.1782729', 'mag': '3037783861'}
Egypt
C144024400
Sociology
Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies|Sussex Research Online (University of Sussex)
‘Strengthening cooperation with external partners: Looking for a common response to the phenomenon of foreign terrorist fighters’
Christiane Höhn (https://openalex.org/A5046627777)
2,023
Addressing the challenge of foreign terrorist fighters (FTFs) and their affiliates who travelled to Syria Iraq join Da'esh other groups has been a priority for EU Counter-Terrorism Coordinator since 2013, both within internationally. This article sets out comprehensive cooperation with international partners on fighters: It covers action related camps prisons in North East where FTFs family members are held, accountability affiliates, EU’s neighbourhood: Turkey, Western Balkans Middle Africa regions, multilateral engagement United Nations fora as well addressing Islamist extremist ideology which is contributing radicalization process. From practitioner's perspective, provides policy framework its evolution, examples capacity building initiatives.
article
en
Terrorism|Political science|Radicalization|Ideology|Accountability|Middle East|Political economy|European Neighbourhood Policy|Democracy promotion|Public administration|Law|Democracy|Politics|Sociology|Democratization
https://doi.org/10.1177/20322844231170336
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4378652589', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/20322844231170336'}
Iraq|Syria|Turkey
C144024400|C203133693
Sociology|Terrorism
New Journal of European Criminal Law
‘Stretching’ Marxism in the Postcolonial World
Sara Salem (https://openalex.org/A5025612430)
2,019
Abstract This article focuses on Egypt’s moment of decolonisation in order to explore some the productive tensions between Marxism, Frantz Fanon’s work, and postcolonial contexts. Through a reading attempts at independent industrialisation decolonising ‘the international’, uses invitation ‘stretch Marxism’ as way understanding particularities capitalism colonial world. It is posited that events such across world have been central evolution global capitalism, should be centred within Marxist analyses politics. further argued these moments can shed light contradictions nationalism, sovereignty independence, ways which anticolonialism places like Egypt ultimately reproduced, rather than challenged, capitalism.
article
en
Capitalism|Decolonization|Marxist philosophy|Colonialism|Nationalism|Sovereignty|Independence (probability theory)|Politics|Reading (process)|Sociology|Political science|Law|Statistics|Mathematics
https://doi.org/10.1163/1569206x-00001840
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2995058245', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1163/1569206x-00001840', 'mag': '2995058245'}
Egypt
C144024400
Sociology
Historical Materialism|London School of Economics and Political Science Research Online (London School of Economics and Political Science)
‘Stronger than men and braver than knights’: women and the pilgrimages to Jerusalem and Rome in the later middle ages
Leigh Ann Craig (https://openalex.org/A5050177291)
2,003
Abstract Women who participated in the long-distance pilgrimages to Jerusalem and Rome fourteenth fifteenth centuries faced a variety of economic social barriers. Based upon pilgrimage narratives Margery Kempe, Felix Fabri, others, this article examines strategies women used overcome those barriers both before during journey. While resistance women’s was strong, part, because they did not fit their quotidian roles as caregivers, it nevertheless aspects same normative that appealed order justify shield themselves from censure journeys. Keywords: Medieval womenPilgrimageJerusalemRome Notes 1 Geoffrey Chaucer, The Canterbury tales. Nine tales general prologue, ed. V. A. Kolve Gendong Olson (New York, 1989), 120-21, lines 655-58: … ‘Whoso buildeth his hous al salwes,/ And priketh blinde hors over falwes,/ suffreth wyf go seken halwes,/ Is worthy been hanged on galwes!’ Modern translation is author’s own. 2 On topic spiritually dangerous later middle ages, see J. Sumption, Pilgrimage. An image medieval religion (Totowa, N. J.,1975), chaps 14–15; C. Zacher, Curiosity pilgrimage. literature discovery fourteenth-century England (Baltimore, 1976), 1–3. 3 Pilgrimage, 262; S. Signe Morrison, pilgrims late England. Private piety public performance 2000), 108–117; L. Craig, ‘Wandering holy matrons: 1300–1500 E’. (Ph.D. diss., Ohio State University, 2001), chap. 2. 4 B. Ward, Miracles mind. Theory, record, event, 1000-1215 (London, 1982), 124. 5 M. Bennett, Introduction Sisters workers E. Clark, F. O’Barr, Vilen Westphal-Wihl (Chicago, 6. 6 Pilgrimage 262, suggests ‘is possible at close ages formed majority visitors many shrines;’ Brefeld, A guidebook for ages. case computer-aided textual criticism (Hilversum, 1994), 15, notes figure one-quarter one-third female has suggested; matrons’ 134, noted comprised anywhere two-thirds suppliants miracle collections she examined. 7 15. 8 P. Halpin, ‘Anglo-Saxon pilgrimage’, Anglo-Norman studies XIX. Proceedings Battle Conference (Suffolk, UK, 1996), 96–122. 9 G. Constable, ‘Opposition ages’, Studia Gratiana Melanges Fransen I (Rome, 127, 131. 10 This translation, all in-text here, ‘The wanderings Fabri’, trans. Aubrey Stewart, library Palestine Pilgrims’ Text Society vols. 7–10 1971), 7–8, 395. Latin text available ‘Evagatorium Terrae Sanctae, Arabiae et Aegypti peregrinationem’, by D. Hassler, Bibliothek des Literarischen Vereins Stuttgart vols I–III (Stuttgart, 1843), vol. II, 322: Juxta eandem domum erat alia curia magna, qua manere solebant foeminae peregrinae, quae viris hospitali magno cohabitare minime permittebantur. 11 Wanderings 7/8, 528; also Evagatorium 418–419. 12 Capgrave, Ye Solace Pilgrimes. description Rome, circa A.D. 1450, an Austin Friar King’s Lynn, C.A. Mills 1911), 77. 13 For example, da Rivolta, Prediche del Beato Fra Giordano Rivalto dell’Ordine dè Predicatori (Florence, 1739), 253, mocks sermon Luke 18:9–14; Pilgrimes, 77, discusses excessive desire pilgrims. 14 See, 260–63; Webb, Pilgrims west 1999), 236–8. 15 Anglo-Saxon pilgrimage, 97. 16 K. Utterback, vision becomes reality. Holy Land’, travelers Land, LeBeau Mor (Omaha, 159–68. 17 18 Book Staley 2001); Middle English Brown Meech (London: Early Society, 1940). 19 Liber Celestis St. Bridget Sweden, only other narrative dictated woman, does contain information about Bridget’s participation rituals, her interactions with fellow-pilgrims, or experiences travel; instead, records visions had while Jerusalem. Because this, sheds little light are addressed here. In words editor, ‘Most what we know Saint learn divine speakers: messages apply most terms personal situation’. R. Ellis, introduction 1, Ellis (Oxford, 1987), xiv. 20 Hirsch, ‘Author scribe Kempe’, Medium Aevum 44 (1975), 145–150. 21 Staley, Kempe’s dissenting fictions (University Park, Penn., 1994). 22 Stone, prose style. Kempe Julian Norwich (The Hague, 1970); Lochrie, Kempe. marginal woman’s quest literary authority’, Journal Renaissance Studies 16, no. (1986), 33–56. 23 Wandering’, trans 7–10; Evagatorium, I–III. H. Prescott discussed journeys depth Land century 1954) Once Sinai. further Fabri 1957). 24 138–40. 25 123–46, esp. 135–6. 26 171. 27 Mitchell, ‘Women canon law’, in: western European culture, Mitchell 152. 28 29 pilgrims’ uniform, 172–73; version initial ceremony, Wickham Legg, ed., Sarum Missal edited three early manuscripts 1969), 452. 30 Brundage. ‘Widows disadvantaged persons Upon my husband’s death. Widows histories Europe, Mirrer (Ann Arbor, 1992), 193–206, 194. 31 Brundage, law crusader (Madison, 12–15. 32 170. 33 205. 34 Book, trans., Chapter 6; Meech, 6: …sche maryed worschepful burgeys…. 35 11; 31. 36 166; 149: Inter quos quidam Flandrensis cum sua uxore intrans galeam. 37 31, 58; 79. 38 41; 56. 39 40 Wade Labarge, small sound trumpet. life (Boston, 1986), 33–35. 41 238. 42 Treatise written Italian friar Francesco Suriano, composed dialogue between himself sister, nun. it, he describes her, tells ‘Great your fervour, beloved burning these places merit which do believe you deprived, cannot them comes impossibility (emphasis mine)’. Theophilus Bellorini Eugene Hoade (1949; rpr. Jerusalem, 1983), 110. commented difficulties fears obtaining permission, well; Wanderings, 7, 48–9. Also 43 ‘Sexual equality sources history, T. Rosenthal (Athens, Georgia, 1990), 67. 26, 44–45; 60: Whan tyme cam þat þis creatur xuld vysiten þo placys wher owyr Lord whyk & ded, sche be reuelacyon 3erys a-forn, preyd þe parysch preste town þer dwellyng sey hir pulpyt þat, yf any man er woman cleymyd dette hosband þei come speke went, help God, xulde makyn a-seth ech hem schuldyn heldyn content. so dede. Sythen toke leue ankyr… 45 Chap. 11, 19; 24: Margery, grawnt me desyr, schal 3ow 3owr desyr. My first desyr xal lyn style to-gedyr o bed han be-for; secunde 3e pay dettys Iherusalem; thrydde etyn drynkyn Fryday wer wont don. 46 19–20; 24. 47 20; 25: Sere, lyke 3ow, haue Grawntyth komyn bed, qwyte Ierusalem. makyth body fre God neuyr make no chalengyng askyn dett matrimony aftyr day whyl leuyn, byddyng. 48 Bynum, feast fast. religious significance food (Berkeley, 220. 49 workers, 50 pilgrims, 46. 51 150. 52 persons’, passim. 53 brief summaries freedoms complications widowhood Mirror, death, 1–17; Lebarge, 164–166. 54 Estow, chronicles Castile’, 153–168, 153. 55 45–46. 56 31: quaedam etiam mulieres, vetulae, devotae matronae divites…. 57 Wandering 26; 43: Videntes autem antiquae vetulae necessitatem nostram…. 58 Pierre-André Sigal, L’homme le dans la France médiévale (XIe-XIIe siècle) (Paris, 1985), 118: Avant ou au cours du voyage, les pèlerins cherchiant à se grouper. 59 See 189–90. 60 31–2: Hoc quidem superbi nobiles aegere ferentes cogitabant navem, transducendae essent illae matronae, non velle ascendere, indignum aestimantes, vetularum consortio ad militiam suscipiendam pergere. Et hoc conabantur illi omnes nos inducere, ne navem illam conduceremus, quam venturae erant. Sed alii milites prudentiores conscientiosi contradicebant superbis illis, gaudebant de poenitentia illarum matronarum, sperantes, quod propter devotionem earum navigatio nostra salubrior fieret. Unde causam orta fuit inter illos implacabilis inimicitia, duravit, quousque Deus superbos medio tulit. Manserunt nobiscum, per mare intrando exuendo. 61 Guidebook 21. 62 Miratus fui audaciam vetularum, ipsas prae senio ferre vix poterat, tamen fragilitatis propriae oblitae, amore illius sanctae terrae consortium militium juvenum ingerebant, laborem fortium virorum subibant. 63 149–150: Ad ingressum mulieris multi turbati fuerunt, pro eo, ipsa sola galea, quia nulla mulier nobiscum…Nec aliquis cui ingressus displicaret, una muliercula tot generosos viros commorari deberet, signanter satis vaga curiosa primo aspectu videretur; …Discurrebat enim continue curiosissima erat, omnia videre aut audire volens, multum odiosam faciebat. 64 153; 137: Mulieres peregrinae accedunt mensam communem sed manuent suis stantiis, ibi manducant, dormiunt. 65 15; 138: Vix potest peregrinus movere sine contactu collateralis; locus est clausus caldissimus ac grossis vaporibus diversis plenus. 66 W. Wey, itineraries William Badinel 1867), 4: ye goo galey yowre covenaunte wyth patrone bytyme, chese yow place seyd overest stage; lawyest under hyt ys ryght smoleryng hote stynking. (Modern own). 67 167; 150: Omnibus spina oculis haec foemina. 68 Nam vero dico, VII quibus prima vice transfretavi, quietiores fuerunt rarius videbantur, illa unica anus. 69 150; 134–135: Ideo aliqui statim ut mensa surgunt, ascendunt, galeam inquirunt, ubi melius vendatur vinum, ponunt, totem diem juxta vinem deducunt…alii clamant ex jucunditate…Alii funes currunt; saltant; suam fortitudinem probant levando onera, vel alias faciendo animosa. 70 161; 145: Caveat galeotis incipientibus currere labores impedimentum cursus praebeat, eum, si nobilis esset, episcopus, trudunt deorsum dejiciunt, super eumque procurrunt, navales sunt celerrimi ignei, nec capiunt moram. 71 263. 72 solace pilgrimes, 77: Al þoo whech rome knowe weel passing desirous touch kisse euery relik. Now uery sothfastnesse þese forbode rith smale quantite. uphap sum prees eþer seknesse child hath grete perel þere cause entre houses suppose. own.) 73 71–2. 74 75 Tafur, Travels adventures, 1435–1439, Letts 1926), 39. 76 n. 1: . …und deweil ob dem altar stund und sy ansach mit poser begir, eging yr die nature; das sicht auf merbelstein dy fraw ist gestanden. 77 Crawford, ‘Attitudes menstruation seventeenth-century England’, Past Present 91 (1981), 47–73, 60. 78 Jusserand, wayfaring Tomlin Smith 1950), 217–218. 79 527–28; 418–19: …primi clamabant sequentium importunitatem, ultimi praecedentium tarditatem, medii pressuram utrorumque clamabant…et exportavimus scutellis flasconibus nostris aquam sacram his, qui hiatum ingredi poterant; praedictas pressures mulieres sociae nostrae, introiverunt, quiete pace foris sedentes manserunt devotione…. 80 190; 169: extra civitatem quandum (sic) ecclesiam evagata fuerat, existimans, recedere. Die nemo tristis absentia, nisi maritus ejus, feceret ultra modum odiosum fatuis locutionibus curiosis indagationibus rerum inutilium. 81 201; 178: De cujus ingressu parvum gaudium erat. Compatiebur misellae angustias ejus recessu navis perpessas. 82 Guylforde, pylgrymage Sir Richarde Guylforde knyght controuler unto our soveraygne lorde kynge Henry Vii howe went servaunts company towardes Jherusalem (n.p.,1511), 91. 83 128; 119. 84 56: …et mansimus dominae praegnantis gravidae refocillationem, valde fuerat illis tempestatibus infirmata; mirum mortua simul foetu tantis terroribus. 85 27, 47; 64: …not-wythstondyng behestyd maystres sekyrd forsake nede. 86 Chapters 28, 49, 29, 54; 66–67, 74. 87 Stale, 51–2; 70: …þan fel down cryed lowde voys, wondyrfully turnyng wrestyng syde, spredyng armys a-brode 3yf deyd…. 88 50; 68: sche…walwyd wrestyd body, a-brode, lowed voys þow hert brostyn a-sundyr. 89 recent examples, Weissman, ‘Margery Jerusalem: Hysterica compassio Acts interpretation. its contexts, 700–1600, Carruthers Kirk (Norman, Okla., 1982); Freeman, Rees Bogorad, Sholomskas, new theory. inadequacy hysteria postpartum psychosis diagnostic categories’, History Psychiatry (1990), 169–90; Partner, ‘Reading Exemplaria (1991), 29–66. 90 Stork, ‘Did suffer Tourette’s Syndrome?’ Mediaeval (1997), 261-300. Some works vein include Atkinson, Mystic pilgrim. world (Ithaca, NY, 1983); translations flesh (Philadelphia, 1991); McEntire, book essays 1992); Beckwith, ‘A very material mysticism: mysticism Gender Chance (Gainesville, Florida, 195–215, 138. 92 Ashley, ‘Historicizing Margery: text’, (1998), 371–88, 375. 93 Harding, ‘Body into text: Feminist approaches literature, Lomperis Stanbury 1993), 183–184. 94 Kieckhefer, ‘Convention conversion. Patterns piety’, Church 67, 41. 95 283–84; 239: Super nostrae sorores quasi parturientes clamabant, ullulabant flebant. correspondence Margery’s devotional behaviour Fabri’s matrons Jerusalem’, 215, argues such ‘hysterical’ result patriarchy; failed note, however, described men women, engaging behaviour. 96 9/10, 32–3; III, 51–52: …quamvis rudes crudeles murmurarent, unam vetulam totus exercitus inquietaretur, quis secutus fuisset eorum consilium, omnino dimisissemus perditione…Accepta gaudio matrona…. 97 41: …quae supra arundinibus balneantur pudore, silentio, devotione maturitate, multo magis nos. 98 47. 99 149–150. 100 …sed Dominus Augustinus patronus alterius galeae collegerat. 101 79: Hir name Margaret Florentyne Knygtys Roodys, gentylwomen, mekyl good caryage. 102 38, 68; 93. 103 Von Harff, Arnold von Knight, Cologne through Italy, Syria, Egypt, Arabia, Ethiopia, Nubia, Palestine, Turkey, Spain, accomplished years 1496–1499, Malcom 1946), 90–1. 104 249, 284. 105 Leonardo Frescobaldi, Frescobaldi’, Visit Sinai, Syria 1384 Gucci, Sigoli, (Jerusalem, 1948), 45. 106 163; 147: peregrinos theutonicos recipit suam, lenones; plurimum Theutonici…. 107 188; 167: Erat urbana reverentialis, discreta, nobis necessaria procuravit abunde…. 108 nos, …in lectulos decidimus aegritudinis magnae: adeo multiplicati infirmi, servitores erant, cupita infirmis ministrarent. nostram, motae misericordia servierunt; aliqua eas infirma. quo facto confudit robore illorum militum, Venetiis sperebant, eisque navigare refugiebant. Discurrebant uno infirmo alterum spretoribus derisoribus lectulis prostratis serviebant. 109 …illarum poterant, militum ingerebat, 110 111 p. 48. 112 67–8; 79–80: omnibus comperegrinae nostae annosae antecedebant praeripientes loca gemebant, conuerebantur labore, fortiores militibus adaciores primae acie procedebant. Magnam verecundiam faciebant istae infatigabilitate, unde miles dixit mihi: ecce, frater, credo vetuals esse foeminas, daemones sunt, enim, praesertim annosae, fragiles, tenerae delicatae, ferreae, cunctis fortiores…Sed fragilibus fortitudo, mulieribus robur, ab infirma mundi eligit, confundat fortia, praetulit viris, glorietur sexu, fortitudine, pulchritudine, juventute nobilitate. Siquidem ipsae erant viri, fortes, pulchrae, nobiles, peregerunt defectu, militia acquiritur. superbiam dedignabantur habere socias….
article
en
History|Ancient history|Demography|Sociology
https://doi.org/10.1016/s0304-4181(03)00032-0
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2118689659', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/s0304-4181(03)00032-0', 'mag': '2118689659'}
Egypt|Palestine|State of Palestine|Syria|Turkey
C144024400
Sociology
Journal of Medieval History
‘Struck by the Turks’: reflections on Armenian refugeehood in Cyprus
Olga Demetriou (https://openalex.org/A5010866960)
2,014
A large part of the Armenian community in Cyprus descends from survivors 1915 genocide Anatolia who initially settled neighbourhoods capital Nicosia. Following independence island British colonialists 1960, these fell under Turkish-Cypriot administration. As ethnic conflict unfolded between Greek- and Turkish-Cypriots 1963 onwards, Armenians became displaced their homes for a second time, seeking refuge Greek-Cypriot sector. Demetriou analyses experience this displacement entanglement legal, political subjective spheres that constitute it. She examines legal administrative measures classified those fleeing administered areas as Tourkóplikti (struck by Turks), label reinforced distinction Greek-Cypriots, majority whom were 1974, officially ‘refugees’ or prósfiyes. By looking at difference prósfiyes, interrogates location minority within community. argues silencing experiences does not merely impoverish our understanding it, but also perpetuates blindness to subtle structures discrimination. Understanding can show how victimization may turn into domination strategy (such through production hegemonic rhetoric refugeehood). Attention such processes, which develop aftermath conflict, might offer better grasp complex patterns post-conflict prejudice exclusion.
article
en
Armenian|Genocide|Turkish|Refugee|Hegemony|Sociology|Politics|Independence (probability theory)|Prejudice (legal term)|Gender studies|Political science|Law|History|Ancient history|Linguistics|Philosophy|Statistics|Mathematics
https://doi.org/10.1080/0031322x.2014.905369
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2005596351', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/0031322x.2014.905369', 'mag': '2005596351'}
Turkey
C144024400
Sociology
Patterns of Prejudice|Durham Research Online (Durham University)|Durham Research Online (Durham University)
‘Structural Adjustment’ or Debt Relief: The Case of Arab LLDCs
Kunibert Raffer (https://openalex.org/A5066979238)
1,992
Managing periphery debts has been the leading issue in development economics during last decade. Due to greater sums involved focus was initially on Latin America and later so-called HICs (Highly Indebted Countries), which include three African countries: Ivory Coast, Morocco Nigeria. The rest of Africa or countries grouped under label Least-Developed Countries (LLDCs) did not receive that much attention, though their relative debt burdens have frequently heavier than those big debtors. reasons are simple: total amount Sub-Saharan (excluding HICs), for example, just $86.6 b. 1987 according IBRD (1989),1 most it official creditors officially guaranteed. In other words, whole region owed less Brazil Mexico alone, roughly double as Nigeria Coast together, private banks whose interests so important US administration scarcely exposed.
chapter
en
Debt|Latin Americans|Creditor|Rest (music)|External debt|Development economics|Political science|Geography|Economy|Economics|Finance|Law|Medicine|Cardiology
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-12558-6_10
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2501785666', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-12558-6_10', 'mag': '2501785666'}
Morocco
C47768531
Development economics
Palgrave Macmillan UK eBooks
‘Stubbornly unchanged’: A longitudinal study of news practices in the Israeli press
Zvi Reich (https://openalex.org/A5003793243)
2,014
The article summarizes three consecutive studies (2001, 2006, 2011) in which national Israeli press reporters detailed how they obtained random samples of their recently published items ( N = 1003): first, order to explore the public interest whether standards news production are deteriorating, improving or staying put; second, indicate journalists adjust transforming ecosystem; and third, resolve theoretical dilemma regarding openness practices change. While showing a general trend conservatism, data some statistically significant changes across time, not always expected directions. Reporters rely more often on ordinary citizens (who remain marginal source), relations practitioners intervene broadly items. They only question sources’ credibility often, but also slightly sources per item cross-checking, mainly thanks older contacts rather than new voices.
article
en
Openness to experience|Credibility|Dilemma|News media|Conservatism|Political science|Sociology|Media studies|Advertising|Psychology|Social psychology|Law|Politics|Business|Epistemology|Philosophy
https://doi.org/10.1177/0267323114523148
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2107198795', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/0267323114523148', 'mag': '2107198795'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
European Journal of Communication
‘Students get bogged down’: how religious Israeli elementary teachers view problems and solutions in Bible teaching
Ruth A. Walfish (https://openalex.org/A5071989110)|David L. Brody (https://openalex.org/A5022177479)
2,016
AbstractBible teachers in contemporary society confront serious problems related to the nature of biblical text and socio-cultural context their teaching. This study, based on semi-structured interviews, examines that five expert religious Israeli elementary school encounter teaching solutions they employ. Our findings show two major domains pedagogic issues: unfamiliar linguistics problematic content. Teachers reported student difficulties understanding Hebrew. Problematic content includes irrelevant topics, emotionally laden material, age inappropriate issues. Linguistic relied reading comprehension techniques use features specific Bible such as diacritical marks. Regarding issues, were motivated by faith sanctity find effective solutions. These include selectivity, reinterpretation using homiletic tools, a holistic contextualising ...
article
en
Mathematics education|Religious education|Sociology|Pedagogy|Psychology
https://doi.org/10.1080/01416200.2015.1134442
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2346351758', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/01416200.2015.1134442', 'mag': '2346351758'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
British journal of religious education
‘Successful’ Alternative Education: Still Reproducing Inequalities? The Case of the Community School Program in Egypt
Lucy El-Sherif (https://openalex.org/A5026505932)|Sarfaroz Niyozov (https://openalex.org/A5060749185)
2,015
Community schools are an alternative form of education that center on partnerships between the community and/or state, aid organizations, and non-governmental organizations. The School Program (CSP) in Egypt sparked a social movement country, with disparate actors all coalescing around CSP as alternative, empowering model education. This study examined relationship dynamics formed, shaped co-opted it through in-depth interviews observations. Our analysis program’s processes legacies its former students. found critical factors success were cost for students, physical proximity, quality teaching. After completing program, these students faced significant challenges mainstream secondary is now converging interplay national global discourses CSP’s formation continue to shape students’ academic learning evolution program.
article
en
Mainstream|Mathematics education|Inequality|State (computer science)|Sociology|Political science|Quality (philosophy)|Pedagogy|Public relations|Economic growth|Psychology|Computer science|Mathematical analysis|Philosophy|Mathematics|Epistemology|Algorithm|Law|Economics
https://doi.org/10.5206/cie-eci.v44i2.9276
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2266369372', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.5206/cie-eci.v44i2.9276', 'mag': '2266369372'}
Egypt
C144024400|C45555294
Inequality|Sociology
Comparative and international education|eCommons - AKU (Aga Khan University)|Scholarship - Western (Western University)
‘Successful’ Development Models: Lessons from the MENA Region
Imed Drine (https://openalex.org/A5040787825)
2,013
Abstract This chapter assesses the development strategies of Middle East and Northern African (MENA) countries. The region covers a diverse group countries, including some very rich poor. can be divided into three main country-groups, with different economic structures. First are oil-producing countries (Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, UAE, Qatar, Oman, Bahrain, Libya, Algeria) whose economies remain overwhelmingly dependent on petroleum. second is represented by states that have diversified more (Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Syria, Tunisia). Indeed, these deeply integrated global economy. third includes poor (Sudan, Yemen, Mauritania, Djibouti, Somalia, Comoros). affected serious social problems as result inadequate Despite low performance whole, few succeeded in finding appropriate to adapt constantly changing international environment. Among those Tunisia, United Arab Emirates (UAE) do offer useful insights.
chapter
en
Middle East|Geography|Development economics|Developing country|Economy|Political science|Economic growth|Economics|Archaeology
https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199671557.003.0023
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2477246510', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199671557.003.0023', 'mag': '2477246510'}
Algeria|Bahrain|Djibouti|Egypt|Jordan|Kuwait|Lebanon|Libya|Morocco|Oman|Qatar|Saudi Arabia|Somalia|Sudan|Syria|Tunisia|United Arab Emirates|Yemen
C47768531
Development economics
Oxford University Press eBooks
‘Such conduct bears Philanthropy’s rare stamp’: The Byronic Hero’s Good Works
Andrew Rudd (https://openalex.org/A5018018556)
2,023
This article presents for the first time a file of petitions sent to Lord Byron, now held in John Murray Archive National Library Scotland (MS 43523) and catalogued 2022. It analyses sample letters argues that Byron’s correspondents (all outside his regular social circle) framed their requests assistance based on reading scenes philanthropy Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage Turkish Tales, where image Byronic hero was consolidated. The goes discuss nature hero’s imaginary giving, characterised by secrecy unknowability, why this model attractive petitioners real life. thus provides new lens examine entanglements between literary epistolary material cultures Romantic period, as well offering scholars valuable evidence personal generosity charitable practices.
article
en
HERO|Pilgrimage|Generosity|The Imaginary|Poetry|Literature|Secrecy|Taboo|Reading (process)|Sociology|History|Law|Art|Political science|Anthropology|Psychology|Ancient history|Psychotherapist
https://doi.org/10.3366/rom.2023.0612
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4388186993', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.3366/rom.2023.0612'}
Turkey
C144024400
Sociology
Romanticism
‘Suddenly she realizes that her husband is not exactly Rabbi Akiba …’ – perceptions of masculinity of ultra-Orthodox Israeli Jewish battering men
Oded Goldberg (https://openalex.org/A5041866242)|Dalit Yassour‐Borochowitz (https://openalex.org/A5044516315)
2,009
The aim of the study reported in this article is to gain an understanding way which haredi (ultra-Orthodox) Israeli Jewish batterers perceive and experience both their masculinity violent behaviour towards wives. attempts understand how masculinity–intimate violence–culture relationship exists community, religious patriarchal. This a qualitative based on 11 interviews with men who behaved violently spouses. Four central themes describe characteristics masculinity: two man's principal roles – Torah providing for his family that ideal attributes restraint self-control, rationality sagacity. Emerging from interviewees' responses difficulty realizing male as they presented it, context actually construed failure. In addition, changes being undergone women's status society intensify conflicts felt by regarding identity. present indicates considerable importance cultural social factors intimate violence against women, especially respect gender shaping
article
en
Masculinity|Judaism|Ideal (ethics)|Context (archaeology)|Gender studies|Identity (music)|Perception|Rationality|Social psychology|Sociology|Psychology|Domestic violence|Poison control|Suicide prevention|Theology|Law|Political science|Medicine|Philosophy|Environmental health|Neuroscience|Paleontology|Physics|Acoustics|Biology
https://doi.org/10.1080/09589230903260050
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2143550631', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/09589230903260050', 'mag': '2143550631'}
Israel
C144024400|C542059537
Domestic violence|Sociology
Journal of Gender Studies
‘Suleiman: Mubarak decided to step down #egypt #jan25 OH MY GOD’: examining the use of social media in the 2011 Egyptian revolution
Genevieve Barrons (https://openalex.org/A5000076661)
2,012
For the last decade, a debate has raged over place of social media within popular uprisings. The 2011 Egyptian revolution shed new light on this debate. However, while use by Egyptians received much focus, and activists themselves pointed towards it as key to their success, did not constitute itself, nor instigate it. Focusing solely diminishes personal risks that took when heading into streets face rubber bullets tear gas, well more lethal weapons. Social was neither cause catalyst revolution; rather tool coordination communication.
article
en
Social media|Political science|Face (sociological concept)|Media studies|Heading (navigation)|Law|Political economy|Sociology|Economic history|Social science|History|Engineering|Aerospace engineering
https://doi.org/10.1080/17550912.2012.645669
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1989366993', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/17550912.2012.645669', 'mag': '1989366993'}
Egypt
C144024400
Sociology
Contemporary Arab Affairs
‘Supporting our boys in battle’
Piers Robinson (https://openalex.org/A5015842340)|Peter Goddard (https://openalex.org/A5065319797)|Katy Parry (https://openalex.org/A5053462742)|Craig Murray (https://openalex.org/A5005674780)|Philip M. Taylor (https://openalex.org/A5015349367)
2,016
This chapter focuses on the evidence emerging from authors study for supportive coverage predicted by elite-driven model. In many ways, British news media of Iraq invasion conformed to predictions Press and television relied heavily coalition sources battle prevailed even among newspapers that had opted oppose war. The provides an analysis ways in which media's visual depictions war reinforced coverage. It highlights some most common types images through was visualised considers extent selection visuals contributed approach discusses emerges three key explanatory factors (sources, patriotism ideology) commonly associated with
chapter
en
Battle|Elite|Newspaper|Ideology|Media studies|Patriotism|Political science|History|Advertising|Sociology|Politics|Law|Business|Archaeology
https://doi.org/10.7765/9780719095030.00009
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2887868297', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.7765/9780719095030.00009', 'mag': '2887868297'}
Iraq
C144024400
Sociology
Manchester University Press eBooks
‘Sustaining masculinity’: a scoping review of anabolic androgenic steroid use by older males
Evelyn Hearne (https://openalex.org/A5072552615)|A. M. Atkinson (https://openalex.org/A5008999513)|Ian D. Boardley (https://openalex.org/A5010339332)|Jim McVeigh (https://openalex.org/A5017743843)|Marie Claire Van Hout (https://openalex.org/A5052394256)
2,022
In the past, research, policy and media have reported use of anabolic androgenic steroids (AAS) primarily among younger males. However, recent studies indicated presence an older cohort men who AAS in comparison to previous years. We carried out a scoping review extant literature map describe what is known about by (>40 years). A systematic search collected analysed empirical research grey relevant question. Following application inclusion exclusion criteria, 44 were included which subsequently charted thematically analysed. The records originated from UK, USA, Canada, Australia, Slovenia, Norway, Spain, Turkey, Switzerland, Japan, five global published between 1996 2021. Age ranged overall 14 78 years old, however our only discussed findings pertaining those than 40. Three main themes with subthemes generated as follows: 1) Characteristics Use; Self-reported Adverse Effects Harms Diagnosed Medical Professional. highlights significant risks hypothalamic-pituitary testicular function, cardiovascular health, other organ systems result ageing man motivated sustain masculine characteristics such muscularity, youthfulness, sexual perceived desirability attractiveness. Future required further understand motivations AAS. Furthermore, there need for age-specific recommendations inform future practice so that age-appropriate healthcare decisions can be made future.
review
en
Attractiveness|Steroid use|Extant taxon|Medicine|Gerontology|Masculinity|Inclusion (mineral)|Grey literature|Demography|Psychology|MEDLINE|Social psychology|Political science|Sociology|Internal medicine|Biology|Psychoanalysis|Evolutionary biology|Law
https://doi.org/10.1080/09687637.2022.2132135
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4308483661', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/09687637.2022.2132135'}
Turkey
C144024400
Sociology
e-space (Manchester Metropolitan University)|Liverpool John Moores University
‘Swagger’: Urban Youth Culture, Consumption and Social Positioning
Will Mason (https://openalex.org/A5066890485)
2,017
Sociological studies of youth culture have often focused on processes social identification. Though some this work has explored the importance consumption within young people’s identity practices, much foregrounded effects economic marginality and neglected ‘race’. This article explores role clothing embodied dispositions, popularly referred to as ‘swagger’, ways that people position themselves in relation each other. Drawing field notes focus group data with a predominantly Somali sample teenage boys, northern English city, elucidates centrality these seemingly mundane cultural signifiers everyday ‘racial’ classed positioning. In doing so, seeks extend contemporary culture, identification by evidencing how marginalized simultaneously challenge reaffirm their positioning, through performance stylized masculinity swagger.
article
en
Sociology|Masculinity|Consumption (sociology)|Identity (music)|Gender studies|Clothing|Identification (biology)|Field (mathematics)|Social science|Aesthetics|Political science|Philosophy|Botany|Mathematics|Pure mathematics|Law|Biology
https://doi.org/10.1177/0038038517698638
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2604450418', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/0038038517698638', 'mag': '2604450418'}
Somalia
C144024400
Sociology
Sociology
‘Swanning back in’? Foreign fighters and the long arm of the state
Adam K. Webb (https://openalex.org/A5066654874)
2,016
As foreign fighters have flocked to conflicts in Syria and elsewhere, their home governments often claimed a right not only criminalise doing so, but also deprive them of the return. This article challenges some problematic assumptions about intersection among political allegiance, extraterritorial jurisdiction abode. It traces origins today’s conventional wisdom particular modern experience state–society relations, including rise administrative ambitions that outrun original bounds territorial state. In contrast, it argues for an ‘unbundling’ state authority, prepolitical membership society, cross-border action. position would chasten overreaching views states’ ownership citizens, while still leaving other ways deal with jihadist violence.
article
en
Allegiance|State (computer science)|Politics|Law|Jurisdiction|Citizenship|Extraterritoriality|Political science|Position (finance)|Sociology|Political economy|Law and economics|Economics|Finance|Algorithm|Computer science
https://doi.org/10.1080/13621025.2016.1252715
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2550306725', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/13621025.2016.1252715', 'mag': '2550306725'}
Syria
C144024400
Sociology
Citizenship Studies
‘Sweet is the Music of Yon Whispering Pine’. Migration and the Pastoral in Hafid Bouazza'sParavion
Henriëtte Louwerse (https://openalex.org/A5063799953)
2,004
How are migrant writers to address migration without confining their discourse condition as migrants? Especially if definition by that in the culture has ‘received’ them is experienced a disabling obstacle being taken seriously writers. In his most recent novel, Paravion, published 2003, Hafid Bouazza, Dutch writer of Moroccan origin, appears return template debut collection. Its double setting Moroccan-esque country called Morea and mysterious city Paravion (Amsterdam) highly reminiscent De voeten van Abdullah (1996). But whereas primarily entertained issue tenuous often barely noticeable thread, remarkable for its sustained focus on primary concern. Bouazza revisits refashions pastoral tradition focussing unresolved complications at core genuine thought. redefines from physical movement some general desire other open everyone.
article
en
Obstacle|Movement (music)|Sociology|History|Aesthetics|Literature|Gender studies|Art|Archaeology
https://doi.org/10.1080/03096564.2004.11730843
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2342936765', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/03096564.2004.11730843', 'mag': '2342936765'}
Morocco
C144024400
Sociology
Dutch Crossing: Journal of Low Countries Studies
‘TALKING PEACE – GOING TO WAR’
Dalia Gavriely‐Nuri (https://openalex.org/A5016069593)
2,013
This article offers a cultural approach to critical discourse analysis of major addresses made by Israeli leaders before the initiation new wars between 1982 and 2008. The reveals an intriguing phenomenon: intensive use word ‘peace’ in these texts. article's central claim is that integral part just war rhetoric, phenomenon can be termed: Peace Service War (PSW). PSW aims at rationalizing legitimizing using series discursive strategies creating various pseudo-logical connections peace: false narrative, logic binarism, dogma metaphor. speeches, interesting relatively unknown arena for non-Hebrew reader, shed light on current global rhetoric from unfamiliar perspective.
article
en
Phenomenon|Rhetoric|Metaphor|Narrative|Sociology|Narratology|Linguistics|Political science|Epistemology|Philosophy
https://doi.org/10.1080/17405904.2013.835979
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2117744357', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/17405904.2013.835979', 'mag': '2117744357'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
Critical Discourse Studies
‘THAT IS WHY WE HAVE TROUBLES’: THE<i>PRO-ITALIA</i>MOVEMENT'S CHALLENGE TO NATIONALISM IN BRITISH-OCCUPIED SOMALIA(1946–9)
Annalisa Urbano (https://openalex.org/A5006675192)
2,016
Abstract Postwar politics in British-occupied Somalia is usually reduced to the activities of Somali Youth League, foremost anticolonial nationalist movement. However, by 1947, smaller associations, pejoratively nicknamed pro-Italia , came together an effort return Italy under international mandate. Drawing upon new archival sources, article argues that this movement did not stem from arguments supporting colonial rule, but rather objections agenda and military occupation. Closer attention these voices sheds light on deeper meanings political alignment during change regime enhances our understanding developments postwar Somalia.
article
en
Nationalism|Somali|Politics|League|Colonialism|Nationalist Movement|Political science|Mandate|Colonial rule|Political economy|History|Law|Sociology|Philosophy|Linguistics|Physics|Astronomy
https://doi.org/10.1017/s0021853716000311
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2549120465', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/s0021853716000311', 'mag': '2549120465'}
Somalia
C144024400
Sociology
The Journal of African History
‘THEY ARE NOT ALL ALIKE’
Muhamad Ali (https://openalex.org/A5020357166)
2,010
Contemporary Muslim perceptions of Jews and Judaism are not always as negative homogenous when one thinks ‘Arab-Muslim anti-Semitism’. The ambiguity complexity Indonesian Muslims' views can be found in a number publications by Muslims associated with interfaith organisations Islamic universities. This article seeks to explore some nuanced, if ambivalent, examines factors that contributed such among intellectuals authors textbooks on religion. In most representations, the concepts religion Jewishness ethnicity often distinguished. Moses, Torah, Israel Muhammad's relationship Medina medieval Spain discussed works intellectuals. based their view ‘Jews Islam’ – it classical Medina, or contemporary Palestine, rather than recognising them independent own dynamic history. However, intellectuals' promotion tolerance pluralism serves response widely held Jews. Not all alike: Of People Book portion stand (For right): They rehearse Signs Allah night long, they prostrate themselves adoration. (Qur'an 3: 113)
article
en
Judaism|Islam|Indonesian|Ambivalence|Religious studies|Torah|Ethnic group|Jewish history|Ethos|Sociology|Pluralism (philosophy)|History|Gender studies|Jewish studies|Theology|Anthropology|Philosophy|Law|Political science|Psychology|Social psychology|Linguistics|Epistemology
https://doi.org/10.1080/13639811.2010.513845
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2199579092', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/13639811.2010.513845', 'mag': '2199579092'}
Israel|Palestine
C144024400
Sociology
Indonesia and the Malay World
‘Tactical athletes’: the United States Paralympic Military Program and the mobilization of the disabled soldier/athlete
Callie Batts (https://openalex.org/A5063567685)|David L. Andrews (https://openalex.org/A5087065209)
2,011
Since the commencement of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, over 35,000 American military personnel have returned home with serious physical psychological wounds, including amputations, traumatic brain injuries paralysis. In 2004, amidst an increasingly militarized culture shaped by Bush-era wartime policies, US Paralympics, a division Olympic Committee, created Paralympic Military Program (PMP) to introduce sport these recently disabled soldiers. The PMP emphasizes rehabilitative benefits sport, but also pursues implicit goal discovering potential elite athletes capable representing USA international competitions. emergence this new subjectivity soldier/athlete is significant development continuing relationship between military. This discussion illustrates how – as symbol both sporting constituencies body far from benign apolitical. Rather, it malleable site upon which contemporary cultural meanings political demands are inscribed mobilized. Thus worthy critical examination production ‘anatomies national fantasy'and ‘corporeal flagging’ that deflect attention away devastating consequences war ultimately promote advancing imperialism.
article
en
Elite|Athletes|Spectacle|Politics|Law|Political science|Criminology|Gender studies|Sociology|Medicine|Physical therapy
https://doi.org/10.1080/17430437.2011.574350
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1979105691', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/17430437.2011.574350', 'mag': '1979105691'}
Iraq
C144024400
Sociology
Sport in Society
‘Take Down Mezuzahs, Remove Name-Plates’: The Emigration of Objects from Germany to Palestine
Joachim Schlör (https://openalex.org/A5054345122)
2,008
This chapter evaluates the meaning of objects inventoried and packed as emigrants prepared to leave Germany for Palestine after Adolf Hitler came power. Private property has, both individual memory collective memory, a deep emotional significance. The exclusion Jews from German society started with National Socialist policy ‘Aryanization’, expropriation property. Many y émigrés had abandon, behind, their private dwellings. In process, they lost more than object itself. Around 1800, British philosopher legal theoretician Jeremy Bentham drew attention importance relationship between an its owner: ownership forms basis hope. Thus, threat losing is symbolic loss all hope continued life in German. Ultimately, Aryanization confiscation were theft identity. And these cases, even system was no longer capable protecting rights. Those who emigrated good time able take at least some them.
chapter
en
Confiscation|Expropriation|German|Emigration|Property (philosophy)|Law|Private property|Meaning (existential)|Object (grammar)|Property rights|Political science|Law and economics|Sociology|History|Philosophy|Archaeology|Linguistics|Epistemology
https://doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781904113454.003.0006
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4253029183', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781904113454.003.0006'}
Palestine
C144024400
Sociology
Liverpool University Press eBooks
‘Take me to a virtual trip if you want me to write better!’: the impact of Google Expeditions on EFL learners’ writing motivation and performance
Marjan Ebadijalal (https://openalex.org/A5030786313)|Nouroddin Yousofi (https://openalex.org/A5003178906)
2,022
The current mixed-methods study aimed at incorporating a virtual reality (VR) tool (i.e. Google Expeditions) into the writing process of Iranian English as foreign language (EFL) learners, examining its impact on their motivation and performance. To that end, 42 EFL learners were randomly assigned to experimental control groups, exploring favorite places in world with without Expeditions, respectively. Independent-samples t-tests paired-samples run investigate participants’ well performance pretest posttest. As quantitative results demonstrated, group significantly outscored both overall end experiment. Semi-structured interviews conducted attitudes toward casting further light initial findings. Thematic analysis qualitative data lent support contribution this VR boosting confidence, general knowledge, autonomy one hand reducing distraction anxiety other. Implications are discussed future research avenues outlined.
article
en
Distraction|Psychology|Thematic analysis|Mathematics education|Boosting (machine learning)|Computer science|Qualitative research|Cognitive psychology|Artificial intelligence|Social science|Sociology
https://doi.org/10.1080/09588221.2022.2123001
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4295682014', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/09588221.2022.2123001'}
Iran
C144024400
Sociology
Computer Assisted Language Learning
‘Taking root and growing wings’: on the concept of glocality from the perspectives of school principals in Israel
Ravit Mizrahi-Shtelman (https://openalex.org/A5012907425)|Gili S. Drori (https://openalex.org/A5080458470)
2,016
Recent discussions of glocalisation call for acknowledging the role agents glocalisation. School principals, by holding a mid-level position that is increasingly evaluated global standards and yet acutely responsive to community-level capacity, both formulate glocality practise it. By recording perception school principals in Israel, we propose novel outlook on glocality. From perspective these glocalisation, (1) redefine as matter orientation (2) extract typology practice First, based principals’ understanding what accounts local, show while they all report their work requires integration international testing standards, ministerial policies, needs preferences pupils, parents teachers, differ orientations, or inclinations, towards regard local. Second, such orientations are associated with particular type glocality: strong also express sense hybrid glocality, whereas local strategic
article
en
Glocalization|Typology|Perspective (graphical)|Perception|Sociology|Position (finance)|Public relations|Political science|Psychology|Globalization|Business|Law|Computer science|Finance|Artificial intelligence|Neuroscience|Anthropology
https://doi.org/10.1080/23254823.2016.1210527
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2505056411', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/23254823.2016.1210527', 'mag': '2505056411'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
European Journal of Cultural and Political Sociology
‘Tales of a flying Dutchman’: An Exaugural Lecture<sup>1</sup>
Vincent Megaw (https://openalex.org/A5089584910)
2,004
The horrors of Auschwitz revealed; Srebrenice, a shocking memorial ethnic cleansing; Iraq, an ancient land despoiled by modern cruelty and global Realpolitik... One might think these are odd images to conjure up at the beginning musings kangaroo Celt, disjointed thoughts archaeological wanderer between many worlds, both past present. But visual evidence for one Saddam's Kurdish death pits 1990 campaign has added ironic significance when realises that it was intentionally located on edge scheduled site in attempt avoid subsequent detection. True, sensibilities have become dulled over sixty years such now almost media cliches. me least horror scenes not assuaged but rather heightened when, example, observed against background Henry Purce1l's Musik Queen Mary, music first heard Westminster Abbey March 1695 then again same place November year -for Purcell's own funeral. Beauty terror often far apart.
article
en
Library science|Media studies|Engineering|Management|Engineering physics|Art history|Sociology|Art|Computer science|Economics
https://doi.org/10.1080/03122417.2004.11681778
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2216486344', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/03122417.2004.11681778', 'mag': '2216486344'}
Iraq
C144024400
Sociology
Australian Archaeology
‘Taming’ Arab social movements: Exporting neoliberal governmentality
Halit Mustafa Emin Tağma (https://openalex.org/A5043962310)|Elif Kalaycıoğlu (https://openalex.org/A5085966269)|Emel Akçalı (https://openalex.org/A5034335936)
2,013
In the wake of recent Arab revolutions, European Union (EU) has sought to provide genuine and substantial support a range social movements in region’s emerging polities. Yet EU’s democracy-promotion efforts represent puzzle for earlier critical approaches relationship between Europe Middle East North Africa (MENA), which argue existence hegemonic patronage linkages. We argue, however, that attempts at democracy promotion MENA region may be understood through governmentality framework, despite limitations such an approach. Specifically, EU is actively promoting neoliberal policies aftermath Spring order foster mode subjectivity conducive own norms interests. What we observe are not just innocent promotion, but form politics economics seeks subject agency on ‘Arab street’ standards. conclude by going over radical plurality street, show how it was fact reforms their former regimes created conditions possibility revolutions Tunisia Egypt.
article
en
Democracy promotion|Governmentality|Political economy|Political science|Hegemony|European union|Politics|Agency (philosophy)|Democracy|Neoliberalism (international relations)|Middle East|Sociology|Democratization|Development economics|Economics|Law|Social science|International trade
https://doi.org/10.1177/0967010613500512
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2092539414', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/0967010613500512', 'mag': '2092539414'}
Egypt|Tunisia
C144024400|C47768531
Development economics|Sociology
Security Dialogue
‘Targeted killing’ and the lack of acquiescence
Elisabeth Schweiger (https://openalex.org/A5055829596)
2,019
Abstract Over the last decade, concept targeted killing has received much attention in debates on customary interpretation of right to self-defence, particularly context practices such as US armed drone attacks. In these debates, government silence often been invoked acquiescence jus ad bellum aspects killing. Focusing question state by Israeli and governments recent years, this article investigates over 900 UN Security Council Human Rights argues that there no tacit consent The analysis firstly shows majority states have condemned raised concerns about attacks, while falling short directly protesting against practices. article, secondly, applies international law requirements for challenges idea attacks can be understood a legal stance towards finally, political engages with alternative interpretations silence. Contextualizing acts protest lack within an asymmetrical context, posits invocation case is problematic risks complicity knowledge production violence hegemonic actors.
article
en
Acquiescence|Silence|Political science|Context (archaeology)|Law|Politics|Human rights|Sociology|Paleontology|Philosophy|Biology|Aesthetics
https://doi.org/10.1017/s0922156519000475
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2973941714', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/s0922156519000475', 'mag': '2973941714'}
Israel
C144024400|C169437150
Human rights|Sociology
Leiden Journal of International Law
‘Teacher! Teacher! I want “A”, teacher!’
Philip Cass (https://openalex.org/A5045266180)
2,011
This article broadly examines the teaching of journalism and media studies in countries Gulf Co-operation Council focuses specifically on authors’ experiences these subject areas Colleges Applied Science Oman. Written partly response to O’Rourke Belushi (2010) drawing earlier work by Quinn (2001) Al Hasani (2006), paper addresses a number broader questions about education GCC countries. It asks whether use English as language instruction is sustainable like Oman its based considerations practicality or because perceived prestige. The draws debates higher policy viability ‘Western-style’ non-democratic societies raised Josephi others. argues that policies which affect too often appear be ideas what will make country look good ‘modern’ while ignoring might actual needs. some cases subjects not viable current form students themselves see role an utterly different light their ‘Western’ ‘Western’-educated instructors.
article
en
Journalism|Prestige|Publishing|Sociology|Democracy|Technical Journalism|Style (visual arts)|Public relations|Political science|Media studies|Social science|Pedagogy|Law|History|Linguistics|Philosophy|Archaeology|Politics
https://doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v17i2.355
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2187624680', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v17i2.355', 'mag': '2187624680'}
Oman
C144024400
Sociology
Pacific Journalism Review
‘Teachers decide because they are adults’: the views of Turkish preschoolers about participation
Tuğçe Akyol (https://openalex.org/A5037246028)
2,020
In order to enrich the practices about participation rights in preschool education institutions, it is necessary take opinions of children concerning their experiences school. this research, aimed Turkish preschoolers schools. The participants study are comprised 200 5-year-old attending public preschools and nursery classes a province Turkey’s inner Aegean region. child Interview form was used as date collection tool. As result determined that participated decision-making processes classroom limited way supported way, either. It observed related insufficient level expression children’s educational institutions processes.
article
en
Turkish|Psychology|Early childhood education|Preschool education|Child rights|Participative decision-making|Developmentally Appropriate Practice|Qualitative research|Pedagogy|Developmental psychology|Medical education|Sociology|Political science|Social science|Medicine|Philosophy|Linguistics|Law|Human rights
https://doi.org/10.1080/1350293x.2020.1817237
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3088072101', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/1350293x.2020.1817237', 'mag': '3088072101'}
Turkey
C144024400|C169437150|C178229462|C3019907584
Child rights|Early childhood education|Human rights|Sociology
European Early Childhood Education Research Journal
‘Teaching an inclusive classroom can be rather tedious’: an international perspective, Israel, 1998–2000
Gilada Avissar (https://openalex.org/A5035761121)
2,003
Inclusion of students with disabilities into regular classrooms has been practised on a voluntary basis in Israel for the past 30–40 years. Special education legislation passed 1988 included as one its touchstones mandate to mainstream maximum extent possible. The ‘Plan Inclusion’ began 1996 and since 2000 it implemented schools all over Israel.
article
en
Mainstream|Mandate|Inclusion (mineral)|Mainstreaming|Legislation|Perspective (graphical)|Special education|Pedagogy|Least restrictive environment|Mathematics education|Political science|Sociology|Psychology|Social science|Law|Artificial intelligence|Computer science
https://doi.org/10.1111/1471-3802.00010
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1978536321', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/1471-3802.00010', 'mag': '1978536321'}
Israel
C144024400|C28858896
Sociology|Special education
Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs
‘Teaching’ Practicing
Jeanne Simonelli (https://openalex.org/A5073774782)
2,004
In the last issue of Practicing Anthropology, we quoted an NPR interview with Iraqi scholar, who mused in frustration, "They send us generals, they businessmen, but where I ask you, are anthropologists?" This features response anthropologist working Iraq, and highlights importance legitimizing practice anthropology outside academy. To do so means that must overcome our colonial legacy forge new bonds trust relevance community at large. A number articles featured this describe work with, groups discipline academic setting. These authors provide a perspective on making important to more than those attend AAA meetings each November. They you consider following questions: • What did faculty from Anthropology Education learn about differences between them how were these used construct viable program for public schools? makes learning science diversity can convince school board should be part curriculum? middle students dividing lines people different skin color apply knowledge their own lives? How confront its indigenous communities? key issues research ethics protocols conveyed anthropologists best models collaboration communities academy? some barriers when members Latino community, what effective methods overcoming barriers? experiential teach farming farmers appreciate ways which participation might benefit them? done get involved local agriculture food system? systems converted policy urban areas? anthropological changing US culture insight into ramifications mainstream American life future nation? war Iraq have been if military had entered enterprise sufficient cultural competency? Is there any hope society large value utilize produced by many colleagues still see no need make practical use do?
article
en
Indigenous|Sociology|Curriculum|Relevance (law)|Colonialism|Applied anthropology|Construct (python library)|Diversity (politics)|Anthropology|Pedagogy|Political science|Law|Ecology|Computer science|Biology|Programming language
https://doi.org/10.17730/praa.26.4.h5751mx521m70210
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4206819909', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.17730/praa.26.4.h5751mx521m70210'}
Iraq
C144024400
Sociology
Practicing Anthropology
‘Technology is Everywhere, we have the Opportunity to Learn it in the Valley’: The Appropriation of a Socio-Technical Enabling Infrastructure in the Moroccan High Atlas
Sarah Rüller (https://openalex.org/A5070730523)|Konstantin Aal (https://openalex.org/A5014975809)|Simon Holdermann (https://openalex.org/A5045830034)|Peter Tolmie (https://openalex.org/A5014026977)|Andrea Hartmann (https://openalex.org/A5025388691)|Markus Rohde (https://openalex.org/A5070271349)|Martin Zillinger (https://openalex.org/A5012471885)|Volker Wulf (https://openalex.org/A5011933120)
2,021
Abstract This paper describes the appropriation processes involved in establishing a socio-technical enabling infrastructure valley High Atlas of Morocco. We focus on challenges co-establishing such an intervention rural/mountainous region that is already undergoing process continuous development and profound transformation. reflect upon changes unforeseen by our local partners inhabitants computer club primarily used as informal learning centre for school children. followed ethnographic approach combined research perspectives from both socio-informatics anthropology. sheds light what successful cooperation this kind challenging environment can look like. It does taking seriously competing expectations, fragile infrastructural foundations socio-cultural context. Despite challenges, managed to lead establishment plays particularly valuable role educational endeavours now moving towards supporting other members community. The thus provides insights regarding has be considered create mutually beneficial with all relevant stakeholders well sustainable intervention.
article
en
Appropriation|Intervention (counseling)|Context (archaeology)|Ethnography|Sociology|Public relations|Process (computing)|Knowledge management|Political science|Business|Engineering ethics|Computer science|Engineering|Geography|Psychology|Epistemology|Philosophy|Archaeology|Psychiatry|Anthropology|Operating system
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10606-021-09401-8
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3213672752', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1007/s10606-021-09401-8', 'mag': '3213672752'}
Morocco
C144024400
Sociology
Computer Supported Cooperative Work
‘Tele-education’ in the COVID-19 pandemic process in Turkey: A mental diaspora research specific to Turkish Language Teaching students
Mete Yusuf Ustabulut (https://openalex.org/A5078752252)|SavaÅŸ Keskin (https://openalex.org/A5036675451)
2,020
This study tries to map educational processes that have transform into the extraordinary history of COVID-19 pandemic and adapt ‘new normal’, with a relational metaphoric approach. In study, existing physical mental conditions students who are "scattered / dispersed" geographically due mandatory "return home" in process conceptualized metaphor "diaspora". The aims draw attention student-centered social problems by questioning functionality tele-education which designed compensate for interrupted relationships make them sustainable again. It is aimed measure effects online consciousness was deterritorialized human-computer interaction computer-mediated communication, on student performances understand motivations during process. For this aim, it conducted survey 10 universities Turkey reached 150 through snowball sampling technique. results show self-perception coincides diasporic identity unusual technology integration cannot fully compensate, triggers diaspora feelings.
article
en
Snowball sampling|Turkish|Diaspora|Psychology|Identity (music)|Process (computing)|Feeling|Metaphor|Pandemic|Mental process|Mathematics education|Pedagogy|Social psychology|Sociology|Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)|Cognition|Computer science|Linguistics|Gender studies|Medicine|Philosophy|Disease|Pathology|Infectious disease (medical specialty)|Physics|Neuroscience|Acoustics|Operating system
https://doi.org/10.17263/jlls.851040
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3117047579', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.17263/jlls.851040', 'mag': '3117047579'}
Turkey
C144024400
Sociology
Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies
‘Telegenically dead Palestinians’
Shohini Chaudhuri (https://openalex.org/A5034541370)
2,019
This chapter examines media coverage of the Gaza conflicts and considers what occurs when humanitarian images Palestinian casualties take centre stage. The argues that a outcome appears to be favourable Palestinians, in it focuses on their suffering, can actually have opposite effect. Addressing UK, US Israeli news media, as well popular television documentary films Waltz with Bashir (Ari Folman, 2008) Where Should Birds Fly (Fida Qishta, 2013), addresses ways ‘perception management’ serve divorce public from realities state violence through kind cinematic derealisation enables states reduce perceptions blame for atrocities act impunity.
chapter
en
Blame|Impunity|Political science|Perception|State (computer science)|Media studies|Law|Criminology|Sociology|Psychology|Social psychology|Human rights|Computer science|Algorithm|Neuroscience
https://doi.org/10.7765/9781526117304.00013
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2910108442', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.7765/9781526117304.00013', 'mag': '2910108442'}
Gaza|Israel
C144024400|C169437150
Human rights|Sociology
Manchester University Press eBooks
‘Telephone Girls’ at the Frontline of Third World Telephony
Burçe Çelik (https://openalex.org/A5024481215)
2,019
The long and complicated work history of women at Third World countries’ national switchboard centrals is a crucial but largely overlooked aspect the telecommunications feminist labour regimes. By focusing on Turkish case between 1950s 1980s, this article aims to unveil authoritarian regimes that telephone girls were exposed in relation capitalist developmentalism, state-led cultural modernisation nationalism policies countries. archival oral research conducted with female operators show expected compensate for deteriorated infrastructure, function as surveillance apparatus state, educate male public engage modern secular gender relations through their sacrificial caring emotional work. Women have developed own strategies survival struggle against regime practices solidarity mechanisms.
article
en
Solidarity|Nationalism|Modernization theory|Sociology|Authoritarianism|Turkish|State (computer science)|Feminization (sociology)|Gender studies|Political science|Law|Democracy|Computer science|Linguistics|Philosophy|Algorithm|Politics
https://doi.org/10.1080/13688804.2019.1585234
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2915360679', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/13688804.2019.1585234', 'mag': '2915360679'}
Turkey
C144024400
Sociology
Media History
‘Tell Me What You Speak and I'll Tell You …’: Exploring Attitudes to Languages in the Ultra-Orthodox Community in Israel
Michal Tannenbaum (https://openalex.org/A5040502374)|Hannah Esther Ofner (https://openalex.org/A5074105792)
2,008
Abstract This paper article on a study focusing Israel's Haredi (ultra-Orthodox Jews) community, exploring its members’ perceptions of Hebrew, Yiddish and English in terms the language's importance, usage, holiness related emotions. Questionnaires were distributed to 180 participants from five prominent subgroups within community. Analysis revealed significant differences participants’ attitudes towards three languages, showing preference for Hebrew above all dimensions explored. Differences between correlated with their stance Israeli majority vis-à-vis one another – greater level segregation, more negative positive Yiddish, somewhere most groups. These findings reflect community's attempts build symbolic fences sustain foster segregation hand, bonding historical heritage other. Gender also emerged women, who function as change agents far often, favourable than men. In sum, languages an interesting lens which learn about broader ideological world views, reflecting tension conflict inner community view surrounding world.
article
en
Hebrew|Perception|Ideology|Psychology|Sociology|Gender studies|Social psychology|Linguistics|Politics|Political science|Law|Philosophy|Neuroscience
https://doi.org/10.1080/01434630802147973
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2047965948', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/01434630802147973', 'mag': '2047965948'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development
‘Tell Me What You Speak and I'll Tell You …’: Exploring Attitudes to Languages in the Ultra-Orthodox Community in Israel
Michal Tannenbaum (https://openalex.org/A5040502374)|Hannah Esther Ofner (https://openalex.org/A5074105792)
2,008
Abstract This paper article on a study focusing Israel's Haredi (ultra-Orthodox Jews) community, exploring its members’ perceptions of Hebrew, Yiddish and English in terms the language's importance, usage, holiness related emotions. Questionnaires were distributed to 180 participants from five prominent subgroups within community. Analysis revealed significant differences participants’ attitudes towards three languages, showing preference for Hebrew above all dimensions explored. Differences between correlated with their stance Israeli majority vis-à-vis one another – greater level segregation, more negative positive Yiddish, somewhere most groups. These findings reflect community's attempts build symbolic fences sustain foster segregation hand, bonding historical heritage other. Gender also emerged women, who function as change agents far often, favourable than men. In sum, languages an interesting lens which learn about broader ideological world views, reflecting tension conflict inner community view surrounding world.
article
en
Hebrew|Perception|Psychology|Ideology|Sociology|Immigration|First language|Gender studies|Social psychology|Linguistics|Politics|Political science|Law|Philosophy|Neuroscience
https://doi.org/10.2167/jmmd608.0
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4229707943', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.2167/jmmd608.0'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development
‘Temporary Until Further Notice’: The Museum of Islamic Art and the Discursive Endeavour of Displaying Islamic Art in Qatar
Eva-Maria Tepest (https://openalex.org/A5053564645)
2,019
Taking the case of curatorial practices at Museum Islamic Art (MIA) in Doha, this study analyses exhibiting art Qatar. Drawing on interviews, observations and visual material collected during a stay Doha November December 2015, it sheds light MIA’s conditions, history, present. Against backdrop Michel Foucault’s writings power/knowledge, I argue that MIA cannot be understood basis dominant liberal cultural policy paradigm. Rather, needs to as ‘a dynamic contingent multiplicity’ (Barad 2007, 147). Notwithstanding, multiplicity meaningfully relates Qatar’s shifting political priorities well discourses exhibition.
article
en
Islam|Exhibition|Notice|Islamic art|Michel foucault|Politics|Power (physics)|Sociology|History|Media studies|Art|Aesthetics|Political science|Art history|Law|Archaeology|Physics|Quantum mechanics
https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v17i2.3043
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2960349052', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v17i2.3043', 'mag': '2960349052'}
Qatar
C144024400
Sociology
DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals)
‘Tenured Radicals’ in Israel: From New Zionism to Political Activism
Ofira Seliktar (https://openalex.org/A5051541076)
2,005
The April 2005 decision of the British Association University Teachers (AUT) to call for an academic boycott Haifa and Bar Ilan universities created a storm protest in Israel abroad. Even more indignation was directed towards handful Israeli academics that have supported boycott. As 2002, when first made, dismay over fact scholars were instrumental instigating such action has led chorus voices demanding firing so-called ‘tenured radicals’. Others, including many press, wondered how professors who are by taxpayer can use their position harm national interest country. While reactions expected, they fall short tackling complex relationship between social science scholarship, activism freedoms. Such analysis, which inflamed passions United States better part past half century, is long overdue Israel. At its core need clarify challenge spread critical theory western academy posed traditional scholarship sciences humanities.
article
en
Zionism|Politics|Political science|Radical|Political economy|Sociology|Law|Chemistry|Organic chemistry
https://doi.org/10.1080/13537120500233979
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2023161038', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/13537120500233979', 'mag': '2023161038'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
Israel Affairs
‘Terrible things happen’: Peter Bowker's <i>Occupation</i> and the Representation of the Iraq War in British Television Drama
Stephen Harper (https://openalex.org/A5039356223)
2,013
Peter Bowker and Laurie Borg's three-part television drama Occupation (2009) chronicles the experiences of three British soldiers involved in 2003 invasion Iraq. By means an historically situated textual analysis, this article assesses how far succeeds presenting a progressive critique military involvement It is argued that although devotes some narrative space to subaltern perspectives on Britain's Iraq, production – contrast other dramas about Iraq war tends privilege pro-war perspectives, elide Iraqi suffering, and, through discursive strategy ‘de-agentification’, obfuscate extent Western responsibility for damage inflicted its population. Appearing six years after beginning whose prosecution provoked widespread public dissent, Occupation's political silences perhaps illustrate BBC's difficulty creating contestatory what have be conservative moment post-Hutton service broadcasting.
article
en
Drama|Subaltern|History|Narrative|Media studies|Dissent|Politics|Law|Literature|Sociology|Art|Political science
https://doi.org/10.3366/jbctv.2013.0130
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2093523994', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.3366/jbctv.2013.0130', 'mag': '2093523994'}
Iraq
C144024400
Sociology
Journal of British Cinema and Television
‘Terrorism’ and the Israeli–Palestinian Conflict in the News
Ruth Sanz Sabido (https://openalex.org/A5000977248)
2,019
This chapter provides empirical findings of the discursive representation ‘terrorism’ and ‘terrorists’ in news coverage Israeli–Palestinian conflict. The discussion includes an overview synchronic data, which serves to highlight some differences frequency with different publications used these terms within each samples period. is followed by a more detailed diachronic findings, according five historical phases that were analysed. One study’s revelations use has evolved over time, as violent acts agents perceived differently dominant political discourse sampled While Zionists classified 1948, Arabs, Palestinians Islamic organisations such Hamas received this label later phases.
chapter
en
Terrorism|Islam|Period (music)|Politics|Representation (politics)|Political science|Criminology|History|Sociology|Law|Art|Aesthetics|Archaeology
https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-52646-5_6
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2981073600', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-52646-5_6', 'mag': '2981073600'}
Israel
C144024400|C203133693
Sociology|Terrorism
Palgrave Macmillan UK eBooks
‘Teshuvah baskets’ in the Israeli teshuvah market
Asaf Sharabi (https://openalex.org/A5080878222)
2,012
As opposed to the approach that makes a dichotomous distinction between ‘rigid religiosity’ and ‘soft religiosity’, I would like point reality in which these boundaries are blurred. shall do so by examining case of religious revival movement Israel (the ‘teshuvah movement’), offers broad range teshuvah styles, out hozrim beteshuvah (penitents) select baskets’, they fill pack themselves, according their own personal preferences. These baskets’ dynamic, owners can fill, empty modify contents, while conduct an ongoing critical ‘market survey’. This dynamism creates reality, accompanied discourse, continuously blurs symbolic separating various types ‘supply’ sources. It demonstrates how practices beliefs related expressed also those participating what is generally referred as religiosity’.
article
en
Religiosity|Dynamism|Sociology|Social psychology|Epistemology|Aesthetics|Psychology|Philosophy
https://doi.org/10.1080/14755610.2012.706227
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2025614517', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14755610.2012.706227', 'mag': '2025614517'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
Culture and Religion
‘Texanicity’ and Its Punishment Dimensions
Hannah Thurston (https://openalex.org/A5060420380)
2,016
The stories being told about Texan punishment, by the media, scholars, politicians and indeed me, often construct Texas as a place of harsh punishment. However, Lone Star State is more than just ‘execution capital world’. Proud its history culture; with own compelling state history. Speaking ways in which small towns cities market themselves to tourists, Avraham Daugherty (2012, p. 1385) suggest that ‘among US states, arguably strongest narrative Texas—cowboys, cattle, desert vistas flag are all widely known, heavily used, symbols story’. Drawing on work First (2003), considered how ‘Americanicity’ presented itself Israeli advertisements, (2012) go speak images define what they term ‘Texasnicity’.
chapter
en
Narrative|Punishment (psychology)|Desert (philosophy)|State (computer science)|Star (game theory)|Construct (python library)|Capital punishment|Capital (architecture)|History|Sociology|Political science|Media studies|Criminology|Literature|Law|Psychology|Art|Social psychology|Ancient history|Computer science|Mathematics|Mathematical analysis|Algorithm|Programming language
https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-53308-1_11
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2485841450', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-53308-1_11', 'mag': '2485841450'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
Palgrave Macmillan UK eBooks
‘Thank God We Are in Syria!’ Modernization, Interfaith Relations and Women’s Rights in Syria Before the ‘Arab Spring’ (2000–2010)
Lorella Ventura (https://openalex.org/A5037169231)
2,018
The status of women is generally considered a measure ‘modernity’ and it has often been exploited by the West to highlight ‘backwardness’ non-Western countries justify colonialism ‘civilization’ endeavours. question women’s rights its connection ‘modernity’, however, not simple. This article considers example Syria immediately before revolts 2011, highlights that government’s approach issue appears have inspired peculiar idea in line with Western mainstream view, because based on centrality individual does include view secularization underestimates social political importance religious beliefs. Reflections peculiarities Syrian may help avoid simplifications – more us reflect premise as ‘other’.
article
en
Modernity|Backwardness|Mainstream|Secularization|Modernization theory|Politics|Premise|Civilization|Sociology|Human rights|Western culture|Political science|Gender studies|Law|Philosophy|Economic growth|Epistemology|Economics
https://doi.org/10.1080/09596410.2018.1464730
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2801543796', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/09596410.2018.1464730', 'mag': '2801543796'}
Syria
C144024400|C169437150
Human rights|Sociology
Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations
‘Thank you Israel, for supporting America’: the transnational flow of Christian Zionist resources
Faydra L. Shapiro (https://openalex.org/A5018936888)
2,012
Abstract This article seeks to understand what it means when, in 2006, a noted British pastor and Bible teacher stood up front of 8000 evangelical Zionists from all over the world at convention centre Jerusalem addressed audience with following counter-intuitive words: ‘Thank you Israel, for supporting America!’ Evangelical Christianity has complex relations ambivalent nation state globalisation. Supernaturally speaking, Israel is only that matters. Contemporary becomes kind litmus test, both manifesting truth word God individual's or nation's commitment realising God's will this world. For Christian Zionism, transnational flow resources into out ultimately redeem locality, offering ‘the nations’ place story, opportunity serve as vehicles will. Keywords: transnationalismIsraelZionismChristian Zionismevangelicalism Acknowledgements Research was carried help faculty standard research grant Social Sciences Humanities Council Canada. I am grateful their support time granted by Wilfrid Laurier University Galilee Center Studies Jewish-Christian Relations Yezreel Valley College. specially thank Paul Freston Shaul Katzenstein patient reading suggestions. Notes 1. My findings are based on fieldwork comprising extensive participant observation semi-structured interviewing began 2006 continued present. have taken part many international Zionist conferences, celebrations meetings North America. Interviews included leaders participants, well critics supporters movement. 2. excellent treatments contemporary Zionism more generally, see Spector (Citation2009) Weber (Citation2004). 3. an understanding phenomenon broadly than its guise, Goldman (Citation2009). 4. These include large progressive organisations like Sojourners smaller, focused ministries such Evangelicals Middle-East Understanding. explication anti-Zionism, works Sizer (Citation2004, Citation2007). 5. No doubt, supranationalism outgrowth universalism stands base, foundational transcendence ethnic identities, most importantly between Jew Gentile (see e.g. Gal 3:28 Col 3:11, Ephesians 2:14–16). 6. That said, there indeed Arab pastors congregations who partner Jewish Israel. 7. While non-Jews not eligible citizenship under Law Return, some Christians sought received permanent resident status through naturalisation. 8. particularly dazzling example, John Hagee Ministries disbursed 8 million dollars Israeli charities 2010. 9. HaYovel/The Jubilee (www.hayovel.com) brings volunteers residents grape harvest Samaria (part often called West Bank’) Bridges Peace (www.bfp.com) invites pack food poor warehouses Karmiel. The common 3-month limit because restrictions tourist visas. 10. They had just returned visiting school seeking additional funds special projects. 11. first Sunday every October been designated Day Pray Jerusalem, initiative Robert Stearns his ministry, Eagles’ Wings, name Psalm 122:6. 12. Spoken Gila Gamliel (Likud) 2 2011. Italics indicate emphasis. 13. Certainly, situation independent but embattled critical eschatological significance Zionists, after years firsthand field research, can say eschatology no primary motivator 14. reference evangelism Jews, subject significant tension within Zionism. 15. expression comes Zachariah 2:8, verse presents precisely dynamic, which announces nations plundered children turn be plundered. 16. Many facilitating immigration helping new immigrants, among organisational priorities. 17. dynamic clearly displayed participation delegates annual ICEJ Feast Tabernacles March. parade streets, grouped country. Complete national dress, T-shirts declaring ‘South Africans Israel’, flags distribution pins onlookers. 18. how evangelicals position themselves vis-à-vis specific domestic issues, series Global South volumes Asia (David Halloran Lumsdaine, ed.), Africa (Terence O. Ranger, ed.) Latin America (Paul Freston, ed.). 19. event takes during biblical (Sukkot Hebrew). group highlight holiday major gathering. 20. in-depth consideration American Evangelicalism Islam, Kidd 21. Esther due general foregrounding overcoming threat people convenient connection made Persian villain Haman current President Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (Shapiro Citation2010). 22. refers controversial 2009 report UN Fact-Finding Mission Gaza Conflict, headed Richard Goldstone. 23. Several religious leaders, including Rabbi Ovadia Yosef David Batzri, also asserted Hurricane Katrina retribution upon dealing sense fate treatment expressed popular evangelism, Chick gospel tract ‘Love People’ http://www.chick.com/reading/tracts/1000/1000_01.asp
article
en
Convention|State (computer science)|Sociology|Christianity|Judaism|Religious studies|Globalization|Media studies|Political science|Law|Theology|Social science|Philosophy|Algorithm|Computer science
https://doi.org/10.1080/1070289x.2012.735616
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1986810546', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/1070289x.2012.735616', 'mag': '1986810546'}
Gaza|Iran|Israel|West Bank
C144024400
Sociology
Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power
‘That thing of human rights’: discourse, emergency assistance, and sexual violence in South Sudan's current civil war
Alicia Elaine Luedke (https://openalex.org/A5057205645)|Hannah Logan (https://openalex.org/A5075561808)
2,017
One of the most widely covered aspects current conflict in South Sudan has been use sexual violence by rival factions People's Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A) and other armed groups. While this had positive effect ensuring that is an integral component intervention strategies country, it also a number unintended consequences. This paper demonstrates how narrow focus on as ‘weapon war’, broader emergency lens through which plight civilians, especially women, viewed, are overly simplistic, often neglecting root causes such violence. More specifically, highlights dominant discourses Sudan's have disregarded historically violent civil–military relations typified SPLM/A's leadership, structural connected with local political economy bride wealth associated commodification feminine identities bodies.
article
en
Sexual violence|Commodification|Intervention (counseling)|Spanish Civil War|Structural violence|Liberation movement|Poison control|Politics|Criminology|Human rights|Sociology|Political science|Law|Gender studies|Psychology|Medicine|Psychiatry|Medical emergency|Economy|Economics
https://doi.org/10.1111/disa.12273
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2780397283', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/disa.12273', 'mag': '2780397283', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29281141'}
Sudan
C144024400|C169437150|C2776857772|C2777996642
Human rights|Sexual violence|Sociology|Structural violence
Disasters|PubMed
‘That's the way they do it in Europe’: Redefining Culture in a Greek Border Region
Dimitris Gintidis (https://openalex.org/A5045526893)
2,012
This article aims at portraying the symbolic and material impact of cross-border entrepreneurial EU-funded projects on local public sphere Evros, a Greek region bordering with Turkey. Often construed as ‘European policies’ level, such reflect complex interaction between ‘European’, ‘national’ ‘local’. In order to unravel dynamics interaction, I focus case cultural associations. These associations stood typical bearers romantic nationalist discourse; this enactment nationalism was also related specific forms capital, through ostensibly ‘disinterested patriotic action’. The introduction in challenged historically constructed practices. At same time, these were mediated by representatives State locally appropriated reformulation older national policies funding channels. argues that implementation those brought about two significant changes sphere: dissemination throughout 1990s 2000s, growing importance new, market-oriented perception action,
article
en
Public sphere|Nationalism|Political science|State (computer science)|Political economy|Symbolic capital|Sociology|Public administration|Economy|Law|Social science|Economics|Politics|Algorithm|Computer science
https://doi.org/10.1017/s1062798711000299
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2123978533', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/s1062798711000299', 'mag': '2123978533'}
Turkey
C144024400
Sociology
European Review
‘That’s the beauty of it, it’s very simple!’ Animal rights and settler colonialism in Palestine–Israel
Esther Alloun (https://openalex.org/A5065686836)
2,017
This article examines the contemporary animal rights movement in Palestine–Israel and compares Jewish Israeli activism to Palestinian illuminate ways which settler colonial context shapes politics. The argues that human–animal relationships constitute a significant dimension through colonialism is expressed, engaged with, resisted. As such, drawing on ethnographic material, it explores how different approaches can obscure or reveal racial relations they are bound up with. It considers Israelis frame non-intersectional ways, as simple, single-issue be abstracted from human politics power relations, while Animal League occupied West Bank weaves with decolonial struggle for self-determination an intersectional spirit. hence suggests that, great extent, follows patterns set by regime, type of advocacy behalf animals being shaped sides taken within state. Instances trouble complicate this settler/native binary explored well possibilities coalitional
article
en
Colonialism|Politics|Animal rights|Human rights|Context (archaeology)|Sociology|Gender studies|Power (physics)|Political science|Law|History|Physics|Archaeology|Quantum mechanics
https://doi.org/10.1080/2201473x.2017.1414138
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2776191059', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/2201473x.2017.1414138', 'mag': '2776191059'}
Israel|Palestine|State of Palestine|West Bank
C144024400|C169437150
Human rights|Sociology
Settler Colonial Studies
‘The Algerian woman is very strong’: music, identity and gender in Algerian London
Stephen Wilford (https://openalex.org/A5048395384)
2,021
The Algerian music community in London is relatively small but includes a significant number of women who are actively involved as performers, composers, event organisers and audience members. In recent years, these have been at the forefront vibrant local diasporic scene. Music-making provides means for social interaction, offering from across city an opportunity to meet perform together. However, while many successful professionals accomplished musicians, their experiences music-making shaped by expectations placed upon within contemporary society. Individual collective ties connect UK with France North Africa, combination familial pressures societal conventions serve configure produced consumed London. This chapter draws extensive ethnographic fieldwork London’s community. Through interviews conversations women, I unpack complex, sometimes contradictory, relationship between music, gender Algerianness explore how encourages interaction community-building simultaneously producing gendered spaces men city. By interrogating some tensions agency constraint that play out Algerians London, seek understand issues class, religion language contribute lived musical practices women.
chapter
en
Identity (music)|Gender studies|Art|History|Sociology|Psychology|Aesthetics
https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429201080-5
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4200139330', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429201080-5'}
Algeria
C144024400
Sociology
Routledge eBooks
‘The Allied Partner’: Sweden and NATO Through the Realist–Idealist Lens
Magnus Petersson (https://openalex.org/A5027565288)
2,017
During the Cold War, Sweden was secretly integrated in Western defence planning. Since then, has become one of NATO’s most eager partners, cooperating with organisation to such a large extent that it is informally referred as ‘allied partner’ or ‘partner number one’. contributed greatly all major NATO operations (Bosnia, Kosovo, Afghanistan and Libya), even more so than many members, during 2014 summit Wales signed an agreement on ‘host nation support’ received special partner (‘gold card’) status within NATO. Despite this, membership not politically realistic. The reason deeply rooted realist scepticism among Swedish people against joining military alliances combined neutralist, idealist identity.
chapter
en
Summit|Political science|Skepticism|Cold war|Political economy|Sociology|Law|Geography|Politics|Cartography|Philosophy|Epistemology
https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-59524-9_4
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2773136094', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-59524-9_4', 'mag': '2773136094'}
Libya
C144024400
Sociology
Palgrave Macmillan UK eBooks
‘The Antidote to Hate Is Success’: An Interview With Izzeldin Abuelaish
Joanie Eppinga (https://openalex.org/A5048230383)
2,011
Izzeldin Abuelaish, often referred to as “the Gaza doctor,” grew up in a refugee camp the Strip. He overcame poverty and many other obstacles, was accepted medical school Cairo. became an internationally recognized expert on issues of fertility worked Israeli hospital. Dr. Abuelaish married had eight children. Shortly after his wife died from leukemia, he with seven children their home January 16, 2009 when hit by mortar during shelling. Three Abuelaish’s daughters niece were killed instantly, another daughter profoundly wounded. Despite great pain, held belief that hate is not appropriate response war. Today who has been nominated for Nobel Peace Prize, started foundation called Daughters Life (www.daughtersforlife.com), which works educate young women Middle East attempt promote peace. In addition, written book entitled I Shall Not Hate: A Doctor’s Journey Road Human Dignity (Random House Canada, 2010), recounts life story philosophy. Journal editor Joanie Eppinga spoke at Gonzaga University Institute Hate Studies’ Conference Studies Spokane, Washington, April 7, 2011.
article
en
Wife|Dignity|Refugee|Law|Daughter|Sociology|Spanish Civil War|Brother|Religious studies|Political science|Philosophy
https://doi.org/10.33972/jhs.86
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1813016203', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.33972/jhs.86', 'mag': '1813016203'}
Gaza|Gaza Strip|Israel
C144024400
Sociology
Journal of hate studies|DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals)
‘The Assassins’: Shelley's Appropriation of History
Ya-feng Wu (https://openalex.org/A5025779211)
1,995
Attached from principle to peace, despising and hating the pleasures customs of degenerate mass mankind, this unostentatious community good happy men fled solitudes Lebanon.
article
en
Appropriation|Aesthetics|Philosophy|Sociology|Epistemology
https://doi.org/10.1179/ksr.1995.9.1.51
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2033331137', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1179/ksr.1995.9.1.51', 'mag': '2033331137'}
Lebanon
C144024400
Sociology
The Keats-Shelley Review
‘The Battle for Abu Simbel’: Archaeology and Postcolonial Diplomacy in the UNESCO Campaign for Nubia
Adam C. Hill (https://openalex.org/A5078545476)
2,021
This essay examines the role and agency of British archaeologists in discussions surrounding Egypt’s construction Aswan High Dam beginning late 1950s. The dam was conceived as a grand engineering project that would create new farmland make Egypt self-sufficient terms its energy needs, but flooding caused by threatened to destroy numerous archaeological sites along Nile River on border Sudan. With blessing Egyptian Sudanese governments, United Nations Educational, Scientific Cultural Organization (UNESCO) launched complex rescue operation 1960 with goal surveying affected sites, some cases removing entire structures safe locations. Despite Britain’s initial reluctance—four years after Suez crisis—to participate program benefit an avowedly hostile regime, scientific expertise private fundraising soon came play important UNESCO’s ‘Campaign for Nubia’. Using diplomatic papers records various bodies, I will argue participation UNESCO crucial avenue Anglo-Egyptian rapprochement during 1960s 1970s.
article
en
Diplomacy|Battle|Agency (philosophy)|Archaeology|Political science|History|Ancient history|Politics|Law|Sociology|Social science
https://doi.org/10.1177/0022009421997884
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3156169247', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/0022009421997884', 'mag': '3156169247'}
Egypt|Sudan
C144024400
Sociology
Journal of Contemporary History
‘The Bedoun’: Kuwaitis without an Identity
Abdullah Mohammad Alhajeri (https://openalex.org/A5002630291)
2,014
The Bedoun (stateless/without nationality) in Kuwait constitute a controversial concurrent social, political and legal issue, which was still is the subject of heated debate, vivid example social conflict, platform extensive deliberation concerning its thorny dimensions. problem not only politically socially complex, but it has problematic dimensions, have made it, since 1950s, complex chronic problem. recent growing interest addressing issue strife to determine degree complexity entanglement could be ascribed margin freedom enjoyed more than rest Arabian Gulf states, active participation pillars democratic system Kuwait, light media freedoms focus on as marginalized community legally, socially. Therefore, current constitutes strongest internal concern for Kuwaiti authorities people after external threats, especially because always been ignored or treated security at times. This study seeks shed decipher causes historical development until became pressing government levels State Kuwait. will avoid complexities
article
en
Politics|Deliberation|Political economy|Political science|Law|State (computer science)|Sociology|Law and economics|Algorithm|Computer science
https://doi.org/10.1080/00263206.2014.941357
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2085552537', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/00263206.2014.941357', 'mag': '2085552537'}
Kuwait
C144024400
Sociology
Middle Eastern Studies
‘The Biggest Problem We Are Facing Is the Running Away Problem’: Recruitment and the Paradox of Facilitating the Mobility of Immobile Workers
Katharine Jones (https://openalex.org/A5079538120)|Leena Ksaifi (https://openalex.org/A5038641167)|Colin Clark (https://openalex.org/A5057634944)
2,022
Fee-charging recruitment industries in Asia have become gatekeepers to temporary employment low-wage occupations for millions of migrant workers. One these jobs is live-in domestic work private households. Increasingly, workers’ recruiters are depicted as contributing their precarious, sometimes exploitative, working conditions. However, narratives misunderstand the systemic and regulatory functions agencies transnational labour market actors. This article analyses relationship between placement Jordan Lebanon clients (the employers) they negotiate women from Bangladesh. Drawing on data 146 qualitative interviews, it addresses mechanisms how controlling practices constructed normalised by everyday interactions with well The argues that play a paradoxical role; whilst facilitating global mobility also broker worker immobility.
article
en
Negotiation|Work (physics)|Business|Wage|Labour economics|Narrative|Qualitative research|Temporary work|Public relations|Political science|Sociology|Economics|Law|Mechanical engineering|Social science|Linguistics|Philosophy|Engineering
https://doi.org/10.1177/09500170221094764
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4290615003', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/09500170221094764'}
Jordan|Lebanon
C144024400
Sociology
Work, Employment and Society|Pure (Coventry University)|The UWS Academic Portal (University of the West of Scotland)|Pure (Coventry University)|The UWS Academic Portal (University of the West of Scotland)
‘The Black House’, or How the Zulus Became Jews
Hlonipha Mokoena (https://openalex.org/A5059886813)
2,018
In the now standardised collection of James Stuart Archive (JSA), there is an odd mention by Zulu informants speculation that Zulus were descendants Jews, or they are one lost ten tribes Israel. Historians who have sourced JSA largely ignored this discourse, preferring to read archive as a repository history and cultural knowledge. This article exploration notion ‘diaspora’ how literate 19th century Bible implying affinity between identities Jews. These literates constituted themselves into reading publics, biblical narrative dispersal Jews became most popular hotly debated topics. Literate actively involved in exegeses, not only allowing them passages together on pages newspapers but also opening up novel interpretations ‘refashioned’ prophetic traditions. The ‘Israelite’ was appealing, since used it write about their own origins. accounts related truncated ways his informants, appeal – maybe even enigma explicitly speculative, religious, fantastical, magical ultimately destabilising, suggesting ‘religiosity’ ‘reading’ synonymous (at least minds African literates). will demonstrate Judaic diaspora functioned template which early 20th centuries reconstructed stories migration, origins service re-imagined diaspora; what called indlu emnyama (‘the black house’).
article
en
Diaspora|Zulu|Narrative|History|Reading (process)|Literature|Islam|Religious studies|Homeland|Newspaper|Anthropology|Sociology|Politics|Art|Philosophy|Gender studies|Media studies|Law|Linguistics|Archaeology|Political science
https://doi.org/10.1080/03057070.2018.1461457
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2803279315', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/03057070.2018.1461457', 'mag': '2803279315'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
Journal of Southern African Studies
‘The Boat is full!’: predictors of perceived migrant group size and perceived right to stay for immigrants (‘¡El barco está lleno!’: predictores del tamaño percibido de los grupos migrantes y de su derecho a residir en el país)
Hanna Zagefka (https://openalex.org/A5031436300)|Nali Moftizadeh (https://openalex.org/A5008886853)|Jessica Barber (https://openalex.org/A5000699057)|Siugmin Lay (https://openalex.org/A5022301871)|Ravinder Barn (https://openalex.org/A5038851153)
2,020
Predictors of perceived population size and right to reside in the UK were tested for immigrants Britain. Two studies explored psychological responses British respondents immigration UK. A questionnaire study examined towards migrants living from India, Poland Syria (Study 1, N = 136). In this study, intergroup similarity threat predicted affect, which turn estimates migrant group Study 2 (N 126) was an experiment manipulated threat, elicited a fictional group, get better handle on causal direction effects observed 1. Taken together, showed that Britain by similarity, affect.
article
en
Immigration|Affect (linguistics)|Social psychology|Psychology|Demography|Migrant workers|Population|Similarity (geometry)|Geography|Demographic economics|Sociology|Archaeology|Communication|Artificial intelligence|Economic growth|Computer science|Economics|Image (mathematics)
https://doi.org/10.1080/02134748.2020.1783835
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3081300385', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/02134748.2020.1783835', 'mag': '3081300385'}
Syria
C144024400
Sociology
Revista De Psicologia Social
‘The Bottom Billion’: A Critique and Alternative View
Charles Gore (https://openalex.org/A5006095273)
2,010
In his book; The Bottom Billion: Why the Poorest Countries Are Failing and What Can Be Done About It?, Paul Collier argues that core development challenge of new millennium is failure growth process in poorest countries world. These are falling behind, often apart’ (Collier 2007: 3), ‘if nothing done about it’, he writes, ‘this group will gradually diverge from rest world economy over next couple decades, forming a ghetto misery discontent’ (ibid.: xi). He identifies 58 group, including most sub-Saharan Africa, as well Bolivia, Cambodia, Haiti, Laos, Myanmar Yemen, much landlocked Central Asia. population together numbers almost one billion. His book concerned with why failing these bottom billion (BBCs) what can be it, particularly by G8 countries.
chapter
en
Landlocked country|Nothing|Development economics|Population|Political science|Developing country|Geography|Economic growth|Economic history|Economy|Economics|Sociology|Law|Demography|Philosophy|Epistemology
https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230274020_11
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2418971387', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230274020_11', 'mag': '2418971387'}
Yemen
C144024400|C47768531
Development economics|Sociology
Palgrave Macmillan UK eBooks
‘The British Turk’ and the ‘Christian harem’
Diane Robinson-Dunn (https://openalex.org/A5021982566)
2,017
This chapter shows how people in England chose to understand and represent the harem for what ends could differ dramatically. It focuses on ways which ideas about slavery entered English gender debates helped create versions of national identity opposition Islam understood negative terms. The relationship between foreign policy domestic is especially manifest when considering widespread concern with prostitution, or 'white slavery'. notion slavery' was redefined through these related movements' linking affairs politics. For anti-slavery workers, Christian missionaries others, Muslims want guidance existed at peripheries British imperial system places such as occupied Egypt. Anti-slavery ideology, however, flexible enough appeal a number different points view.
chapter
en
Harem|Appeal|Opposition (politics)|Ideology|White (mutation)|Chose|Islam|Gender studies|Politics|Political science|History|Sociology|Law|Biochemistry|Chemistry|Archaeology|Evolutionary biology|Gene|Biology
https://doi.org/10.7765/9781526118639.00011
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2885623781', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.7765/9781526118639.00011', 'mag': '2885623781'}
Egypt
C144024400
Sociology
Manchester University Press eBooks
‘The Cedar Revolution’: Lebanese Independence and the Question of Collective Self-Determination
Ersun N. Kurtulus (https://openalex.org/A5046566239)
2,009
The article rejects the notion conveyed by expression ‘the Cedar Revolution’ that Lebanon has recently experienced radical political changes. On basis of an empirical survey recent developments, it identifies four elements continuity; confessional nature Lebanese politics, omnipresence trans-national alliances, confrontational rhetoric and continuation foreign interventions in Lebanon's internal affairs. Making use opinion surveys, argues some these indicate existence independence-integration cleavage which follows sectarian lines renders conceptualization citizens as a collective actor able to exercise self-determination—either gaining complete independence or establishing close ties with Syria—problematic. Finally, at theoretical level problem agent ensuing self-determination can potentially emerge any polity where there is cleavage.
article
en
Polity|Independence (probability theory)|Conceptualization|Politics|Political science|Political economy|Collective identity|Cleavage (geology)|Sociology|Law|Philosophy|Statistics|Mathematics|Linguistics|Geotechnical engineering|Fracture (geology)|Engineering
https://doi.org/10.1080/13530190903007251
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2062146117', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/13530190903007251', 'mag': '2062146117'}
Lebanon|Syria
C144024400
Sociology
British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies
‘The Coloniser who Refuses’: Co-Resistance and the Paradoxical Reality of Israeli Solidarity Activists
Leanne Gale (https://openalex.org/A5007611012)
2,014
In the period following Second Intifada, many Israeli and Palestinian peace activists began to despair of traditional coexistence efforts, turning instead joint nonviolent political activism against policies. This mode work came be known as ‘co-resistance’. It would fair wonder if such might foster Israeli–Palestinian efforts towards a shared society, possibly one-state solution. However, somewhat counter-intuitively, solidarity can sometimes reinforce separation between two parties in question. article uses Solidarity Movement case study explore role co-resistance activists. Using ethnographic methods drawing upon Albert Memmi's theory ‘coloniser who refuses’, this illustrates how serve advance Israelis Palestinians into distinct national communities.
article
en
Solidarity|Resistance (ecology)|Politics|Sociology|State (computer science)|Law|Wonder|Political science|Gender studies|Social psychology|Ecology|Biology|Psychology|Algorithm|Computer science
https://doi.org/10.1080/15423166.2014.944852
{'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2007622085', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/15423166.2014.944852', 'mag': '2007622085'}
Israel
C144024400
Sociology
Journal of Peacebuilding & Development