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‘The ones who die are lost and the survivors are what we have’: neoliberal governmentality and the governance of Covid-19 risk in social media posts in Turkey | Selin Atalay (https://openalex.org/A5023739862) | 2,022 | This study focuses on understanding and explaining the technologies that affect governance of risk Covid-19 in Turkey. To assess how this is governed by individuals, discussions around disease within a Turkish Facebook group. The aim to understand individuals conduct themselves establish norms against illness that, case an infectious disease, involves governing self while managing others. results show discourse created infection very much line with notions neoliberal governmentality, individual responsibility, citizens as consumers, entrepreneurs. Governing related prevalent ways prioritising or recognising economic explanations, cost calculation assessment successful using quantifiable variables, such number new cases deaths. Concepts like herd immunity natural selection are open discussion. Individuals who believe government primarily responsible for assert they paying taxes advocate disciplinary measures should be taken government, whereas opposing view states risk. We interpret both these views illustrating governmentality representing contractual familial state–citizen relationships. | article | en | Governmentality|Corporate governance|Government (linguistics)|Risk society|Turkish|Risk governance|Political science|Neoliberalism (international relations)|Public relations|Sociology|Political economy|Business|Law|Politics|Social science|Linguistics|Philosophy|Finance | https://doi.org/10.1080/13698575.2022.2056583 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4221039021', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/13698575.2022.2056583'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Health, Risk & Society |
‘The only place where an Arab can hit a Jew and get a medal for it’: boxing and masculine pride among Arab citizens of Israel | Tamir Sorek (https://openalex.org/A5078025083) | 2,009 | Hamze Yunes' life story from Israeli boxing star to Palestinian guerrilla is highly interesting as a case study that challenges the conventional linkage between Arab sport and politics in Israel. Israel publicly presented by its major actors an integrative sphere, athletes usually distance themselves nationalist overtones or political protest. boxing, which dominated athletically administratively Arabs, even extreme example of this tendency. Hamze's narrative, however, ties his attraction for humiliation men under Military Government (1948–66), implying was combative practice more than channel integration. Based on memoirs published 1999 interviews with family members, essay contrasts these two diametrically opposed discourses discusses reasons exceptionality. | article | en | Pride|Memoir|Narrative|Humiliation|Gender studies|Politics|Media studies|Muhammad-Ali|Nationalism|Political science|Sociology|Law|Art|Literature | https://doi.org/10.1080/17430430903076357 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2000749604', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/17430430903076357', 'mag': '2000749604'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Sport in Society |
‘The people awoke awake’: observations from Beirut’s walls in the 17 October moment | Arek Dakessian (https://openalex.org/A5068380046)|Célia Hassani (https://openalex.org/A5063118701)|Sarah Shmaitilly (https://openalex.org/A5020395450) | 2,021 | In this chapter we reflect on street art in Beirut during the October 17 revolutionary moment, when a decades-long accumulation of social, political and economic ills culminated unprecedented sustained protest across Lebanon. Through our engagement with series murals, stencils graffiti that emerged Beirut’s walls around 17, as well numerous scribbles by anonymous citizens these more formal works random public surfaces, argue might have mediated formation citizen subjectivities ‘making public’ conversations, contestations reflections previously restricted to private intimate spaces home family. | chapter | en | Graffiti|Politics|Moment (physics)|Sociology|Media studies|Political science|Visual arts|Art|Law|Physics|Classical mechanics | https://doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447340508.003.0004 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4285416794', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447340508.003.0004'} | Lebanon | C144024400 | Sociology | Policy Press eBooks |
‘The people want …: ’ the populist specter in the Tunisian President’s inaugural speech | Fethi Helal (https://openalex.org/A5058463344) | 2,021 | This paper combines insights from Deictic Space Theory and Conceptual Metaphor to analyze the Tunisian President’s inaugural speech following his victory in October 2019 elections. Detailed critical discourse analysis of deictic exponents metaphorical image schemas employed text showed a Manichean opposition between pure/good people (Us) versus corrupt/evil ‘elites’ (Them), nostalgia pristine revolutionary moment, pan-Arab which anchors Israeli-Palestinian conflict close local geography radical form populism, grounds sovereignty within transcendent theocratic cosmology. It is suggested that upsurge populism politics could be explained by disenchantment with deficient rather ‘fake’ Islamo-nationalist consensus politics, inappropriate neoliberal policies imposed fund-raising bodies like International Monetary Fund (IMF) World Bank (WB) as well fragmentation, if not total erosion, viable public spaces for rational deliberation decision-making processes result ‘digital era.’ | article | en | Opposition (politics)|Populism|Politics|Disenchantment|Sociology|Political economy|Sovereignty|Exceptionalism|Deixis|Nationalism|Theocracy|Victory|Thatcherism|Law|Political science|Philosophy|Linguistics | https://doi.org/10.1080/17405904.2021.1879886 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3128554447', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/17405904.2021.1879886', 'mag': '3128554447'} | Israel|Tunisia | C144024400 | Sociology | Critical Discourse Studies |
‘The personal is political’: sexuality, gender and the Left in Europe during the 1970s | Nikolaos Papadogiannis (https://openalex.org/A5035451561)|Sebastian Gehrig (https://openalex.org/A5047483317) | 2,014 | Click to increase image sizeClick decrease size AcknowledgementsWe would like thank Aribert Reimann who played a crucial role in developing ideas for this special issue. Ilse Josepha Maria Lazaroms, Rachel Ritchie and Jozefien de Bock all greatly supported us throughout the publication process. The initial idea issue resulted from conference entitled ‘The Personal is Political: Interfaces between Politics Culture Across Europe 1970s’ held 2009 at Lucy Cavendish College, Cambridge. We Faculty of History, University Cambridge, as well Society Modern Greek Studies generous financial support that helped fund conference.Notes 1. ASKI, Archive EKON Rigas Feraios, Speech Tassos Ioannidis, Pre-Congress Athens Gathering, 1978. 2. Ingrid Gilcher-Holtey coined term describe political developments France elsewhere “West” after 1968. See: CitationGilcher-Holtey, “May 1968 France,” 253–76. 3. E.g. CitationDurrer, “Born be Wild.” Callum Brown, however, estimates much less significant impact contraceptive pill on sexual permissiveness England during 1960s. CitationBrown, “Sex, Religion, Single Woman,” 189–215. 4.CitationMarwick, Sixties. 5.CitationStearns, Sexuality World History. 6. For case Greece, see: CitationHerzfeld, “Semantic Slippage Moral Fall,” 161–72. Pat Thane Tanya Evans, their study unmarried mothers contemporary England, have argued conformity decades preceding 1960s has been overestimated. CitationThane, “Unmarried Motherhood Twentieth-Century England,” 11–29; CitationEvans Thane, Sinners? Scroungers? Saints? 7.CitationHerzog, “Between Coitus Commodification,” 261–86. 8. CitationGunther, Elastic Closet; CitationHerzog, Europe. 9.CitationKarakatsanis, “‘Turkish-Greek Friendship’ Reiterated.”10. Recent scholarship demonstrated strength groups beyond Left, such Conservative Neofascist organisations. right-wing actors, CitationLivni, Schmidt, Sturm, Die 1970er Jahre als schwarzes Jahrzehnt; Citationvon der Goltz, “A Polarised Generation?,” 195–215. To ensure coherence, articles focus Left.11.CitationBaumann, Büchse, Gehrig, “Einleitung: Protest und gesellschaftlicher Wandel den Jahren,” 11–32.12. gender relations postwar Italy, CitationFilippucci Willson, “Gender Private Sphere Italy since 1945.”13. Irish context, CitationFerriter, Occasions Sin.14.CitationBracke, Which Socialism?, 194.15. Herzog, Europe, 2.16.CitationMurphy Spear, “Introduction,” 1–11; CitationRubin, “Thinking Sex,” 267–319.17.CitationWallach Scott, “Women History,” 141–57.18. Based approach very influential among women's historians CitationSmith-Rosenberg, “The Female World,” 1–18.19.CitationWallach “Gender: Useful Category,” 1053–75. Similar analyses had already developed 1970s number scholarly pieces. See, instance, CitationKaplan, Anarchists Andalusia.20.CitationMaleck-Lewy Maleck, Women's Movement East West Germany,” 373–96; CitationHorn, Spirit ‘68, 217–19; CitationEvans, “Sons, Daughters, Patriarchy,” 331–47. In an even more nuanced approach, historian Luisa Passerini stressed “1968” Turin bred liberation women, often dispensed with monogamous relationships. However, transitional period was marked by absence “love respect” women; oral emotion envy many women felt one another student movement. CitationPasserini, Autobiography Generation, 95–100. Concerning relationship homosexual activists “1968”, see, others: CitationJackson, Living Arcadia, especially 172–94; CitationChassaigne, French Gay Militant Movement;” CitationSibalis, May ’68 Origins Liberation 235–53.21. E.g.: CitationSchulz, “Echoes Provocation,” 137–54.22.CitationBracke, “Building ‘Counter-Community Emotions,’” 223–36.23. gender, CitationConnell Messerschmidt, “Hegemonic Masculinity,” 829–59. See also: CitationTosh, Masculinity History Gender,” 41–58.24.CitationSchulman, Seventies; CitationFrum, How Got Here; CitationBerkowitz, Something Happened; CitationDoering-Manteuffel Raphael, Nach dem Boom; CitationJarausch, Das Ende Zuversicht?25. CitationEley, Forging Democracy, 405–8.26.CitationJarausch, After Hitler, 180.27.CitationEyerman Jamison, Music Social Movements, 130–9.28. “red decade” Germany, CitationKoenen, rote Jahrzehnt. Dutch journalist Antoine Verbij, echoing Koenen, labelled 1970 1980 Netherlands “ten red years” left-wing radicalism. CitationVerbij, Tien rode jaren. A recent edited volume Switzerland endorses concept “bewegtes Jahrzehnt” (a decade protest movements), which lasted CitationSchaufelbuehl, 1968–1978. Finally, Bernd Faulenbach maintained radicalism merely side story. Rather, he described Germany “Social Democratic Decade.” His argument based electoral successes SPD fact Democrats set agenda domestic politics foreign affairs period. CitationFaulenbach: “Die Siebzigerjahre – ein sozialdemokratisches Jahrzehnt?,” 1–37.29.CitationWolfe, ‘Me’ Decade,” 26–40.30. CitationGundle, Between Hollywood Moscow; CitationHajek, “Fragmented Identities,” 107–30.31. Feminism Eurocommunism Gundle, Moscow, 150.32.CitationKlimke, Other Alliance, 2.33.CitationGal Klingman, Gender, 8.34.CitationMcLellan, “Glad behind Wall,” 105–30.35.CitationPells, “Double Crossings,” 189–201.36. Marwick, Sixties; De Groot, Seventies Unplugged.37.CitationSchildt, “‘Die Kräfte Gegenreform,’” 449–78; CitationSchulman Zelizer, Rightward Bound.38.CitationFerguson, 1–21.39. Conference “Writing Post-1970 History: Conceptualizing Late Twentieth Century German American Historiography,” Munich, Center Advanced (CAS), June 2011.40.CitationWirsching, 1980s,” 8–26.41. Several researchers use demonstrate so-called protests began before and, some cases, continue years come. example, network “Around Activists, Networks Trajectories:” http://www.history.ox.ac.uk/research/project/around-1968-activism-networks-trajectories.html (Accessed 12 November 2013).42. 176.43.CitationJameson, “Periodizing,” 178.44. CitationDavis, “Violence Memory Nazi past 1960s–70s Protest,” 210–37.45. Rüdiger Graf, Review Niall Ferguson, Charles S. Maier, Erez Manela Daniel J. Sargent, Shock Global. Perspective (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press Harvard Press, 2010), www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id = 33759 2 April 2014). | review | en | Politics|Human sexuality|Gender studies|Conformity|Sociology|History|Political science|Law | https://doi.org/10.1080/13507486.2014.983425 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2081359571', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/13507486.2014.983425', 'mag': '2081359571'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | European Review of History: Revue europeenne d'histoire |
‘The perspectives of Iranian Feminists and Women Activists on Gender Equality in Iran’ | Pardis Asadi Zeidabadi (https://openalex.org/A5002160491)|Nadia Aghtaie (https://openalex.org/A5090848619) | 2,023 | This paper explores the perspectives of Iranian women involved in women’s activism and policymaking Iran on gender equality justice. The study draws 47 in-depth semi-structured interviews through an explanatory approach. Participants this included activists, whose points reference is Islamic teaching, as well those activists who consider rights outside framework religion. political leaders do not accept between men women, their gendered policies have limited activities feminists activists. Key findings demonstrate that participants take different positions conceptualization justice there a strong link social position, self-identification terminology they use to advocate for autonomy calling change. | article | en | Gender studies|Conceptualization|Autonomy|Terminology|Politics|Gender equality|Islam|Sociology|Economic Justice|Reproductive justice|Position (finance)|Gender justice|Political science|Law|Pregnancy|Linguistics|Philosophy|Theology|Finance|Artificial intelligence|Abortion|Biology|Computer science|Economics|Genetics | https://doi.org/10.1080/13530194.2023.2225895 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4383312298', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/13530194.2023.2225895'} | Iran | C139621336|C144024400|C2777257067 | Economic Justice|Reproductive justice|Sociology | British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies |
‘The phoenix that always rises from the ashes’: an exploratory qualitative study of the experiences of an initiative informed by principles of psychological first aid following the Beirut blast | Brian Chi Fung Ching (https://openalex.org/A5034713572)|Alexandra Badaoui (https://openalex.org/A5076805754)|Nada Abou Seif (https://openalex.org/A5041331526)|Rea Al Hallal (https://openalex.org/A5093007620)|Gabriel Luiz Bundies (https://openalex.org/A5018572379)|Amy T. Campbell (https://openalex.org/A5088613199)|Ayla Rafie (https://openalex.org/A5093007621)|Angela Song-Chase (https://openalex.org/A5093007622)|Jane Sungmin Hahn (https://openalex.org/A5037483506)|Jo Billings (https://openalex.org/A5020668076) | 2,023 | Background: On 4 August 2020, an explosion occurred in Beirut, Lebanon. Hundreds of people were killed, thousands injured and displaced. An initiative was rapidly initiated to provide remote support informed by psychological first aid for the mental health Lebanese young adults affected blast. However, little is known about recipients' experiences such initiatives.Objective: This study aimed qualitatively explore supporters recipients community-led following blast.Method: We recruited a diverse sample four who took part Beirut initiative. Semi-structured interviews conducted with participants. Reflexive thematic analysis used analyse qualitative data.Results: developed five themes from interviews, which highlighted ideas around accessibility, alienation, relationship, elements safe space created initiative, unmet needs areas improvement. Recipients described detrimental impact blast on their within context beyond. elucidated complex its impact.Conclusions: Our findings suggest has potential be acceptable Further research into after similar crisis events warranted.Following implemented adults.Reflexive data sessions completed identify across views.Participants feeling alienation blast, development meaningful relationship between supporter recipients, gratitude having process share difficult feelings. Possible avenues improvement implementation suggested. | article | en | Thematic analysis|Context (archaeology)|Mental health|Reflexivity|Qualitative research|Exploratory research|Psychology|Qualitative property|Medicine|Medical education|Sociology|Psychiatry|Social science|Paleontology|Machine learning|Computer science|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1080/20008066.2023.2263146 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4387363890', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/20008066.2023.2263146', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37796664'} | Lebanon | C134362201|C144024400 | Mental health|Sociology | European Journal of Psychotraumatology|PubMed |
‘The phone means everything.’ Mobile phones, livelihoods and social capital among Syrian refugees in informal tented settlements in Lebanon | Markus Göransson (https://openalex.org/A5028729762)|Lotta Hultin (https://openalex.org/A5007952401)|Magnus Mähring (https://openalex.org/A5006687930) | 2,020 | This study explores the role of mobile phones in livelihood creation among Syrian refugees informal tented settlements Akkar Governorate and Bekaa Valley Lebanon. Drawing on forty-five interviews with ten aid workers, highlights importance reviving, maintaining leveraging social capital for purpose securing livelihoods a context precarity restricted movement. We find that offer important means reviving networks exile, managing supportive relationships have been established Lebanon liaising employers. As such, they constitute tools coping shaped by legal exclusion, movement, police harassment, decentralised provision geographical dispersal support networks, even as remain costly investment uncertain returns. | article | en | Livelihood|Refugee|Human settlement|Informal settlements|Mobile phone|Harassment|Context (archaeology)|Social capital|Syrian refugees|Economic growth|Business|Political science|Geography|Sociology|Engineering|Economics|Social science|Agriculture|Telecommunications|Archaeology|Law | https://doi.org/10.1080/21632324.2020.1746029 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3016456588', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/21632324.2020.1746029', 'mag': '3016456588'} | Lebanon|Syria | C144024400|C3018716944 | Sociology|Syrian refugees | Migration and development|KTH Publication Database DiVA (KTH Royal Institute of Technology) |
‘The piety of the gift’: Selfhood and sociality in the Egyptian Mosque Movement | Philip C. Anderson (https://openalex.org/A5030490440) | 2,011 | This article asks what is achieved in Muslim piety movements Cairo by reciting, listening to and discussing the Quran, sermonizing, mutual moral exhortation admonishment. I argue that at stake for Egyptian pietists not only self-formation (the Foucauldian perspective privileged Mahmood 2005), but also achievement of a non-secular sociality. For participants movement, virtue constituted primarily through social exchange interaction (mu‘aamalaat) rather than simply worship (‘ibaadaat) or ritual practices discipline self. suggests need go beyond conceptions ethics as self-formation. In order understand sociality contemporary Egypt analysed (2005) Hirschkind (2006), propose metaphor borrowed from economic anthropology: ‘gift economy’. characterize gift economies reference circulation words material goods. The advantages ‘words gifts’ are threefold. First, it emphasizes way which virtue, pietists, transaction individual worship. Second, directs attention ideology language movements, whereby ethical communities form around efficacy Quran recalls example Prophet Muhammad. Third, reflects urban constitute themselves conscious opposition notion secularism (‘almana) associated with commodity economy goods, images experienced morally socially corrosive. | article | en | Sociology|Metaphor|Piety|Sociality|Ideology|Aesthetics|Worship|Virtue|Epistemology|Philosophy|Law|Political science|Politics|Theology|Ecology|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1177/1463499610395441 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1983231347', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/1463499610395441', 'mag': '1983231347'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | Anthropological Theory |
‘The principle of mulier taceat in ecclesia did not matter in the early church’: P. A. Prokoshev about the charismatic power of women in the Church | Vyacheslav Yachmenik (https://openalex.org/A5040994825) | 2,023 | The article analyzes the historiosophic opposition between womanliness and virility that characterized late modern era was transferred by Pavel Prokoshev to history of emergence office deaconess in early Church. shows how charismatic widows who began usurp power bishops Church were replaced clerical deaconesses subordinate church hierarchy. also reveals sources drew upon, including historical narrative A. von Harnack on transition from Charismatic monarchical episcopate, as well work Syrian Didascalia H. Achelis, described struggle perspective women's issue. assimilates these ideas tries see them problems feminization life relevant at turn 19th 20th centuries. | article | en | Charisma|Bishops|Monarchy|Church history|Power (physics)|Opposition (politics)|Christianity|Theology|Sociology|History|Religious studies|Philosophy|Law|Political science|Politics|Physics|Quantum mechanics | https://doi.org/10.32608/2307-8383-2023-31-252-275 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4388996201', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.32608/2307-8383-2023-31-252-275'} | Syria | C144024400 | Sociology | Адам & Ева |
‘The proper and naturall meaning of the Prophets’: the hermeneutic roots of Judeo-centric eschatology | Andrew Crome (https://openalex.org/A5073293133) | 2,009 | Recent scholarship on Puritan millennialism has identified an interest in Jewish conversion and restoration to Palestine, labelled as ‘Judeo-centrism’. This essay examines the early development of this theme from 1600–21, focusing primarily three writers within mainstream theology – Thomas Brightman, Draxe Henry Finch. In Judeo-centrism, was not viewed a union with Gentile believers. Instead, Jews were seen maintain their otherness assume position superiority over Gentiles. presumed that Church believing Israel separate entities, meaning prophecies previously applied must exclusively be Jews. result adoption ‘consistently literal’ hermeneutic reading Old Testament prophecy. suggests approach Brightman's response Jesuit commentaries Revelation produced late sixteenth century. | article | en | Revelation|Judaism|Meaning (existential)|Philosophy|Eschatology|Theme (computing)|Literature|Hermeneutics|Mainstream|Theology|Early Christianity|New Testament|Religious studies|History|Epistemology|Art|Computer science|Operating system | https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1477-4658.2009.00628.x | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1516982905', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1477-4658.2009.00628.x', 'mag': '1516982905'} | Israel|Palestine | C111936747 | Early Christianity | Renaissance Studies |
‘The right to the city’ revisited: Assessing urban rights – The case of Arab Cities in Israel | Yosef Jabareen (https://openalex.org/A5073231352) | 2,014 | Based on a critical revision of Lefebvre's right to the city, this paper proposes conceptual framework for city that is made up several rights. The study uses assess held by Arab minority in Israel. indicates inhabitants cities Israel, both Jews and Arabs, are large extent denied although unequally. Significantly, reveals rights Palestinians Israel deficient incomplete. This problem structural deeply political ethnic one could not be solved at level. has agenda aims enhance conditions urban life its face economic processes hegemony central state. A crucial insight regarding regards city–state relationships, suggesting represents protect from state tyranny technocrats provide adequate human shelter with strong status. absence potential intensify conflicts between state; conversely, it suggests progressive might mitigate conflict. | article | en | Right to the city|Politics|State (computer science)|Technocracy|City-state|Hegemony|Ethnic group|Political science|Human rights|Political economy|Sociology|Law|Algorithm|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.habitatint.2013.06.006 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2153588786', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.habitatint.2013.06.006', 'mag': '2153588786'} | Israel | C144024400|C169437150|C2780423321 | Human rights|Right to the city|Sociology | Habitat International |
‘The school is the link between the Jewish community and the surrounding milieu’: education and the Jews of Iran from the mid-1940s to the late 1960s | Daniella Farah (https://openalex.org/A5066169192) | 2,021 | This article offers a thematic examination of the significant role education played among Jews Iran from mid-1940s to late 1960s. I focus on work Alliance Israélite Universelle, Franco-Jewish philanthropic organization which established its first school in 1898. The – viewed Iranian as backwards and degenerate aimed modernize them via Western education. In this article, demonstrate that Alliance’s helped move up socio-economic ladder provided with opportunities integrate into broader non-Jewish milieu. By exploring disputes arose between local Jews, also show Iran’s did not always accept paternalistic attitudes. To discuss overall impact situate history Jewish within Pahlavi state’s nationalizing campaigns. | article | en | Alliance|Judaism|Sociology|Political science|Paternalism|Work (physics)|Gender studies|Religious studies|Ancient history|History|Law|Philosophy|Archaeology|Mechanical engineering|Engineering | https://doi.org/10.1080/00263206.2021.1892646 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3139358450', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/00263206.2021.1892646', 'mag': '3139358450'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | Middle Eastern Studies |
‘The sea pulled her skirt up’ | Paul Baker (https://openalex.org/A5000893315)|Maryam Paknahad Jabarooty (https://openalex.org/A5075383493) | 2,017 | Abstract This article examines the language used by bloggers in Iran who write about same-sex relationships. Homosexuality is a criminal offence and discussion of sex tabooed so blogging potentially acts as form empowerment for desire such By conducting qualitative analysis small sample blogs, we show how Iranian have developed range techniques to avoid censorship their postings, well examining they orient discourses around relationships, oppression identities heteronormativity. | article | en | Heteronormativity|Oppression|Empowerment|Gender studies|Censorship|Homosexuality|Sociology|Media studies|Human sexuality|Psychology|Political science|Law|Politics | https://doi.org/10.1075/jls.6.2.01bak | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2667081559', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1075/jls.6.2.01bak', 'mag': '2667081559'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of language and sexuality |
‘The sequential organisation of gossip talk’ | Tugba Aslan (https://openalex.org/A5060527872) | 2,021 | Gossip, in its most general sense, means talking about absent third parties with regards to their strengths and weaknesses an evaluative or informative tone. It is a common phenomenon has been investigated from different perspectives of research such as human sciences, behavioural psychology, anthropology so forth. Although it prevalent topic amongst researchers various disciplines, the sequential organisation gossip talk still keeps authenticity terms real-life talk-in-action research. This study aims provide micro-analysis adopting emic perspective. The data set consists collection 90 hours audio collected retirement home Turkey. are analysed using Conversation Analysis. results authentic points systematicity sequences initiation, response closing. | article | en | Gossip|Conversation|Emic and etic|Conversation analysis|Perspective (graphical)|Tone (literature)|Phenomenon|Set (abstract data type)|Sociology|Psychology|Social psychology|Epistemology|Computer science|Linguistics|Communication|Artificial intelligence|Philosophy|Anthropology|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1177/14614456211001604 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3149321853', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/14614456211001604', 'mag': '3149321853'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Discourse Studies |
‘The show of the people’ against the cultural elites: Populism, media and popular culture in Turkey | Burak Özçetin (https://openalex.org/A5000093212) | 2,019 | This article explores the relationship between populism, media and popular culture in Turkey by focusing on a phenomenal historical television series, Diriliş: Ertuğrul, discursive spaces opened show. The author relies symptomatic analysis of populism which conceptualizes term as an anti-status quo discourse that simplifies political space symbolically dividing society ‘the people’ its other, more specifically elites’. Diriliş is promoted Justice Development Party ( Adalet ve Kalkınma Partisi) elite pro-government show people’, cultural artifact belonging to people. has been embraced alternative morally degenerate products alienated Westernist/Kemalist elites. elites used every opportunity incorporate series into populist program. focuses specific crisis moment, ‘The Golden Butterfly Awards 2016’, ensuing debates how can resonate with party. | article | en | Populism|Politics|Elite|Sociology|Economic Justice|Media studies|Political science|Popular culture|Political economy|Law | https://doi.org/10.1177/1367549418821841 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2922432493', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/1367549418821841', 'mag': '2922432493'} | Turkey | C139621336|C144024400 | Economic Justice|Sociology | European Journal of Cultural Studies |
‘The sky is the limit’: higher education, gender and empowerment in the Bedouin community in the Negev in Israel | Anat Pessate‐Schubert (https://openalex.org/A5007070386) | 2,004 | This article addresses the meaning that female Bedouin from Negev in Israel give to higher education. I shall focus discussion on processes which personal and social contexts merge into one another. Although there has been an increase number of investigations ways women participate public sphere, a survey literature reveals no have conducted educated attribute education during course their lives. Through analysis ten in‐depth interviews carried out between 1998 2001, this examines issues such as gender, empowerment mobility amongst young Israel. | article | en | Empowerment|Sky|Limit (mathematics)|Geography|Socioeconomics|Sociology|Economic growth|Economics|Mathematical analysis|Mathematics|Meteorology | https://doi.org/10.1080/0305792042000257167 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2052535872', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/0305792042000257167', 'mag': '2052535872'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education |
‘The small talk of the harem’: discursive communities and colonial silences in Edith Wharton'sIn Morocco | Lucas Tromly (https://openalex.org/A5001348482) | 2,009 | Edith Wharton's travel narrative In Morocco (1920) is an endorsement of French colonialism underwritten by central tropes Orientalism. During travels she takes on a masculine agency and, consequently, presents androcentric account her experiences. alignment herself with colonial administration describes in highly terms disturbed during visit to harem, when moment identification shares woman meets there compromises the androcentrism that informs politics. However, this ambiguous itself colonised Orientalism which Wharton committed. The ideology confirmed inadvertent and long-deferred acknowledgement as woman. Instead advocating colonialism, becomes gendered proof its necessity. attests Orientalism's flexible resilience, because ideological underpinnings re-entrench themselves through context-specific silencing own advocate. | article | en | Orientalism|Colonialism|Ideology|Harem|Context (archaeology)|History|Gender studies|Agency (philosophy)|Sociology|Politics|Law|Political science|Social science|Archaeology|Evolutionary biology|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1080/13645140903080040 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2066766529', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/13645140903080040', 'mag': '2066766529'} | Morocco | C144024400 | Sociology | Studies in Travel Writing |
‘The sphinx will speak at last’: Visions, Communications and Esoteric Experience | E. Dobson (https://openalex.org/A5089285365) | 2,020 | This chapter investigates visions of ancient Egypt that were understood to be grounded in supernatural truth. It examines the Egyptologists on peripheries magical orders, including E. A. Wallis Budge and Battiscombe Gunn, those who took part spiritualistic activities, such as Howard Carter, well individuals involved these specialists their spiritual undertakings. Examining lives works Golden Dawn magicians Florence Farr Aleister Crowley alongside writers Sax Rohmer H. Rider Haggard, it exposes networks collaboration between interested Egyptian rites, connects relationships with Egyptological sites, artefacts. experts often attempted distance themselves from tales artefacts particularly liable inspire, but this was by no means universal. literary overlaps esotericism Egyptology illuminates one most intriguing aspects cultural exchange taking place scholarly field culture more broadly: spirits ceremonies which frequently claimed had potency modern world (besides fiction) did, fact, impress upon several practitioners; esotericists, meanwhile, turned buttress beliefs experiences. | chapter | en | Vision|Sphinx|Egyptology|Art|Literature|History|Aesthetics|Art history|Visual arts|Classics|Sociology|Anthropology | https://doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474476249.003.0006 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3202238284', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474476249.003.0006', 'mag': '3202238284'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | Edinburgh University Press eBooks |
‘The spring of hope, the winter of despair’: an unfinished narrative of Mediterranean cities | Dennis Hardy (https://openalex.org/A5063270845) | 2,012 | Abstract Early in 2011, a powerful surge of protest calling for political and social change swept along the North African shoreline. Not first time, almost certainly not last, established rhythms urban life region were to be severely disrupted. The patient work well-laid plans counted little as people took streets military governments resisted; overnight, public squares became places even battlegrounds. Tunis, Tripoli Alexandria – three cities that feature this paper by no means only feel strong winds change. Moreover, all case studies have long histories and, with so many other around Mediterranean, turbulence is nothing new. It hard think parts world where often experienced changing fortunes: at one moment history nourishing growth civilization, another trapped spiral decline. Located between continents, geological well geopolitical instability, Mediterranean are familiar bad times good. This explores nature volatile process its impact on form. Keywords: Mediterraneanurban developmenturban changeAlexandriaTripoliTunis Acknowledgement My thanks due Jane Woolfenden taking photos. Notes Adapted from timeless introduction Charles Dickens, A Tale Two Cities (1859). Although book was about London Paris time French Revolution there an enduring resonance sense contrasts described: best times, it worst age wisdom, foolishness, epoch belief, incredulity, season Light, Darkness, spring hope, winter despair, we had everything before us, going direct Heaven, way … . (Book First, p. 1, http://www.gutenberg.org/files/98/98-h/98-h.htm) Fulke Greville (English poet, writer politician), Caelica, 1633, Oxford Dictionary Quotations, 4th ed. (Oxford: University Press, 1992), 318. One example artists’ colony Estaque (formerly separate settlement but now western edge Marseille), towards turn nineteenth century. mother impressionist, Paul Cèzanne, lived artist's enthusiasm landscape attracted experimentalists like Renoir later, Braque Dufy. fascinating informative source Byron's travels Fiona MacCarthy, Byron: Life Legend (London: Murray, 2002). distorted view East, known Orientalism, considered E.W. Said, Orientalism Penguin, 2003). First published Routledge Kegan Paul, 1978. Said's has itself been widely contested. Byron, 114. Theroux, course his own round made point visiting some writers who their home if they longer alive, making pilgrimages portrayed books. See Pillars Hercules: Grand Tour 1996). Hamish Hamilton, 1995. See, instance, Blue Plan report, State Environment Development 2009, Sophia Antipolis, France. For helpful context, see Benoit, G. Comeau, A., eds., Sustainable Future Earthscan, 2005). most illustrative Marseille, where, particularly Euroméditerranée project, concerted effort authorities attract corporate headquarters rejuvenated docklands site. Most metropolitan areas claim structure place clear planners can do stem or guide overwhelming volume rate growth. true Alicante west east. There striking contrast rates population southern Europe, ago rapidly growing relatively stable, countries Africa Levant totals everywhere rising faster than new opportunities employment. Reliable statistics unemployment come figures 30% young without jobs Egypt 46% Algeria uncommon; see, Lydia Khalil, ‘Youthquake Middle East’, Australian Literary Review, April 6, 3–4. At writing, situation Syria remains unresolved, Government protesters still locked conflict. P. Matvejević, Mediterranean: Cultural Landscape (Berkeley: California 1999), 10. Grafički Zavod Hrvatske, Zagreb, 1987. short sympathetic treatment Minoan sudden demise, provided J.J. Norwich, Sea: History Chatto Windus, 2006). exceptional Baroque architecture found original site city, former island Ortygia (for connected mainland bridges). Fernand Braudel, pre-eminent scholar, whose research focus sixteenth century, argued inverse relationship occurrence warfare outbreaks piracy, latter flourishing when national hostilities fewer. World Age Philip II, vol. 2 1995), 865. France, Librairie: Armand Colin, 1966, Z. Oldenbourg, Crusades Phoenix, 2001). Weidenfeld Nicolson, 1966. As late twentieth under banner ‘Greater Greece’, Greek troops invaded Anatolia. They driven back whole centuries forced leave. In following year, 1923, modern Turkey formed. example, Trieste Roman Tergeste. passed over favour Aquilea, although waned while later prospered become main Italian city east Venice. M. Mazower, Salonica, City Ghosts: Christians, Muslims Jews, 1430–1950 Harper, 2004). Milton, Paradise Lost: Smyrna 1922 Destruction Islam's Tolerance Sceptre, 2008). R. Kapuściński, Travels Herodotus 2008), 81. E.M. Forster, Alexandria: Guide Pharos Pharillon André Deutch, 2004), 19. 1922, 1923. J. Pollard H. Reid, Rise Fall Birthplace Modern (New York: 2007). Viking 2006, 24. Amongst good references early development following: Alexandria; Haag, Memory Haven: Yale Alexandria, 29. xiv. first-hand observation Scipio's tutor, Polybius (c.200–118 BCE): sight utterly perishing amidst flames Scipio burst into tears, stood reflecting inevitable which awaits cities, nations, dynasties, all, does every us men. (Polybius, Book XXXIX, Histories, www.fordham.edu/halsall/ancient/polybius-punic3.asp). Rose Macaulay, Pleasure Ruins Thames Hudson, 1977), 6. edition 1953. N. Smart, World's Religions: Old Traditions Transformations (Cambridge: Cambridge 1989), 277. A. Wheatcroft, Infidels: Conflict Christendom Islam 198. Viking, 2003. Arab general, Amr, 54. Sea, 205. Ibid., 204. term, ‘Tunis white’ reputedly coined historian, Diodorus Sicily, century BC. Lewis Wingfield, Under Palms vols. (Elibron Classics, 2005), 239. Hurst Blackett, 1868. C.G. Segrè, Fourth Shore: Colonization Libya (Chicago: Chicago 1974), 109. M.L. Todd, Mysterious (Tripoli: Dar Al Fergiani, 1994). 1912 (publishing house unknown). same cathedral, however, would mosque, crescent replacing cross towering dome. Bechir Kenzari, ‘Lake Concept Third Centre’, Evolving City: Tradition, Modernity & Urban Development, Y. Elsheshtawy (Abingdon: Routledge, 114–33. useful accounts how spread beyond core F. Vigier, Housing Tunis (Cambridge, MA: Harvard Graduate School Design, 1987) J.S. Woodford, Tunis: Evolution System (Outwell, UK: East Studies 1990). Tunis’, J.-Y. Empereur, Past, Present 2002), 120. France Gallimard, 2001. Lawrence Durrell, Quartet Faber Faber, ‘Balthazar’, 314. 1962. Hassan Abdel-Salam, ‘The Historical Morphology Alexandria’, Planning Perspectives 10, no. (1995): 173–98. R.B. St. John, Libya: From Colony Independence Oneworld, 139. Village, Libya, 135. www.leonwohlhagewernik.de/fileadmin/downloads/english/Press_Release_Tripolis_e.pdf. Hercules, 478. 125. Ewan Anderson, ‘A Geopolitical Fracture Zone’, Geography, eds. King, De Mas, J.M. Beck (Brighton: Sussex Academic 2001), 18–27. | review | en | Spring (device)|Narrative|Mediterranean climate|Physical geography|History|Political science|Geography|Sociology|Economic geography|Art|Archaeology|Engineering|Literature|Mechanical engineering | https://doi.org/10.1080/02665433.2012.681137 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2039960476', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/02665433.2012.681137', 'mag': '2039960476'} | Algeria|Egypt|Libya|Syria|Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Planning Perspectives |
‘The starting point of development should be the people’ - Interview: Kwasi Adu-Amankwah | Kwasi Adu-Amankwah (https://openalex.org/A5088088799) | 2,011 | Kwasi Adu-Amankwah, the former head of Ghana’s powerful labour federation, was elected general secretary Africa division International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC-Africa) in 2007, putting him at helm a pan-African movement representing 16 million workers 47 countries. Renewal’s Michael Fleshman spoke with annual gathering civil society groups for World Social Forum Dakar, Senegal, on 8 February, shortly after Mr. Adu-Amankwah led march to Egyptian embassy solidarity people’s pro-democracy movement. | article | en | Solidarity|Democracy|Civil society|Political science|Economic history|Sociology|Economic growth|Public administration|Law|Politics|History|Economics | https://doi.org/10.18356/7c448197-en | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2553518500', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.18356/7c448197-en', 'mag': '2553518500'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | Africa Renewal |
‘The stories of anywhere are also the stories of everywhere else’: Salman Rushdie’s Shalimar the Clown and The Enchantress of Florence | Daniel O’Gorman (https://openalex.org/A5075238930) | 2,015 | In a 2005 interview with the Paris Review, Salman Rushdie said: ‘My life has given me this other subject: worlds in collision. How do you make people see that everyone’s story is now part of everyone else’s story? It’s one thing to say it, but how can reader feel their lived experience?’1 His statement makes case for ability literature encourage readers empathically imagine themselves into ‘lived experience’ other, producing new global ties not unlike those Judith Butler called her recent work (see Chapter 1). However, like Dave Eggers’ What Is — as well majority authors I have discussed study Rushdie’s post-9/11 fiction does stop at redressing imbalances empathy (or power structures underlie it), additionally works towards deconstruction categories identity and difference allow such an imbalance occur first place. Bringing conclusion expansion argument’s scope began 3, which focused on novels challenge perceptions between two national (the United States Iraq), trans-nationalism final chapter less delimited by country or type. While previous chapters explored complex negotiation fiction, more interested broader question what it means be different widely globalised world. | review | en | Identity (music)|Narrative|Power (physics)|Subject (documents)|Literature|Argument (complex analysis)|History|Aesthetics|Media studies|Art|Sociology|Physics|Quantum mechanics|Library science|Computer science|Biochemistry|Chemistry | https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137506184_6 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2492175174', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137506184_6', 'mag': '2492175174'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | Palgrave Macmillan UK eBooks |
‘The students do not know why they are here’: education decision-making for Syrian refugees | Fares J. Karam (https://openalex.org/A5039401081)|Christine Monaghan (https://openalex.org/A5027012443)|Paul J. Yoder (https://openalex.org/A5063345535) | 2,016 | This case study, conducted collaboratively between education scholars and practitioners, describes analyses the ways in which Syrian refugee teachers an NGO are developing implementing non-formal (NFE) programming three settlements Lebanon. Utilising INEE Minimum Standards for Education Emergencies, we analyse teachers’ programme administrators’ decision-making processes regarding curriculum, language of instruction, pedagogy as well how why these decisions made absence a guiding framework or policy NFE. We also consider nation-state writ large still helps to influence ‘global era’. | article | en | Writ|Refugee|Syrian refugees|Curriculum|Political science|Global education|Pedagogy|State (computer science)|Sociology|Public relations|Medical education|Medicine|Law|Computer science|Algorithm | https://doi.org/10.1080/14767724.2016.1222895 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2520969817', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14767724.2016.1222895', 'mag': '2520969817'} | Lebanon|Syria | C144024400|C2776702143|C3018716944 | Global education|Sociology|Syrian refugees | Globalisation, Societies and Education |
‘The teacher makes us feel like we are a family’: students from refugee backgrounds’ perceptions of physical education in Swedish schools | Erica Cseplö (https://openalex.org/A5029515913)|Stefan Wagnsson (https://openalex.org/A5070992708)|Carla Luguetti (https://openalex.org/A5000647512)|Ramón Spaaij (https://openalex.org/A5034214602) | 2,021 | Background: Over the past five decades, number of people from refugee backgrounds in developed countries has been on constant rise. Although field and forced migration studies relation to education sport grown considerably recent years, very little is known about refugee-background students’ perceptions Physical Education (PE).Purpose: The aim this study was investigate PE Swedish high schools, using a salutogenic approach.Participants settings: This qualitative conducted two schools involved eleven students aged 16–18 years (seven boys four girls) who originated variety including Afghanistan, Syria, Somalia, Ethiopia Albania.Data collection/analysis: A total 11 semi-structured interviews were conducted, systematically coded analyzed sense coherence (SOC) components as analytical tools.Findings: Three themes identified that captured experiences: (1) perceived more meaningful Sweden than their country origin due short-term benefits (e.g. social interaction with friends, improving personal health wellbeing) long-term learning for future); (2) understanding rules purpose activities helped better comprehend experiences acquired communicate others; (3) constructive relationships teachers classmates an essential resource order make manageable.Implications: We suggest strengths-based approaches should be recognized incorporated into facilitate promoting factors wellbeing among backgrounds. | article | en | Refugee|Perception|Qualitative research|Qualitative property|Psychology|Physical education|Social psychology|Pedagogy|Sociology|Political science|Social science|Neuroscience|Law|Machine learning|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1080/17408989.2021.1911980 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3156035326', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/17408989.2021.1911980', 'mag': '3156035326'} | Somalia|Syria | C144024400 | Sociology | Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy|Digitala vetenskapliga arkivet (Diva) (Karlstad University)|VU Research Repository (Victoria University) |
‘The teacher who helps children learn best’: affect and authority in the traditional primary classroom | Eleanore Hargreaves (https://openalex.org/A5024547697)|Dalia Elhawary (https://openalex.org/A5038481273)|Mohamed Mahgoub (https://openalex.org/A5023734508) | 2,017 | This paper draws on the views of nearly 400 Year 5 pupils across nine classes in three government primary schools Alexandria, Egypt. It explores how they perceived role affect their classroom; and teachers’ authority. By presenting with sentences to complete, our research explored prevailing traditional approach teaching influenced English classroom. We also collected data by interviewing 38 individually carrying out Group Interviews pupils’ teachers. concluded that were acutely aware feelings relationship teacher capacity learn cognitively. Many them said did not respect those teachers who refused exercise an ethic care In these cases, see as authoritative; learning was impeded. | article | en | Affect (linguistics)|Feeling|Interview|Psychology|Mathematics education|Government (linguistics)|Pedagogy|Social psychology|Sociology|Communication|Linguistics|Philosophy|Anthropology | https://doi.org/10.1080/14681366.2017.1314318 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2607361020', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14681366.2017.1314318', 'mag': '2607361020'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | Pedagogy, Culture and Society|UCL Discovery (University College London)|UCL Discovery (University College London) |
‘The trophies of their wars’: affect and encounter at the Canadian War Museum | Sara Matthews (https://openalex.org/A5002885018) | 2,013 | Abstract This paper explores the concept of war trophy in relation to two exhibits at Canadian War Museum: a black Mercedes-Benz bulletproof limousine that was once used by Hitler as parade car and Gertrude Kearns' (1996) painting Somalia Without Conscience, an image depicts Master Corporal Clayton Matchee posing beside tortured Somali teenager Shidane Arone. A central preoccupation is how encounter think with affective realm experience when narrative museum one represents difficult histories social devastation, violence war. I investigate free association method cultural analysis can attend force encounter. To do so, propose fictive exhibit brings into conversation consider embodied subjects are constructed presence memorial space. Finally, comment on visitor responses open new questions regard mandate remember, preserve educate. | article | en | Painting|Wilderness|Realm|Conversation|Parade|Sociology|Dance|Somali|Embodied cognition|Conscience|Aesthetics|Dark tourism|Spanish Civil War|History|Visual arts|Art|Art history|Law|Political science|Tourism|Archaeology|Philosophy|Communication|Ecology|Linguistics|Epistemology|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1080/09647775.2013.807994 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2069626496', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/09647775.2013.807994', 'mag': '2069626496'} | Somalia | C144024400 | Sociology | Museum Management and Curatorship |
‘The ugly side to the beautiful game’: Qatar | Grace Gallacher (https://openalex.org/A5081466142) | 2,023 | On 2 December 2010, the announcement that Qatar would host 2022 World Cup sent shock waves through sporting community, given is a relatively small state with little in way of footballing history (Brannigan and Giulianotti 2015). The marks first time tournament has been held an Arab country over one million tourists to were projected (FIFA, 2022). It not uncommon for countries use mega events such as enhance their global presence alter international image 2015 Millward, 2017). However, this chapter will demonstrate, failed ‘rebut Orientalist images nation, Persian Gulf peoples more generally’ (Millward, Indeed, spotlight on its treatment migrant workers under kafala system, questionable LGBT+ laws which bid was obtained, only rebut negative Qatar, but attracted further criticism. | chapter | en | State (computer science)|Orientalism|Shock (circulatory)|Political science|Tournament|Advertising|History|Economic history|Media studies|Law|Sociology|Business|Medicine|Mathematics|Archaeology|Algorithm|Combinatorics|Computer science|Internal medicine | https://doi.org/10.56687/9781447362210-025 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4368375079', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.56687/9781447362210-025'} | Qatar | C144024400 | Sociology | Policy Press eBooks |
‘The veiled protectorate of Kowait’: liberalized imperialism and British efforts to influence Kuwaiti domestic policy during the reign of Sheikh Ahmad al‐Jaber, 1938–50 | Andrew B. Loewenstein (https://openalex.org/A5046207626) | 2,000 | British foreign policy-makers confronted a difficult quandary when in the late 1930s exportable quantities of oil were discovered Kuwait. The discovery transformed Kuwait from an obscure corner imperial map significant only for securing route to India important, if not critical, strategic and economic asset. Grasping Kuwait's new-found importance, strategists quickly realized that they could take full advantage resources able exert influence over domestic policies. structure Britain's treaties with Kuwait, however, denied such prospect. In 1899, Government negotiated first treaty governing relationship value was its location along sea lanes India. Britain consequently had control relations, solemnly pledged interfere matters concern. But as now discovered, arrangement satisfactory so long remained quiet port concerned pearl diving localized trade; revenue flooding Kuwaiti coffers, allowing Kuwaitis manage their internal affairs without guidance no longer acceptable. Kuwaitis, hardly prepared relinquish right unimpeded self-government. Thus, interests politico-legal realities head on. As result, compelled try reconfigure way would give them yet violate neither obligations nor emerging liberal international norms. Over ensuing decade, two strategies devised: first, promotion limited liberalization democratization; second, failed yield acceptable results, attempts persuade | article | en | Protectorate|Reign|History|Ancient history|Political science|Development economics|Colonialism|Law|Archaeology|Economics|Politics | https://doi.org/10.1080/00263200008701310 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1996316108', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/00263200008701310', 'mag': '1996316108'} | Kuwait | C47768531 | Development economics | Middle Eastern Studies |
‘The violence we live in’: reading and experiencing violence in the field | Lamia Moghnieh (https://openalex.org/A5037771083) | 2,017 | Anthropological literature on ethnographic experiences of violence, like Ethnographies under Fire (Nordstrom & Robben, 1995. Fieldwork Fire: Contemporary Studies Violence and Culture. Berkeley: University California Press) Violence: Ethnographic Encounters (Ghassem-Fachandi, 2009. Encounters. Oxford: Berg), has mostly approached violence as either a force destruction rupture located at the end politics social, or thing encountered during fieldwork that alienates researcher from her object study. Rarely does this speak how we can ethnographically capture not only destructive, but also social life (Thiranagama, 2011. In My Mother’s House: Civil War in Sri Lanka. Philadelphia: Pennsylvania transforms reconfigures subjectivities, suffering place. How ethnographies investigate political possibilities emerge while accounting for its detrimental effects?Based my research humanitarian knowledge practices trauma Lebanon, author explores article what an ethnography living-in-violence offer to our understanding conceptualization violence. The shows need theorize critically experience relation dominant portrayals encounter. Reading conflict sites is work experts who encounter ‘in field’ (like workers, ethnographers, psychologists military personnel/fighters) communities live However, reading everyday serves delineate conditions possibility liveability precariousness. It normalize certain kinds others are produced traumatic. Drawing several moments writings asks article: living-in-violence? And analytical importance? help us make sense different distinct forms production? | article | en | Ethnography|Sociology|Politics|Political violence|Conceptualization|Structural violence|Criminology|Reading (process)|Field (mathematics)|Gender studies|Political science|Anthropology|Law|Mathematics|Pure mathematics|Artificial intelligence|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1080/20581831.2017.1318804 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2612691563', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/20581831.2017.1318804', 'mag': '2612691563'} | Lebanon | C144024400|C2776857772|C2777162435 | Political violence|Sociology|Structural violence | Contemporary Levant |
‘The war has divided us more than ever’: Syrian refugee family networks and social capital for mobility through protracted displacement in Jordan | Sarah A. Tobin (https://openalex.org/A5068175303)|Fawwaz Ayoub Momani (https://openalex.org/A5055367548)|Tamara Al Yakoub (https://openalex.org/A5014952549) | 2,022 | The Syrian crisis began in 2011 Daràa, near the southern-Syrian border, with first refugees coming into Jordan thereafter. Over course of following years, nearly one million migrated to and still reside there, some same areas which they settled. These settlement patterns are often portrayed simplistic narratives migration that emphasise mobility a straightforward trajectory. This paper aims unsettle such by examining role family networks Jordan’s northern region, particularly between cities Mafraq Irbid, as well Zaatari refugee camp. Based on mixed methods, this examines network factors made country preference possibility for settlement, involved domestic within Jordan, their influences aspirations worries about future movements. Ultimately, finds pre-crisis economic, social, familial were employed at key decision-making moments throughout trajectories. As time has progressed, however, Syrians reported challenges social capital form assistance from long-standing networks. | article | en | Syrian refugees|Refugee|Settlement (finance)|Social capital|Middle East|Narrative|Palestinian refugees|Capital (architecture)|Geography|Political science|Economy|Development economics|Business|Economics|Law|Linguistics|Philosophy|Archaeology|Finance|Payment | https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183x.2022.2090157 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4288430910', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183x.2022.2090157'} | Jordan|Syria | C3018716944|C47768531 | Development economics|Syrian refugees | Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies|Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) |
‘The war on terrorism would not be possible without NATO’: a critique | David Brown Senior (https://openalex.org/A5039505111) | 2,004 | This article questions prevailing assumptions regarding the efficacy of NATO as a vehicle for waging US-declared ‘war on terror’. It begins by critically assessing evolution to date NATO's involvement in this ‘war’, with particular focus post-11 September interventions Afghanistan and Iraq. Having placed actions within empirical framework, expands its consider series proposals, both military political, that could, it has been suggested, form foundation future counter-terrorist agenda. The concludes suggesting that, far from being essential war terror, risks own vitality medium-to-long-term attempting involve itself areas where nothing real value offer. | article | en | Terrorism|Vitality|Politics|War on terror|Political science|Nothing|Political economy|Cold war|Law|Sociology|Epistemology|Philosophy|Theology | https://doi.org/10.1080/1352326042000330583 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2083314464', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/1352326042000330583', 'mag': '2083314464'} | Iraq | C144024400|C203133693 | Sociology|Terrorism | Contemporary Security Policy |
‘The world we share’: everyday relations and the political consequences of refugee-refugee hosting in Amman, Jordan | Zoë Jordan (https://openalex.org/A5050710024) | 2,022 | Male, Sudanese experiences of displacement in Amman, Jordan are characterised by the exclusions state and international humanitarian response bureaucracies, compounded pervasive racial discrimination violence. As part their efforts to maintain presence city, men have created household-level hosting relationships, based on a situated ethics care developed through shared understandings recognition interdependence. Through these personal relations, inhabit city offer one another some safety from uncertain hostile context Jordan. Hosting arrangements not merely convenient or functionally necessary difficult circumstances displacement, but produce new ways being together serve as sites for enactment social rights claims presence. such, refugee-refugee practices hold potential lived citizenship, enacted everyday ordinary acts care. | article | en | Refugee|Citizenship|Context (archaeology)|Politics|Bureaucracy|Situated|Displacement (psychology)|Sociology|Political science|State (computer science)|Gender studies|Criminology|Political economy|Law|Geography|Psychology|Archaeology|Algorithm|Artificial intelligence|Computer science|Psychotherapist | https://doi.org/10.1080/13621025.2022.2103976 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4288700682', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/13621025.2022.2103976'} | Jordan | C144024400 | Sociology | Citizenship Studies|Radar (Oxford Brookes University) |
‘Theatre of the People’: Rhetoric versus an Apparatus for Subversion and Control in the Mizrahi Co-Community | Shulamith Lev‐Aladgem (https://openalex.org/A5060163054) | 2,010 | Theatre in ethnic co-communities began Israel the early 1970s, mainly within Mizrahi co-culture (Jews originating from Arab/Muslim countries) and has since become known as ‘community-based theatre’. This form of theatre is generally initiated sponsored by municipal and/or state welfare cultural bodies a means for interpellation. The institutional agencies assume that participants’ self-expression through will facilitate or testify to their integration into dominant order. In contrast, bottom-up perspective group, project provides an opportunity articulate repressed forbidden life materials resist, challenge negotiate some way with status quo. history Israeli community-based thus illustrates complicated interaction between establishment co-community relation articulation empowerment. While defined formally created within, by, ‘people’, practice it usually controlled policed bodies. | chapter | en | Subversion|Negotiation|Empowerment|Articulation (sociology)|Status quo|Rhetoric|Political theatre|Postmodern theatre|Ethos|Sociology|Political science|Gender studies|Aesthetics|Media studies|Art|Law|Postmodernism|Literature|Politics|Philosophy|Linguistics | https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230276499_6 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2495782429', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230276499_6', 'mag': '2495782429'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Palgrave Macmillan UK eBooks |
‘Theatres of War’: Visual Technologies and Identities in the Iraq Wars | Benjamin Müller (https://openalex.org/A5079873734)|John Measor (https://openalex.org/A5075001051) | 2,011 | Abstract The proliferation and development of media during the current war in Iraq opening Iraqi landscape, which had heretofore been dampened through authoritarian state control international isolation due to economic sanctions, has played a role political articulation identity formation throughout occupation fashion not seen previous conflicts. adoption tools, emerging as both technology its applications – often referred Web 2.0 impacted combatants civilians caught within conflict providing them opportunity capture articulate their own experience never before available. This investigation points potential impacts on action, resourcefulness opposition access media, well dangers posed emotive content most produced. We argue that while such production is disassociated from surrounding events (or decontextualised), nonetheless trusted impactful viral distribution sourcing networks diverse impact those intimately involved lack overarching narrative away sites power. Notes 1. Iraqis precarious predominantly state-controlled digital age prior 2002 with limited exceptions northern environs under Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG). was estimated have less than 25,000 internet-enabled personal computers internet, satellite television mobile telephony, highly restricted controls pertinent infrastructures. 2. With emergence Al-Jazeera other privately owned potentially revolutionary change occurred across much region television, internet phone technologies all obviating monopoly information. On Al-Jazeera, rise Arab debates over see: Marc Lynch, Voices New Public: Iraq, Middle East Politics Today (New York: Columbia University Press 2006). 3. foreign intelligence murdered reporters numerous occasions found cooperating by regime were persecuted regime's security establishment. Hazhar Aziz Surme, 'Baathist psychological operations’, Kurdish Globe, 9 April 2008; Eason Jordan, ’The News (CNN) Kept To Ourselves’, York Times, 11 2003, available at <http://www.nytimes.com/2003/04/11/opinion/11JORD.html>. 4. Lawrence Wright, ‘Web Terror’, Yorker, 2 Aug. 2004, <http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2004/08/02/040802fa_fact>. 5. Mark Glaser, ‘Your Guide Soldier Videos Iraq’, MediaShift, 1 2006, <http://www.pbs.org/mediashift/2006/08/your-guide-to-soldier-videos-from-iraq213.html>. 6. James Der Derian, Virtuous War: Mapping Military-Industrial-Media-Entertainment Network Routledge 2009) p. 249. 7. Ibid., 250. 8. Arthur Kroker, Will Technology & Culture Nihilism: Heidegger, Nietzsche, Marx (Toronto: Toronto 2004) pp. 39–40. 9. Ibid. 10. War (note 6) 251. 11. In addition War, see also Critical Practices International Theory: Selected Essays 2009); After 9/11 (Udris Productions 2003); Human Terrain: Becomes Academic (2010), produced directed David Udris Michael Udris, Bullfrog Films; Antidiplomacy: Spies, Terror, Speed, (Oxford: Blackwell 1993). 12. 13. See Arjun Appadurai, Modernity Large: Cultural Dimensions Globalization (Minneapolis: Minnesota 1996). 14. Y. Dartnell, Insurgency Online: Activism Global Conflict 2006) 15. Rachel Hughes, ‘Through Looking Blast: Geopolitics Visual Culture’, Geography Compass 1/5 (2007) 976–994. 16. so-called ‘highway death’ Highway 80 runs between Kuwait City, Basra, Iraq. forces fleeing heavily bombarded 1991 US UK forces. proved controversial attacks cited strong examples unnecessarily disproportionate use force, troops refugees, who time retreating theatre operations. 17. notion ‘performances nationhood’ used developed J. Shapiro, Methods Nations: Governance Indigenous Subject 2004). 18. 19. varied audiences video-releases Al-Qaeda see, ‘Al-Qaeda's Media Strategy’, National Interest (Spring 50–56, <http://www.nationalinterest.org/Article.aspx?id=11524>. 20. MTV documentary “Iraq Uploaded” award-winning “The Tapes” depicting deployment Hampshire Guard film shoot entirely footage shot unit itself deployed 21. ‘Porn Site Offers Soldiers Free Access Exchange for Photos Dead Iraqis’, USC Annenberg Online Journalism Review, 20 Sep. 2005, <http://www.ojr.org/ojr/stories/050920glaser/>; article ‘Foto dell'orrore cambio di porno’, Il Corriere della Sera, 26 2005 (a mainstream Italian daily). 22. One ‘five pillars’ Islam hajj refers pilgrimage every able Muslim must attempt make Mecca lifetime. Muslims complete are hajji denote observance religious fidelity. Many adopted term reference seemingly neutral acceptable image-conscious officers spite pejorative connotations many it fashion. 23. Combat Diary: Marines Lima Company, Epstein, Viewfinder (2006), <http://www.aetv.com/listings/episode_details.do?episodeid=163325>. 24. Brian Lowry, ‘Combat Company’, Variety, 23 May <http://stage.variety.com/review/VE1117930623?categoryid=32&cs=1>. 25. 26. A portion focuses introduction some special then work alongside Company 27. See: Douglas Little, American Orientalism: United States since 1945, 3rd ed. (Chapel Hill, NC: North Carolina 2008); Melani McAlister, Epic Encounters: Culture, Media, U.S. Interests Since 2nd (Berkeley, CA: California 2005); Karim H. Karim, Islamic Peril: Violence (London: Black Rose Books 2000); Thierry Hentsch, Imagining East, trans. Fred A. Reed 1992); Edward Said, Covering Islam: How Experts Determine Rest World Vintage 1981); Orientalism 1979). 28. Violent Cartographies: Cultures 1997) 47–49, passim. 29. 47. 30. 48. 31. Three aspects emerge comprise 2.0’ generation software clearly alter social relations, behavioural interactions users themselves: (1) Rich Internet Applications (RIA) flash or Ajax (software making app browser) iterative can constantly update application (2) Service Orientated Architectures (SOA) feeds like RSS, Services allowing sharing user-generated Flikr YouTube, finally ability compile “Mash-Ups” bringing together unique shareable formats (3) Social encourages interaction end user (creator, audience participant) tagging content, dissemination organisation wikis, blogs, podcasts. 32. Misha Glenny, McMafia: Journey Through Criminal Underworld Knopf John Robb, Brave Next Stage Terrorism End (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley Sons 2007); Moises Naim, Illicit: Smugglers, Traffickers, Copycats Hijacking Economy Doubleday 2005). 33. 34. Benjamin Muller W. Measor, ‘Securitizing Norm Identity: Biometrics Homo Sacer Fallujah’, Muller, Risk, Security, Biometric State: Governing Borders Bodies 2010). 35. Destroyed part winter 2007. 36. Ba'th Party ruled 1968 until overthrow military March–April 2003. competition what previously Ba'th-co-opted symbols an imagery neo-Ba'th, Iraqist nationalist Islamist groups movements performance nation very fluid proposition insurgency. Eric Davis, Memories Politics, History Collective Identity Modern (Berkeley: Kanan Makiya, Monument: Art Vulgarity Saddam Hussein's (London I. B. Tauris 37. Referring al-Aqsa mosque Jerusalem. 38. K‘aba holiest site located inside Masjid al-Haram Mecca. long judged 1990s presence in, long-standing alliance with, Kingdom Saudi Arabia affront tacit holy cities infidel including al-Qaeda commonly advanced arguments 1990s. Bonner, Jihad History: Doctrines Practice (Princeton, Princeton 39. Millennium: Journal Studies 34/3 (2006). 40. Jacques Ranciere. Aesthetics, Gabriel Rockhill Continuum 51. 41. Ranciere, Disagreement: Philosophy 1998); Nights Labour: Workers Dream Nineteenth Century France (Philadelphia: Temple 1989); Ben ‘Ranciere Dummies’, Artnet Magazine (2007), <http://www.artnet.com/magazineus/books/davis/davis8-17-06.asp>, accessed Jan. 2007; contrast Louis Althusser, ‘Lenin Other Essays’, Monthly Review (1972). 42. Large, 43. aspect evident spectrum within, cutting class divisions military, increasing sense serving more honourable they serve. First addressed Andrew Bacevich, phenomenon consistent video products out As focusing them, evidenced concern fellow citizens, insularity combat experience, deprivations service, general disengagement ‘mission’ themselves sacrificing so pursue. Militarism: Americans Are Seduced Oxford 44. surge Thomas E. Ricks. Gamble: General Petraeus Military Adventure 2006–2008 Penguin Peter R. Mansoor, Baghdad Sunrise: Brigade Commander's Haven: Yale 2008). Beyond immense efforts US, Iraqi, allied dampening levels violence Baghdad, Ricks makes plain strategic failure level factions moved one iota forward issues dividing them. success encapsulated ‘victory’ Washington salons cable news outlets belied stasis described members ground communications home viewed authors. 45. youth demographics represent enormous bulge population actors increasingly attempting reach dynamic group. Finding employment, cohesion, ecological impact, mobilisation only important factors researchers concentrating examining this rapidly advancing cohort. For Development report(s) detailing challenges 2009 <http://www.arab-hdr.org/>; Rights Watch report ‘False Freedom Censorship Africa’, <http://www.hrw.org/en/reports/2005/11/14/false-freedom>. 46. emphasises how videos new contribute altering distance place speed technology, and, consequently, waged mediated beyond battlefield. F. Macdonald, K. Dodds, Observant States: I.B. | review | en | Iraq war|Political science|Geopolitics|War on terror|Media studies|Political economy|Economy|Computer security|Spanish Civil War|Sociology|Politics|Computer science|Law|Economics | https://doi.org/10.1080/14650045.2010.538879 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1965029733', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14650045.2010.538879', 'mag': '1965029733'} | Iraq|Jordan|Kuwait|Saudi Arabia | C144024400 | Sociology | Geopolitics |
‘Their Backs toward the Temple, and Their Faces toward the East:’ The Temple and Toilet Practices in Rabbinic Palestine and Babylonia | Rachel Neis (https://openalex.org/A5028171114) | 2,012 | Abstract This article treats the cultural meaning of rabbinic toilet rules from their Tannaitic instantiation through to later developments in Palestine and Mesopotamia. It argues that these draw corporeal mental bearings Jerusalem temple, inverse opposite directions prayer deportment. shows how juxtaposition sacred (temple) profane (toilet) triggered temple unlikely instances under guise prohibition. As such, are underside a mapping project, similar bodily orientation prayer. map, effectively drawn by direction orientation, with (absent) at its center, traversed Diaspora, ignored contemporary religious imperials maps limes . Thus developing practices can tell us something about minority social formation shaped functions not necessarily more predictable terms disgust expulsion but rather as devices which uphold lost center. | article | en | Toilet|Prayer|Temple|Palestine|Disgust|Diaspora|Aesthetics|Mesopotamia|Sociology|Ancient history|Philosophy|History|Art|Religious studies|Theology|Psychology|Engineering|Social psychology|Anger|Waste management | https://doi.org/10.1163/157006312x644137 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2000561698', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1163/157006312x644137', 'mag': '2000561698'} | Palestine | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal for the study of Judaism in the Persian, Hellenistic and Roman period|Humanities Commons CORE (Modern Language Association / Columbia University) |
‘Their Blood is Eastern’: Shahin Makaryus andFin de SiècleArab Pride in the Jewish ‘Race’ | Jonathan Marc Gribetz (https://openalex.org/A5035852690) | 2,013 | This article studies the origins and functions of a belief in Jewish race Arab fin de siècle through case study writings Shahin Makaryus al-Muqtaṭaf, influential journal he co-edited. The begins by examining racial definition Jews proffered al-Muqtaṭaf. It situates this view, first, within then-recent controversy surrounding Darwinism problem secularism renaissance and, second, contemporary Egyptian discourse about concerning Egypt's rule over Sudan. then presumed implications categorization for their supposed relatives, Arabs. argues that it was precisely imagined link between Arabs made an attractive category understanding minds certain Nahda thinkers. Next, examines Makaryus's approach to nationalism Zionism contends his apparent sympathy toward movement may be understood, at least part, relation Jews. Finally, concludes with some reflections on our world Nahda. | article | en | Secularism|Judaism|Religious studies|Zionism|Race (biology)|Nationalism|Sympathy|Sociology|Pride|Gender studies|Philosophy|Theology|Law|Islam|Political science|Politics|Psychology|Social psychology | https://doi.org/10.1080/00263206.2012.759107 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2084814207', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/00263206.2012.759107', 'mag': '2084814207'} | Egypt|Sudan | C144024400 | Sociology | Middle Eastern Studies |
‘Their Lives Have Become Ours’: Counter-Encounters in Mesopotamia, 1915–1918 | Santanu Das (https://openalex.org/A5078501558) | 2,018 | Das explores the complex encounter between soldiers and non-combatants from undivided India, serving as part of British Indian army, local population in Mesopotamia during First World War. Through memoirs diaries troops, doctors nurses stationed Mesopotamia, this chapter engages with ‘global’ turn War studies to explore these men’s interactions their officers, Turkish enemy a multi-ethnic civilian population. In so doing, Indians’ plural identities—as invaders, fellow Asians, colonial subjects often co-religionists (for Muslim sepoys)—and analyses how identities defy any neat political categorisation. | chapter | en | Mesopotamia|Plural|Memoir|Ancient history|Colonialism|Population|Adversary|Politics|Turkish|Ethnic group|History|Ethnology|Geography|Genealogy|Gender studies|Political science|Sociology|Anthropology|Law|Demography|Archaeology|Philosophy|Linguistics|Statistics|Mathematics | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-78229-4_8 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2888687729', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-78229-4_8', 'mag': '2888687729'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | War, culture and society, 1750-1850 |
‘Then Israel Bowed Himself…’ (Genesis 47.31) | Raymond de Hoop (https://openalex.org/A5031666789) | 2,004 | In Gen. 47.31b we find the phrase [ILLEGIBLE], which is generally interpreted as ‘then Israel bowed himself at head of bed’. Yet this interpretation does not make much sense in context and commentators are puzzled about its meaning. This article surveys possible meaning with help LXX Peshitta, traditions interpret final word [ILLEGIBLE] ‘staff’. The rendering Versions suggests a ‘staff, tribe’ for Hebrew term, leading to more common ‘head tribe’. suggested implies that dying patriarch down new pater familias, Joseph. Finally some considerations given regarding historical Joseph appears successor his father, Israel. | article | en | Interpretation (philosophy)|Meaning (existential)|Tribe|Hebrew|Reflexive pronoun|Phrase|Context (archaeology)|Successor cardinal|Original meaning|Philosophy|History|Literature|Linguistics|Sociology|Art|Epistemology|Archaeology|Anthropology|Mathematical analysis|Mathematics | https://doi.org/10.1177/030908920402800405 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2135257946', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/030908920402800405', 'mag': '2135257946'} | Israel | C144024400|C2779121571 | Sociology|Tribe | Journal for the Study of the Old Testament |
‘There Are No Blacks in France’: Fanonian Discourse, ‘the Dark Night of Slavery’ and the French Civilizing Mission Reconsidered | Françoise Vergès (https://openalex.org/A5060479591) | 2,010 | During the Algerian struggle, Fanon warned us about influence on politics of ‘the few European colonialists, powerful, intractable, those who have at all times instigated repressions, broken French democrats, blocked every endeavor within colonial framework to introduce a modicum democracy into Algeria’. Is this remark still pertinent? How does Frantz help understand current reactionary in France? his analysis Left discourse weigh postcolonial present? In article, I explore expressions focusing an event Reunion Island, territory. argue that it is important observe what happening territories because they remain laboratories for repressive policies and discourses. What call ‘French Algeria’, mix revisionist history, resentment, wounded narcissism racism, embodies political trend seeks counter small progress made rewriting history from point view colony France. | article | en | Reactionary|Politics|Colonialism|Racism|Postcolonialism (international relations)|Democracy|History|Political science|Sociology|Political economy|Gender studies|Law | https://doi.org/10.1177/0263276410383715 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1997667509', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/0263276410383715', 'mag': '1997667509'} | Algeria | C144024400 | Sociology | Theory, Culture & Society |
‘There Is No Value’ | Elizabeth Saleh (https://openalex.org/A5040647831) | 2,023 | This article draws on narratives from middle-class households in Beirut to examine their disenfranchisement amid the country’s financial collapse. A common expression, “There is no value,” often used allusion extreme price fluctuation that has punctuated everyday life since end of 2019. The phrase also speaks undoing a lifestyle emerged with pegging Lebanese lira US dollar 1990s. Reflecting how value conceptualized at level leads into exploring some complex ways which this milieu accessed credit following Lebanon’s civil war, and everything changed during current shortage. | article | en | Middle class|Value (mathematics)|Narrative|Liberian dollar|Everyday life|Political science|Undoing|Political economy|Sociology|Gender studies|Economics|Law|Psychology|Finance|Literature|Art|Machine learning|Computer science|Psychotherapist | https://doi.org/10.1525/curh.2023.122.848.329 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4389113200', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1525/curh.2023.122.848.329'} | Lebanon | C144024400 | Sociology | Current history |
‘There are no chickens in suicide vests’: the decoupling of human rights and animal rights in Israel | Erica Weiss (https://openalex.org/A5076899110) | 2,016 | In this article, I consider the shifting politics of animal rights activism in Israel relation to human activism. find that whereas past, and were tightly linked, today they have become decoupled, for reasons explore article. Although once shared social ideological foundations Israeli society, much current is assertive explicit its disregard issues, such as ongoing occupation Palestine treatment Palestinians. This decoupling has been heightened by appropriation a right-wing state purposes ethical legitimation. article considers dilemmas responsibilities towards humans animals it plays out one most vexed political environments world. activism, demonstrate how implicate entangle each other context Israeli-Palestinian conflict. further what movements might suggest regarding academic critique humanism. Résumé Dans cet l'auteure examine la politique changeante des mouvements militant pour protection animaux en Israël avec ceux qui militent défense les droits de l'homme. Elle montre que l'homme et étaient étroitement liés dans activistes par le passé mais sont aujourd'hui dissociés, raisons explorées l'article. Bien ces militantismes aient eu autrefois bases sociales idéologiques communes Israël, défenseurs affirment explicitement leur désintérêt questions l'homme, notamment l'occupation sort Palestiniens. Cette dissociation été renforcée mainmise d'un État droite sur animaux, à fins légitimation éthique. L'article dilemmes responsabilité éthique vis-à-vis humains l'un environnements politiques plus bouleversés au monde. Il l'activisme comment uns autres s'impliquent mutuellement entremêlés contexte du conflit chronique israélo-palestinien. L'auteure étudie également implications découplage entre cadre universitaire actuelle l'humanisme. Nir1 was agitated when met up with him at his apartment south Tel Aviv fall 2012, despite fact he had asked me join an event on issue close heart. known Nir, vegan activist from central Aviv, since 2008, during previous period fieldwork. He offered bring heard about fellow activist, Tom, but learned arriving just recently fallen out. Nir late 1990s, Tom new movement. Both their twenties pursuing studies, quickly formed friendship. A few days earlier, invited salon gathering discuss efforts help Palestinians living under blockade Gaza. assumed would be sympathetic causes basis surprised balked, forcefully informing didn't care Palestinian struggle, wasn't interested any leftist politics. Ethical veganism national phenomenon (Reuters 2015), while movement solidly embedded left, specifically causes, not case today. Nir's mistaken assumption reflects shift. upset, decided accompany nevertheless. At Rabin Square, we watched side Israelis all ages lining stations arms tattooed numbers, ritual inscribing flesh being carried solidarity victims factory farming. The recent surge larger more mainstream than initiatives. It also distinguishes itself very part politics, relied same rationalities movement, which closely associated it. Domestic significant presence owing almost fifty years territories. Numerous violations basic are endemic practices occupation, including restrictions collective punishment, abuse, more. Having reached peak Oslo era (1990s), recently, lost support domestically, subject rightward shift (Shamir & Sagiv-Schifter 2006). risen manifestation divorced left. Human interactions often index symbolize fraught intra-human relations (e.g. Cassidy 2002; Song 2010). compare 1990s early 2000s, strong ties humanism, As exemplified scene above, there amount antagonism between activists different movements. experience violence societies order illuminate stakes divergence. clash still active predecessor, critiques perverting priorities, revealing deep rifts. process abandoned commitment rights, times adopting strongly right-wing, anti-Palestinian stance. ways inserts appropriating own interests, especially purpose go mean While earlier articulated claims through regime humanism commonality suffering, latter adopted approach focused agency foregrounds guilt innocence. argue demonstrates limited value theoretical outside articulation. affirms specific cannot guarantee justice, outcome depends deployed practice. draws fieldwork conducted 2007-9 military refusers dedicated well major upswing broader society 2012 2015 individuals many stripes. During later period, addition conducting interviews among activists, re-established relationships my interlocutors see experienced phenomenon. take starting-point inquiry insights scholars anthropology ethics, ordinary everyday (Lambek fitting case, correct relationship animals, whether or eat them, routine faced multiple day. Furthermore, approach, Webb Keane (2010) Cheryl Mattingly (2013), judgements fundamentally social, made alone abstract, rather communication community mutual expectations negotiated actions intentions justified. insight important considered here, because should understood public reckoning over norms. account follows ‘ordinary’ privileging lived experiences evaluation abstract deliberation (Das 2010: 377). Abdellah Hammoudi termed ‘practical articulation’ (2009: 51), referring concrete way people relate ideas times, motion. contrasted treatments humanist ethics anthropological accounts. attention unfolds play controversial appropriated goals control. However, proper stance-taking described judgement ‘sincerity’ ‘bad faith’ (see 2010 sincerity). Rather, evidence suggests contemplation ‘the animal’ ‘rights’ conflict, completely determined cynically purely expedience. Instead, ‘cross-pollinate’ discourses, inserting into discourse. contributes understandings drawing importance dilemmas. expands nature showing norms hand-in-hand foreseeable first research 2007 2009 Jewish who refused perform mandatory service conscience – brought occupation. When began pacifists, noticed unusually large percentage defined themselves pacifist vegetarian vegan. Wary ethnographic ‘mission creep’, initially tried maintain focus ‘relevant’ motivations pacifism humans. But eventually found underlying opposition eating related conscientious objection service. Indeed, examples referenced letters refusal Defence Forces (IDF). Western societies, meat-eating hegemonic (in contrast Buddhist Hindu cultural practices), aligned left Adams certainly group. guess started getting scene. kids school saying things like ‘meat murder’, really think before, kind ate table refrigerator. doing some research, couldn't believe saw. Once you those pictures don't possible continue meat. So became scene, handing flyers graffiti Rothschild Boulevard. spray-painted ‘I come chicken's pussy’, building. Anyway, talking army also. reading Betzelem [a NGO] Palestinians, reminded raising food. How basically keeping cages letting them move around, videos move. position against causing suffering torturing killing. enlist. connection ubiquitous discussions juxtaposition jarring equivalence commonly dehumanize thus legitimize them. sphere, compared, infrequently, eminent politicians cockroaches (Israeli Military Chief Staff Rafael Eitan) grasshoppers Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir), crocodiles (Prime Ehud Barak) snakes Justice Ayelet Shaked), generically beasts Deputy Eli Ben-Dahan). Dehumanization cases done discursively symbolically, denying full humanity characteristics deny responsibility owed For example, March 2015, philosophy professor Connecticut College gained Facebook posting situation Gaza summer ‘a rabid pit bull chained cage, regularly making mass escape’. Many claimed comparison reflected attempted dehumanization racism. online petition calling university condemnation noted ‘[d]ehumanization used throughout history justify genocide, colonialism hatred communities’ (quotes Mulhere 2015). Above, conversations, evident version thought, principle preventing unnecessary extended include Peter Redfield (2013) summarized premise humanitarian thought idea beings species suffer. Ideas long thought. Bible establishes dominion (Genesis 1:26), concerning ‘humane’ turn reflect concept responsible stewardship. European laws based principles certain forms cruelty domestic back least seventeenth century. Dog-fighting, cock-fighting, cock-throwing, badger-baiting, bull-baiting, bull-running, blood sport targeted humane intervention (Ritvo 1987). Paternalistic emerged tandem empathy guiding force moral regulation. Jeremy Bentham problem protections influenced thinking ever since: ‘The question not, Can reason?, nor talk?, but, suffer?’ (2007 [1789]: 311). Fieldwork 2000s reveals reliance compassion. heavily critiqued number philosophers anthropologists, claim rationality produces reproduces problematic Didier Fassin (2011) suggested displaces other, robust rights. Miriam Ticktin (2006; 2011) criticized universal arguing reinforce hierarchies inequalities, produce exclusion casting passive need heroic intervention. herself these observations field rely imagined mute rescue. She notes values distinctions noble rescuer rescued underlie exploitation familiar us (Ticktin Thus, unfit both (Bornstein 2012; our (Haraway 2008; proposed alternative needed, divorces and, moves away paternalistic notions We will does abandon though so locally politically unanticipated calls do so. Specifically, regional embrace grammar enables becomes complicit aggressive stances above relatively small, last three years. (Overly) optimistic even predicted soon nation. One incursions rights/vegan message video lecture American Gary Yourofsky. called best speech hear’, translated Hebrew two activists. Yourofsky compares slavery, torture, murder. challenges allows ‘humane slaughter’, claiming contradiction terms akin rape, Holocaust. enormously popular Israel. viewed YouTube hundreds thousands featured prime-time television. Public figures, journalists politicians, watch change habits. screened municipal government (Modi'in, July 2012). Animal groups reinvigorated. group Anonymous founded household name By contrast, 269life, staged brandings beginning created 2012. Further, countless pages websites share information veganism. Vegetarianism moved upper-class margins mainstream. survey, 10 per cent reported vegetarian, another 5 vegan, 40 having friend relative year. Another 13 said seriously considering becoming 50 changing habits less meat (Aharoni 2014). spoke after educated veganism, relatives, friends, coworkers. Businesses responded accordingly, restaurants entirely increasing options included businesses identified ‘vegan friendly’ (Halutz 2013). Even chains Domino's pizza changed practices, now offer option, only available (Arad Newly converted vegans vegetarians quite easy find. stickers areas bathroom walls. Rina typical example newly vegetarian. her café chain ‘Aroma’, where overheard asking waiter if avocado sandwich menu (It not; omelette sandwich.) svelte 49-year-old, two-month-old upper-middle-class suburb husband, children, dog, Gili. played local women's throwball team (cador reshet, game similar volleyball), friend's team, Tami, introduced women realistic told she never huge meat-eater, deeply affected materials saw on-line. recoiled images farming, could Yourofsky's argument no thing slaughter’ undeniable. ‘How can kill something way?! Do say sorry cow?’ Initially, sceptical food too restrictive difficult prepare. Tami families dinner night show satisfying simple Rina's husband gave verdict terrible, change. latest impacted far contingent did.2 Accordingly, group, fewer traditional (anti-occupation positions) organizations. wear hats issues symbiotic. involved likely single-issue enthusiasts. result, cuts across divisions alliances previously unlikely, impossible. Contributing widespread popularity, received official (many have), degree consensus uncommon legislature, Knesset, global Meatless Monday,3 serve day cafeteria. Israel's President, Reuven Rivlin, long-time Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, shown concern supporting Mondays (Ravid 2013b), limiting consumption (Eichner stated meeting opinion book Yuval Noah Harari, saying, consciousness bothers twice’ 2013a). Interestingly, President Rivlin Netanyahu politicians. Agriculture, Uri Ariel. Ariel belongs right party Beit HaYehudi, leader settlement singled moderate four egregiously anti-peace role Housing housing tenders extend settlements West Bank intentionally undermined international peace efforts. visits Al-Aqsa Mosque, particularly tension, sovereignty Muslim holy site, establishment Third Temple there. pro-active behalf After footage revealed abuse slaughterhouses, immediately shut down plants, ordered cameras installed slaughterhouses Israel, pursued indictments individual slaughterhouse employees engage abusive practices. stated: zero tolerance harming animals’ (quoted Udasin 2015a), operate welfare, acts occur either perspective State Israel’ 2015b). Ah, ok. it's pretty idea. basically, Europeans Arabs criticize They know here. innocent victims, dealing terrorists, always nice pretty. My son territories, tells comes home weekends, can't child children sometimes terrorists. voted Likud years, seeing viable parties. oldest Home (Habeit Hayehudi) fans politician Naftali Bennett august I'm leftist, issue, political. mean, clearly well, feel aren't related. right-winger, Those rejected emphatic distinction. Orna me, ‘But thing. food, taking mothers, skin clothing. give electricity, water, jobs, everything have’. runs grain conceptualize left-wing cause West, hegemonic.4 today, development sparked clear sign detached traditionally politics: IDF. While, time nearly impossible feat, recognized legitimate life-style choice interest support. November IDF posted tweeted image advertising accommodation (Fig. 1). provides faux leather boots (as 2014) offers synthetic berets place wool respect ethics. According military, already issued soldiers. Vegan soldiers receive extra money supplement supply. serving soy-based substitute company Chef Man (Benari Kempinski 2011). added post Twitter caption read: ‘Going respecting obligation. #Meatless Monday’ 2). recognition choice, perception domestically internationally (note campaign poster English). constantly fighting Yoram Peri ‘perceptual warfare’ (2006: 4), attempt shape favour abroad. seen concerted effort cast ethically attuned morally upright. Here, determining vice versa, player negotiation. reaction initiative swift divided. commentators praised progressiveness IDF, model Some demonstrated ‘advanced’ culture is. Others reacted seemed grossly misplaced abuses continue. critic responded, ‘You murdered 500 You protect settlers steal land commit hate crimes Bank. dare try whitewash your despicable inhuman pretending | article | en | Decoupling (probability)|Animal rights|Human rights|Political science|Criminology|Law|Sociology|Engineering|Control engineering | https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9655.12453 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2493346305', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9655.12453', 'mag': '2493346305'} | Gaza|Israel|Palestine|State of Palestine|West Bank | C144024400|C169437150 | Human rights|Sociology | Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute |
‘There are orphans in Africa still looking for my hands’: African women refugees and the sources of emotional distress | Farida Tilbury (https://openalex.org/A5051317095)|Mark Rapley (https://openalex.org/A5031760839) | 2,004 | This paper explores issues of emotional distress expressed by refugee women from Ethiopia, Somalia, Sudan and Eritrea who now live in Western Australia. Qualitative data interviews focus groups are used to illustrate differences understandings distress, including depression anxiety, women’s the causes of, solutions to, what have been defined service providers as ‘mental health’ problems. The findings challenge biomedical approaches dealing with prolonged grief among migrant communities, which frequently reinforce disempowerment. We argue that it is structural determinants powerlessness need be addressed, rather than individual psyches. | article | en | Refugee|Distress|Project commissioning|Mental health|Grief|Focus group|Sociology|Anxiety|Publishing|Qualitative research|Emotional distress|Psychology|Gender studies|Psychiatry|Social science|Psychotherapist|Political science|Anthropology|Law | https://doi.org/10.5172/hesr.13.1.54 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2101663223', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.5172/hesr.13.1.54', 'mag': '2101663223'} | Somalia|Sudan | C134362201|C144024400 | Mental health|Sociology | Health Sociology Review |
‘There is hope for the future’: Retrospective visions of the bomb in 1950s hollywood | David Eldridge (https://openalex.org/A5005966326) | 2,006 | Click to increase image sizeClick decrease size Notes 1 Susan Sontag, The imagination of disaster, Against Interpretation (Vintage, 1994/1966), 209–225. 2 Frank Hauser, quoted in Vivian Sobchack, Limits Infinity: the American science fiction film, 1950–1975 (London, Thomas Yoseloff, 1980), 49. Respectively, films question are Beast from 20,000 Fathoms (Eugene Lourie, Warner Bros.; US, 1953), Them! (Gordon Douglas, US 1954) and Beginning End (Bert Gordon, Republic; 1957). 3 See Paul Boyer, By Bomb's Early Light: thought culture at dawn atomic age (Chapel Hill, NC, University North Carolina Press, 1994), 352. 4 Renzi, Jules Verne on Film MacFarland, 1998) Brian Taves, Hollywood's Verne, Taves Stephen Michaulk (eds) Encyclopedia Scarecrow 1996), 205–248. As notes, ‘injection’ concerns into film adaptations was already evident 15-part serial Mysterious Island produced by Sam Katzman for Columbia 1951. adaptation involves alien Rulu searching Pacific a rare radioactive metal, which she intends use destroy all life earth, preparation an invasion Mercury. 5 Joe Adamson, Byron Haskin: director's guild America oral history (Metuchen, NJ, 1984). 6 When President Truman told nation that bomb had been dropped Hiroshima, he similarly explained as ‘a harnessing basic power universe’. Statement Announcing Use A-Bomb August 6, 1945, Public Papers Presidents United States: Harry S. Truman, 1945 (Washington, DC, Government Printing Office, 1961), 197. 7 According near-contemporary translation, ‘gun-cotton’ (also known pyroxyle, or fulminating cotton) is much more mundane than explosive conceived film. ‘Cotton combined with cold nitric acid becomes transformed substance insoluble, combustible highly explosive’—which would ‘give projectiles velocity four times greater gunpowder’. From Earth Moon Arco, 1959), 56. 8 Dialogue screen, (Bryon Haskin, 1958). Benedict Bogeaus's company, Waverly Films, under deal RKO. RKO stopped producing distributing films, Bros. handled movie's distribution. Bill Warren, Keep Watching Skies! Science Fiction Movies Fifties, Volume II McFarland, 1986), 97. 9 Review, Independent Journal, November 1958. Clippings File, Archive, Southern California (hereafter WB-USC). 10 Pressbook, WB-USC. Calculating rocket needed be fired moon site between 0 28 degrees latitude, identified southern portions Texas Florida being only plausible areas launching within States. In novel, towns compete honour—and Barbicane eventually opts ‘Tampa Town’, Florida. Tampa 117 miles west Cape Canaveral, opposite side coastline. Moon, 64–68. 11 Matt Bille Erika Lishock, First Space Race: world's first satellites (Houston, TX, A&M 2004). 12 Beverley Hills Citizen, 20 13 Variety, 21 October 14 Hollywood Reporter, 15 Conquest (Byron Paramount; 1955). For discussion this its development, see I 1982), 208–214. 16 Milton Katz, Ban Bomb: SANE, Committee Sane Nuclear Policy, 1957–1985 (New York, Greenwood 1986). 17 excellent detailed analysis Eisenhower's nuclear policies, Richard G. Hewlett Jack M. Holl, Atoms Peace War, 1953–1961: Eisenhower Atomic Energy Commission (Berkeley, CA, 1989). Chapters 13, 18 government's public statements during 1956 campaign negotiations going behind closed doors. Quoted A.G. Noorani, Pokhran: expensive folly, Frontline 17.5 (4 March 2000), reprinted http://www.flonnet.com/fl1705/17050800.htm. 19 declassified National Intelligence Estimates ‘Fourth Country Problem’, originally marked ‘Secret’, have made Security Archive website, http://www.gwu.edu/∼nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB155/. relevant documents (which can downloaded) include memorandum W. Park Armstrong, Special Assistant Secretary State Fisher Howe et al., Estimate Fourth Problem, May 1957; letter Director Central Allen Dulles, 25 April 100-6-57, Weapons Production Countries—Likelihood Consequences, June 1957. Moon. Leagues Under Sea (Richard Fleischer, Walt Disney Pictures; 1954). Nemo describes it Verne's his electricity chloride sodium extracted seawater. Twenty Thousand Everyman, 1993), 22 USS Nautilus authorised Congress July 1951, built Electric Boat Division General Dynamics Corporation, Groton, Connecticut. It christened January 1954, Mamie Eisenhower, commissioned Navy Department 30 September 1954. A first-hand account submarine expeditions co-written Commander William Anderson journalist Clay Blair, Jr., entitled 90 Hodder Stoughton, 1959). 23 Tony Gibbons, Warships Naval Battles Civil War Gallery Books, 1989), 158–59. native country, however, led way fictional most directly inspired 1863 vessel Le Plongeur, designed Simeon Bourgeois driven compressed air engine. J. Dent's introduction Everyman edition 1993). 24 completed full transpolar voyage Anderson, North, 79. An interesting private 1974, representing Harper Goff's own thoughts design has reproduced Internet Movie Database. found http://www.imdb.com/user/ur0377613/comments. 26 Sea. 27 Steven Watts, Magic Kingdom: (Columbia, MO, Missouri 1997), 298. Address before Assembly Nations Peaceful Uses Energy, December 8, 1953, Dwight D. 1953 1960), 820. 29 U.S. Council report, NSC-5507/2, 1955. Peter R. Lavoy, Enduring Effects Peace, Arms Control Today, 33.10 (December 2003), 27. 31 Hilgarter, Bells Rory O’Connor Nukespeak: selling technology (San Francisco, Sierra Club, 44. 32 International Agency, Statute 2. text IAEA statute presented http://www.iaea.org/About/statute_text.html. 33 34 35 36 817. 37 Gerard DeGroot, Jonathan Cape, secret briefing hydrogen test (codenamed Mike) received president elect 1952 documented 1–5. 38 817, 816. ‘Atoms Peace’ speech originated decision ‘candidly’ inform people ‘the new danger created bomb’. However, preliminary ideas ‘Operation Candor’ risked creating panic, leaving ‘with terror, not hope’. eventual speech, prepared C. Jackson, therefore sought combine ‘warning destruction’ ‘new, constructive proposal appeal mankind's instinct survival’. Robert A. Divine, Cold Oxford 1981), 111–112. 39 promoting Leagues, showcased Undersea’, Emmy-winning episode Disneyland television show, broadcast ABC television, industry ‘The Long, Long Trailer’. 40 Holl aptly comment, well-publicised ventures ‘were escapades; they obvious implications warfare missile age’. Seawolf, launched 1955 specifically attack submarine, carrying Polaris ships were crisis response Sputnik 521. 41 42 Rhodes, Dark Sun: making Simon Schuster, 508–509. Rhodes comparison Hiroshima fireball expanded one-tenth mile. Mike's alone enough engulfed Manhattan. 43 44 Specifically, Medford (Edmund Gwenn) concludes notion ‘when man entered age, opened door world. What we may find world, nobody predict.’ 45 Warren right, note Cox's ‘pedestrian cliched’ does begin compare work Leagues. Keeping 2, 99. 46 47 Castle Bravo tests, their consequences, discussed Holt, 168–179. 48 At behest SANE's founder, Norman Cousins, Dr Albert Schweizter delivered ‘Declaration Conscience’ radio Oslo 1957, outlining severe dangers radioactivity generated thermonuclear tests. 49 Omar Khayyam, astronomer-poet Persia, Calcutta 1858, 149–162; copy ‘Omar Khayyam Research File’ Barre Lyndon Collection, Margaret Herrick Library Motion Picture Arts Sciences, Los Angeles, ‘AMPAS’). 50 Evidence provided ‘Story Comparison’ Allida Paramount Script File 3501, AMPAS. 51 British Institute Library, London BFI). 52 (William Dieterle, US. 53 Edgar Hoover, Masters Deceit: story Communism how fight 1958), 86. 54 idea these soldiers ‘brainwashed’ rapidly gained currency America. Certainly Chinese ‘re-educate’ prisoners through system brutal punishments rewards abandon allegiance America; but ironically CIA who experimented so-called ‘mind control drugs’ 1950s. L. Carruthers, Manchurian Candidate brainwashing scare, Historical Journal Film, Radio Television 18(1) (March 1988), 75–94; John Marks, Search Candidate: CIA's efforts human behavior Lane, 1979). 55 Rack (Arnold Laven, MGM; 1956), featured Newman Captain Edward Hall, returning States after two years prisoner war Korea. court-martial collaboration—having convincing other unjust. 56 1, BFI. 57 3, BFI; dialogue Khayyam. 58 59 Hazel Flynn, ain’t anymore!, Clipping 60 61 Notes, nd., 62 himself killed when shot back soldiers. destroyed explosion, sinks beneath waves blast, apparently scuttled loyal crew commit suicide preserve Nemo's secret. 63 Bomb, 172. 64 Report People, 9, 213. 65 Ibid.; New York American, Light, 211. 66 Editor's note, Evangelical Action, 199. 67 Allan Nevins, How felt about war, Goodman (ed.) While You Were Gone: report wartime 1946), 63. 68 Reinhold Niebuhr, issue, Christianity Crisis, 6. | review | en | Vision|Hollywood|Political science|Art history|History|Sociology|Anthropology | https://doi.org/10.1080/01439680600799231 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1967186208', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/01439680600799231', 'mag': '1967186208'} | Persia | C144024400 | Sociology | Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television |
‘There is no heritage in Qatar’: Orientalism, colonialism and other problematic histories | Karen Exell (https://openalex.org/A5051873787)|Trinidad Rico (https://openalex.org/A5057157640) | 2,013 | This article discusses the construction of Qatari heritage in context pre-conceived ideas ‘cultural heritage’ predominant global and regional spheres that operate this country. It considers location Qatar within Middle Eastern discourses debates, identifies productive similarities as well unique avenues for further discussion. The authors identify challenge formulating methodologies are able to recognize, accommodate, encompass reflect local dialogues practices exist Qatar, which may aid researching wider Arabian Peninsula, its histories heritages. | article | en | Orientalism|Peninsula|Context (archaeology)|Colonialism|Cultural heritage|History|Middle East|Cultural heritage management|Anthropology|Geography|Ethnology|Environmental ethics|Sociology|Archaeology|Philosophy | https://doi.org/10.1080/00438243.2013.852069 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1983534739', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/00438243.2013.852069', 'mag': '1983534739'} | Qatar | C144024400 | Sociology | World Archaeology |
‘There is no sincerer love than the love of food’ (George Bernard Shaw, 1903): The meaning of food and its uses in prison subculture | Tomer Einat (https://openalex.org/A5044826249)|Moran Davidian (https://openalex.org/A5001820403) | 2,018 | This study examines the ways in which prison service handles food and analyses uses meanings of subculture. Using semi-structured interviews content analysis, data were collected analysed from 20 ex-prisoners who incarcerated maximum-security facilities for a period three years or more. Our main findings are that, according to interviewees’ testimonies, (a) Israel Prison Service (IPS) makes manipulative abusive use order perpetuate its power; (b) serves as means determine relationship between prisoners staff, govern social status rejection subculture, pass time. We have four conclusions. First, IPS nutrition policy differentiates discriminates among clearly violates basic human rights prisoners, thus suggesting an abuse power. Second, IPS’s tool punishing rewarding introduces perpetuates inequalities encourages illegal trade products. Third, cooking prison, especially light illegality, constitutes symbolic expression resistance institution meaningful way coping with boredom. Lastly, possession serve very powerful tools constructing perpetuating exploitation unequal power relations prisoners. Although suffers two limitations – validity adolescents’ responses small sample size lead us propose that improvement products accessible permission cook their cells inexpensive legitimate bettering both prisoners’ quality life atmosphere prison. | article | en | Prison|Imprisonment|Criminology|Possession (linguistics)|Sociology|Meaning (existential)|Social psychology|Vulnerability (computing)|Psychology|Computer security|Psychotherapist|Linguistics|Philosophy|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1177/1477370818769258 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2802456755', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/1477370818769258', 'mag': '2802456755'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | European Journal of Criminology |
‘There is no time’: Agri-food internal migrant workers in Morocco's tomato industry | Lydia Medland (https://openalex.org/A5070801088) | 2,021 | Agri-industrial production is supported by the agriculture–migration nexus, in which industrial-scale horticultural relies on migrant workers. In this article I consider time-related pressures workers who are internal migrants from rural regions of Morocco. My account illustrates how impacted demands consumers for fresh food, year round, as well rhythms nature, and social reproduction. use concepts EP Thompson's depiction transition to factory work describe tensions agricultural at industrial scale foreign markets. The used nature's time (related seasonality, weather, daylight) (of market), adjoin category social-reproductive order show these three function together. identification threefold time-pressure agri-food builds recent attention scholars seasonality a conceptual lens, highlight intersectional inequalities everyday. paper based ethnographic interview data Moroccan region Chtouka Aït Baha, tomatoes other crops produced export. find that, together, temporal lead suffering exhaustion finding themselves far mobile available move with seasons; rather, they ‘locked in’ low-wage sector. | article | en | Nexus (standard)|Production (economics)|Internal migration|Food security|Consumption (sociology)|Scale (ratio)|Industrial production|Agriculture|Geography|Economics|Sociology|Economic growth|Engineering|Social science|Developing country|Cartography|Archaeology|Keynesian economics|Macroeconomics|Embedded system | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrurstud.2021.04.015 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3165861729', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrurstud.2021.04.015', 'mag': '3165861729'} | Morocco | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Rural Studies|Bristol Research (University of Bristol)|Bristol Research (University of Bristol) |
‘There is nothing else to do!’: the impact of football-based sport for development programs in under-resourced areas | Selçuk Açıkgöz (https://openalex.org/A5047543107)|Reinhard Haudenhuyse (https://openalex.org/A5029363115)|İlknur Hacısoftaoğlu (https://openalex.org/A5046767058) | 2,020 | The capacity of sport to contribute broader social-inclusive and developmental outcomes is widely addressed in Sport for Development (SfD) literature. However, the hegemonic impact football, most-chosen activity SfD programs, remains under-researched. We used Capability Approach Hegemony Theory as analytical lenses explore football-based programs on improving young people’s lives. In particular, we investigate two under-resourced areas Turkey. interviewed various stakeholders (participants, coordinators, participant’s parents), conducted field visits observations. Our findings highlight contradictions wherein challenges opportunities are intertwined do not appear lead clear, identifiable outcomes. While activities embody some values that can new opportunities, argue dominance football way it have a neutralizing capabilities gained through programs. | article | en | Football|Hegemony|Dominance (genetics)|Public relations|Nothing|Sociology|Political science|Politics|Epistemology|Law|Philosophy|Biochemistry|Chemistry|Gene | https://doi.org/10.1080/17430437.2020.1778670 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3036806445', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/17430437.2020.1778670', 'mag': '3036806445'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Sport in Society |
‘There it will be better … ’: Southern Sudanese in Khartoum imagining a new ‘home’ away from ‘home’ | Ulrike Schultz (https://openalex.org/A5075461952) | 2,013 | At the time of research, Khartoum was a multi-ethnic and multinational metropolis 8 million people. A considerable part population consists Southern Sudanese migrants displaced persons that came during 20 years plus civil war in South Sudan to capital. These people were categorised after Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), as regardless whether they come capital labour migrants, students or because The notion displacement assumes are who ‘out place’: thereby assuming former situation being place, place can be called ‘home’. After CPA from 2005, this frequently only imagined home became real for IDP’s which supposed go back. Yet, many reluctant move Sudan. Their decision about going staying depends not on opportunities perspectives their respective ‘home’ areas but also perceptions belonging identity. imaginations aspirations future life Sudan, I analyse article, reflect ambivalent positioning. | article | en | Ambivalence|Displaced person|Capital (architecture)|Multinational corporation|Identity (music)|Population|Spanish Civil War|Gender studies|Sociology|Ethnic group|Political science|Geography|Economic growth|History|Psychology|Refugee|Social psychology|Demography|Anthropology|Law|Ancient history|Art|Aesthetics|Economics | https://doi.org/10.1080/1070289x.2013.829772 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2070965031', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/1070289x.2013.829772', 'mag': '2070965031'} | Sudan | C144024400 | Sociology | Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power |
‘Therefore They Shouldn’t Exist’: The Carter Administration, the ‘Israel Lobby’ and the Sinai Settlements | Shaiel Ben-Ephraim (https://openalex.org/A5070665972) | 2,019 | The Israeli settlements in Sinai could have been a fatal obstacle to Egyptian–Israeli peace, but the Jimmy Carter administration overcame it. established narrative of how Israel ceded focuses on Camp David summit. However, real battle over fate was fought previously. In February–April 1978, attempted turn pro-Israeli supporters United States against position, according which should remain place. Menachem Begin government mobilized counter that push lost battle. Contrary his image as an awkward political operator, won effectively. case raises questions regarding oft-mentioned role ‘Israel lobby’ preventing peace. | article | en | Human settlement|Battle|Administration (probate law)|Summit|Politics|Political science|Settlement (finance)|Government (linguistics)|Narrative|Law|History|Political economy|Ancient history|Sociology|Geography|Archaeology|Cartography|Philosophy|Payment|Linguistics|World Wide Web|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1080/07075332.2018.1552608 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2910733194', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/07075332.2018.1552608', 'mag': '2910733194'} | Egypt|Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | International History Review |
‘These Two Lines …’ | Esther-Miriam Wagner (https://openalex.org/A5043174071)|Ben Outhwaite (https://openalex.org/A5062637824) | 2,018 | Letters were an essential means of communication for the Jews living under Islam in Middle Ages. The traditional seats Jewish learning Baghdad and Jerusalem, but their constituencies scattered across world. frequently passed between Egypt Palestine Iraq, as sought halakhic knowledge, rulings, influence, political advantage from leaders, dignitaries to govern distant communities ensure continued flow funding. At a lower level, letters communal officials prominent citizens, petitioners public servants. heavily involved trade; network traders relied upon written letter organize cargoes, settle debts, or discuss rumours. This chapter outlines distinct medieval epistolary styles used Hebrew Judaeo-Arabic correspondence. internal development these letters, choices language, layout, style are discussed within historical sociolinguistic framework. | book | en | Hebrew|Judaism|Politics|Arabic|Style (visual arts)|Debt|Islam|Palestine|Petitioner|History|Classics|Political science|Sociology|Law|Literature|Ancient history|Art|Linguistics|Philosophy|Business|Supreme court|Archaeology|Finance | https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198768104.003.0015 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2790596166', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198768104.003.0015', 'mag': '2790596166'} | Egypt|Iraq|Palestine | C144024400 | Sociology | |
‘These are not the realities I imagined’: an inquiry into the lost hopes and aspirations of beginning teachers | Bruria Shayshon (https://openalex.org/A5060989106)|Ariela Popper‐Giveon (https://openalex.org/A5020177125) | 2,016 | The Program for Excellence in Teaching (PET) conducted Israel aspires towards training excellent teachers but also creating agents of change within the educational system. This qualitative study, focusing on 21 students and beginning who participated PET at a certain college education Israel, examines their professional expectations disparity between intentions implementations that happens as encounter reality schools. article suggests three factors address this disparity: participants’ positive conception system, isolation teachers, induction process they must undergo. proposes various innovative recommendations coping with situation. | article | en | Excellence|Implementation|Qualitative research|Coping (psychology)|Pedagogy|Isolation (microbiology)|Psychology|Mathematics education|Professional development|Sociology|Political science|Social science|Engineering|Microbiology|Law|Biology|Software engineering|Psychiatry | https://doi.org/10.1080/0305764x.2016.1214238 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2489097758', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/0305764x.2016.1214238', 'mag': '2489097758'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Cambridge Journal of Education |
‘These are ordinary things’: Regulation of Death under the AKP Regime | Onur Bakıner (https://openalex.org/A5027754162) | 2,019 | Turkey is far from being the most violent place in world, but for those who find themselves vulnerable due to their socioeconomic, political, and gender identities positions, death an all-too-real possibility. Large-scale as a result of government action, complicity or inaction nothing new Turkey, I argue that AKP regime has enacted remarkable shift how courts officials address incidents resulting death, what ordinary citizens are allowed know discuss about deaths, kinds demands redress relatives deceased can make. identify four strategies through which regulates death: (1) <italic>expansion martyrdom</italic>, concept hitherto used religious justification military casualties, into civilian sphere, increasing distribution material benefits formal laws informal discretion regulating conceptions martyrdom; (2) <italic>normalisation death</italic> inherent feature some citizens’ occupational, cases, position; (3) <italic>depoliticisation eliminate risk dissident mobilisation after deadly incidents; (4) <italic>controlling narrative</italic> around news maintain discursive hegemony. | chapter | en | Hegemony|Redress|Political science|Government (linguistics)|Politics|Solidarity|Discretion|Law|Socioeconomic status|Criminology|Sociology|Demography|Philosophy|Linguistics|Population | https://doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474450263.003.0002 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3165623794', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474450263.003.0002', 'mag': '3165623794'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Edinburgh University Press eBooks |
‘These boys are wild': constructions and contests of masculinities at two Jordanian high schools | Roozbeh Shirazi (https://openalex.org/A5005240483) | 2,015 | In Jordan, gender equality is often depicted as an important social concern in policy texts, national media, and reports by international development institutions. these reports, ‘gender' synonymous with ‘women’, efforts are directed to improving parity economic outcomes. This article argues that males overlooked or invisible such accounts, more readily visible obstacles embodiments of masculine crisis. Drawing upon ethnographic work two government high schools for boys, I analyse everyday practices experiences male students teachers argue they constitute site the construction gendered subjectivities. Mainstream accounts fail account how schooling constitutive struggle this connected changing nature membership Jordan spurred part pressures. | article | en | Mainstream|Gender studies|Ethnography|Sociology|Government (linguistics)|Masculinity|Gender equality|Gender relations|Political science|Linguistics|Philosophy|Anthropology|Law | https://doi.org/10.1080/09540253.2015.1081877 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2220936906', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/09540253.2015.1081877', 'mag': '2220936906'} | Jordan | C144024400 | Sociology | Gender and Education |
‘These mountains are unlike ours’: my interactions with camp refugees in Greece | Nabil George George (https://openalex.org/A5088157102) | 2,018 | The recent regional crises affecting the Middle East and Mediterranean have seen masses of people move away from conflict devastation to safer territories. A large movement has occurred European nations bordering these zones. Greece, along with other countries, become a focal point for refugees avoiding warfare daily struggle said regions, seeking asylum safety. dangerous journeys by land sea are risks taken many escape atrocities disaster. This case-report aims highlight aspects this migration zones through simple conversation between refugee community aid relief workers. focus paper is on Yazidi Iraq, who were temporarily accommodated in campsites having suffered horrendously. events described conveyed English, as translated author Arabic | article | en | Refugee|Middle East|Political science|SAFER|Conversation|Geography|Arabic|Development economics|Sociology|Law|Computer security|Computer science|Economics|Linguistics|Philosophy|Communication | https://doi.org/10.1080/21632324.2017.1402465 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2768154589', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/21632324.2017.1402465', 'mag': '2768154589'} | Iraq | C144024400|C47768531 | Development economics|Sociology | Migration and development |
‘These people protesting might not be so strident if their own jobs were on the line’: Representations of the ‘economic consequences’ of opposition to the Iraq war in the Irish national press | Colin Coulter (https://openalex.org/A5014956628)|Harry Browne (https://openalex.org/A5089068576)|Roddy Flynn (https://openalex.org/A5013597948)|Vanessa Hetherington (https://openalex.org/A5052291440)|Gavan Titley (https://openalex.org/A5010455315) | 2,016 | In this article, the authors examine ways in which social movement Ireland opposed to Iraq war was represented national press. The article draws upon data generated by largest research project of its type ever conducted an Irish context. considered representations anti-war 11 daily and Sunday newspapers over a period 9 months. One principal threads that ran through newspaper coverage time centred concerns about possible ‘economic consequences’ opposing against Iraq. A close reading reveals familiar reliance journalists on official sources interpretations ensured press tended cast as danger both regional economy at seemingly unprecedented prosperity. | article | en | Irish|Newspaper|Opposition (politics)|Prosperity|Spanish Civil War|Political economy|Period (music)|Political science|Media studies|Sociology|Economic history|History|Law|Politics|Philosophy|Linguistics|Physics|Acoustics | https://doi.org/10.1177/1750635216637635 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2325920055', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/1750635216637635', 'mag': '2325920055'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | Media, War & Conflict|MURAL - Maynooth University Research Archive Library (National University of Ireland, Maynooth) |
‘They Cannot Herd a Sheep’ Populist Politics and Its Struggles for and Against Education in Turkey | Ezgi Pinar (https://openalex.org/A5045935661)|Axel Gehring (https://openalex.org/A5013668140) | 2,022 | Instruments of direct suppression and tight control are widely discussed parts education politics in Turkey. They often perceived as a wider political struggle that is crucial to produce imaginaries memories supporting the populist narrative ruling AKP. The important role higher reproduction professional labour force does, however, indicate these instruments cannot be reduced function. Ideological objectives economic interests contradictory relationship, hindering AKP’s ability formulate coherent strategy for education. Analysing contradictions policies offers significant insights into limits conflict with aspects order. | article | en | Politics|Political science|Herd|Political economy|Sociology|Law|Biology|Animal science | https://doi.org/10.1080/19448953.2022.2143849 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4308588214', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/19448953.2022.2143849'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies |
‘They Come, and They Are Happy’: A Gender Topography of Consumer Space in Dubai | Anette Baldauf (https://openalex.org/A5034299667) | 2,008 | In 2004, several US-American newspapers published articles praising Saudi Arabia for a step towards women’s liberation. Riyadh, shopping center had dedicated an entire floor to women’s-only usage; women could take off their veils and shop without fear of interruption by male intruders. The Los Angeles Times, the Washington Post Seattle Times were unanimous in approval Lady’s Kingdom center. According accounts, it was ‘liberated zone’ midst land, ‘where are kept under wraps packs cane-wielding religious police.’ article quoted manager Giorgio Armani store, who reported that storm place, ‘they come, they “abayas” off, they’re happy’ (Stack, 2004). | chapter | en | Newspaper|Center (category theory)|Advertising|Space (punctuation)|Gender studies|Media studies|Sociology|Business|Linguistics|Chemistry|Philosophy|Crystallography | https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230591264_12 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2506464639', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230591264_12', 'mag': '2506464639'} | Saudi Arabia | C144024400 | Sociology | Palgrave Macmillan UK eBooks |
‘They Didn’t Consider Me and No-one Even Took Me into Account’: Female School Principals in the Arab Education System in Israel | Tamar Shapira (https://openalex.org/A5058274675)|Khalid Arar (https://openalex.org/A5070438331)|Faisal Azaiza (https://openalex.org/A5058726259) | 2,011 | The study of women’s management and leadership in education has become a central research topic the copious work published many countries encompasses various issues relating to gender educational leadership. female school principals from Arab minority Israel only recently begun. This is that lives mostly separate settlements, distinguished majority Jewish population by their lifestyle culture, society can be described as developing. In-depth interviews were conducted with seven principals, different socio-cultural backgrounds, who had successfully climbed professional ladder senior positions system Israel. Data-analysis addressed three areas: biographical background; social political aspects nomination principalship; acceptance women principals. Findings indicated contribute significantly development schools. As roles, faces resistance; change societal norms willingness accept would enable more fill public roles society’s progress. | article | en | Nomination|Educational leadership|Politics|Population|Resistance (ecology)|Sociology|Gender studies|Public relations|Political science|Pedagogy|Law|Ecology|Demography|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1177/1741143210383901 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2139594859', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/1741143210383901', 'mag': '2139594859'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Educational Management Administration & Leadership |
‘They Don't like Us’: Reflections of Turkish Children in a German Preschool | Fikriye Kurban (https://openalex.org/A5040547482)|Joseph Tobin (https://openalex.org/A5065387215) | 2,009 | In this article, the authors present multiple interpretations of a transcript discussion with group Turkish-German girls in kindergarten Berlin, Germany. These five-year-old make statements suggesting they experience alienation from their non-Turkish classmates and teachers, wider German society. The argue that meanings these should not be taken at face value. Instead, employ interpretive strategies borrowed mostly Mikhail Bakhtin frameworks Judith Butler, post-colonial theory Critical Race Theory to suggest girls' utterances can usefully seen as having performative dimension expressing tensions around immigration found larger | article | en | German|Turkish|Alienation|Sociology|Performative utterance|Immigration|Gender studies|Value (mathematics)|Epistemology|Linguistics|Political science|Law|Philosophy|Machine learning|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.2304/ciec.2009.10.1.24 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2017247008', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.2304/ciec.2009.10.1.24', 'mag': '2017247008'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood |
‘They Have Rights over Us’ | Dónal Hassett (https://openalex.org/A5087972367) | 2,019 | This chapter turns away from partisan politics to analyse the development of Algerian veterans’ movement over course interwar period. It considers organizations that drew members not only different ethnic and social backgrounds but also a pool men with an unparalleled claim legitimacy born participation in war. The focuses on attempts one such association, <italic>Amicale des Mutilés du Département d’Alger</italic>, reconcile its supposedly non-racial notion veteran primacy real European community colonial state. Furthermore, it illustrates how tensions at heart <italic>Amicale</italic>’s discourse empowered indigenous veterans assert their demands within eventually set up own were fully committed achieving change behalf ex-servicemen. | chapter | en | Indigenous|Legitimacy|Ethnic group|Colonialism|Political science|Politics|Political economy|State (computer science)|Sociology|Gender studies|Law|Ecology|Algorithm|Computer science|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198831686.003.0005 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2973988323', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198831686.003.0005', 'mag': '2973988323'} | Algeria | C144024400 | Sociology | Oxford University Press eBooks |
‘They Paved Paradise And Put Up A Parking Lot’ | Cameron Page (https://openalex.org/A5056557065) | 2,012 | Narrative Matters Health AffairsVol. 31, No. 6: Focus On The Care Span For Elderly & Disabled ‘They Paved Paradise And Put Up A Parking Lot’Cameron Page Affiliations Cameron ( [email protected] ) is a clinical instructor of medicine at Beth Israel Medical Center, in New York City. Editor’s Note: title this article invokes lyric excerpt from Joni Mitchell’s song “Big Yellow Taxi.” Use the would be authorized under Fair doctrine, but permission was also received artist’s management agency exchange for $280 fee. BIG YELLOW TAXI. Words and Music by JONI MITCHELL. Copyright © 1970 (Renewed) CRAZY CROW MUSIC. All Rights Administered SONY/ATV MUSIC PUBLISHING, 8 Square West, Nashville, TN 37203. Reserved. Used Permission. PUBLISHED:June 2012No Accesshttps://doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2011.1285AboutSectionsView articleView Full TextView PDFPermissions ShareShare onFacebookTwitterLinked InRedditEmail ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack CitationsPermissions View articleAbstractA doctor ponders his public health role when patient loses place exercise sharply deteriorates.TOPICSExerciseClinicsObesityAccess careMedical educationPhysical activity Loading Comments... Please enable JavaScript view comments powered Disqus. DetailsExhibitsReferencesRelated Article MetricsCitations: Crossref 1 History Published online June 2012 Information Project HOPE—The People-to-People Foundation, Inc. PDF downloadCited byStaying Afloat Amidst Tempest: External Pressures Facing Private Child Family Serving Agencies Managerial Strategies Employed Address Them9 May 2019 | Human Service Organizations: Management, Leadership Governance, Vol. 43, 2 | article | en | Paradise|Health care|Agency (philosophy)|Management|Political science|Law|Sociology|History|Art history|Social science|Economics | https://doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2011.1285 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2121158266', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2011.1285', 'mag': '2121158266', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22665846'} | Israel | C144024400|C160735492 | Health care|Sociology | Health Affairs|PubMed |
‘They are bombing now’: ‘Intercultural Dialogue’ in times of conflict | Alison Phipps (https://openalex.org/A5080266966) | 2,014 | This article argues that the concept of ‘Intercultural Dialogue’ in its present dominant manifestation has run course. I argue this is one which may work and make sense stable, open equal jurisdictions where there relative ‘freedom from fear want’, but it at best, limited worst, dangerous when used situations conflict aggression under creeping conditions precarity mark out form globalisation. In this, turn to field visits undertaken Gaza Strip 2012 with Life Long Learning Palestine project. a connection Carolin Goerzig, Hamas, transformation practice Jean Paul Lederach Graeber, Bigo Scarry's theoretical practical consideration emergency security post-9/11. do so order for re-politicised intercultural dialogue such might fit Language Intercultural Communication concerned. | article | en | Precarity|Intercultural communication|Sociology|Field (mathematics)|Intercultural relations|Terrorism|Intercultural learning|Globalization|Order (exchange)|Palestine|Social psychology|Epistemology|Law|Political science|Gender studies|Pedagogy|Psychology|History|Philosophy|Ancient history|Mathematics|Finance|Pure mathematics|Economics | https://doi.org/10.1080/14708477.2013.866127 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2089165454', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14708477.2013.866127', 'mag': '2089165454'} | Gaza|Gaza Strip|Palestine | C144024400|C203133693|C2778071103 | Precarity|Sociology|Terrorism | Language and Intercultural Communication |
‘They can live in the desert but nowhere else’: a history of the Armenian genocide. By Ronald Grigor Suny | Bill Park (https://openalex.org/A5060362512) | 2,015 | This painstakingly researched and highly readable work adds to the growing body of literature that assesses as ‘genocide’ what, in Turkey, is typically referred ‘massacres deportations’ Armenians during First World War. Ronald Suny argues it was a contingent rather than pre-planned event, best seen reaction an existential crisis. The very survival Ottoman state at stake, empire's Armenian population, accused siding with Russian forces advancing into eastern Anatolia, were perceived traitors. According Suny, massacres also reflected anti-Armenian disposition had long been gestating which frequently spilled over vicious, but not necessarily genocidal, violence. flood Muslim refugees Anatolia from Balkans Caucasus fuelled more general anti-Christian sentiment. They required resettlement, where better those territories inhabited by disloyal Armenians? In face triumphant Christian nationalism truncated empire, powers threatening what remained it, ethnic Turkish Islamic identities taking shape. Widespread hunger, disease displacement brutalized its inhabitants. short, there ‘multitude determining factors’ (p. 363) behind ‘genocide’. | article | en | Armenian|Genocide|Refugee|Ancient history|History|Ethnic Cleansing|Population|Nationalism|Geography|Political science|Law|Sociology|Politics|Archaeology|Demography | https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-2346.12366 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1935410651', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-2346.12366', 'mag': '1935410651'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | International Affairs |
‘They did to him whatever they pleased’: The exercise of political power within Matthew’s narrative | Dorothy Jean Weaver (https://openalex.org/A5007149435) | 2,009 | To read Matthew’s Gospel within the global context is to this narrative vis-à-vis urgent challenges facing community. One such challenge concerns exercise of political power public arena. Throughout his Matthew paints a vivid portrait brokers Jesus’ world and unsavoury methods that they use achieve their goals. He also offers graphic depictions as wielded by those in authority. This study examines first-century authorities, Roman Jewish, who exercised Palestine beyond. Part one depicts these authorities exercising power. two assesses relative effectiveness uses depiction. three points toward contrasting positive leadership patterns. four rhetoric tool for fruitful refl ection on | article | en | Portrait|Narrative|Politics|Power (physics)|Depiction|Context (archaeology)|Narrative history|Sociology|Rhetoric|Aesthetics|Literature|History|Political science|Media studies|Law|Art|Art history|Philosophy|Theology|Archaeology|Physics|Quantum mechanics | https://doi.org/10.4102/hts.v65i1.319 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2112800289', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.4102/hts.v65i1.319', 'mag': '2112800289'} | Palestine | C144024400 | Sociology | Theological Studies/Teologiese Studies|UpSpace Institutional Repository (University of Pretoria) |
‘They go to get a gun’: Hidden histories of violence and the politics of rumour in Israel | Una McGahern (https://openalex.org/A5049398885) | 2,016 | This article examines rumour as a distinct type of speech act and makes case for engaging with the spaces within which rumours are deployed circulated in practice. Critiquing rigid linguistic focus on acts prevailing securitization theories, it follows insights from fields political geography anthropology order to incorporate voices margins more fully into its analysis threat construction. Examining local deployment circulation religiously mixed Arab localities Israel, argues that perlocutionary force not only is rooted security policing arrangements but reveals spatialization violence particular margins. In so doing, seeks contribute broadening research agenda social construction would bring ‘security have-nots’ centre draw attention space. | article | en | Spatialization|Securitization|Politics|Sociology|Software deployment|Order (exchange)|Focus (optics)|Space (punctuation)|Media studies|Law|Political economy|Gender studies|Political science|Anthropology|Linguistics|Economics|Engineering|Philosophy|Physics|Software engineering|Optics|Finance|Financial system | https://doi.org/10.1177/0967010616668066 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2539054304', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/0967010616668066', 'mag': '2539054304'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Security Dialogue|Newcastle University ePrints (Newcastle Univesity) |
‘They know nothing about university – neither of them went’: the effect of parents’ level of education on their involvement in their daughters’ higher education choices | Huda Al‐Yousef (https://openalex.org/A5067105851) | 2,009 | This article attempts to explore how parents are involved in their daughters’ decision‐making around higher education path. It draws on qualitative research that investigated the process through which young women from UK and Saudi Arabia reached a decision about subject or an institution for educational study. The paper demonstrates different forms of parents’ involvement (emotional, financial, providing information) choices relation prior level education. concludes differs according gender parent. suggests little relationship between background nature choices. shows some similarities women’s groups groups, though decisions were made within two cultural contexts. | article | en | Institution|Qualitative research|Educational institution|Psychology|Higher education|Nothing|Social psychology|Developmental psychology|Sociology|Pedagogy|Political science|Social science|Philosophy|Epistemology|Law | https://doi.org/10.1080/03057920902913909 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2093711425', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/03057920902913909', 'mag': '2093711425'} | Saudi Arabia | C144024400 | Sociology | Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education |
‘They look into our lips’ | Kamran Khan (https://openalex.org/A5023956540)|Adrian Blackledge (https://openalex.org/A5029547329) | 2,015 | The British citizenship ceremony marks the legal endpoint of naturalisation process. While may be a celebration, it can also final examination. Using an ethnographically-informed case study, this article follows one candidate, ‘W’, through process in UK. W is migrant Yemeni at end Bakhtin’s notion “ideological becoming” offers analytic orientation into how competing discourses operate. This focuses on role what Bakhtin describes as “authoritative discourse” ceremony, particular Oath/Affirmation Allegiance which candidates are required to recite. Success dependent individuals negotiate authoritative discourse. study and highlights complexities negotiations discourse ceremony. | article | en | Naturalisation|Ceremony|Citizenship|Ideology|Allegiance|Negotiation|Sociology|Law|Linguistics|Political science|Politics|Philosophy|Theology | https://doi.org/10.1075/jlp.14.3.04kha | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2283619606', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1075/jlp.14.3.04kha', 'mag': '2283619606'} | Yemen | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Language and Politics |
‘They look into our lips’ | Kamran Khan (https://openalex.org/A5023956540)|Adrian Blackledge (https://openalex.org/A5029547329) | 2,017 | The British citizenship ceremony marks the legal endpoint of naturalisation process. While may be a celebration, it can also final examination. Using an ethnographically-informed case study, this article follows one candidate, ‘W’, through process in UK. W is migrant Yemeni at end Bakhtin’s notion “ideological becoming” offers analytic orientation into how competing discourses operate. This focuses on role what Bakhtin describes as “authoritative discourse” ceremony, particular Oath/Affirmation Allegiance which candidates are required to recite. Success dependent individuals negotiate authoritative discourse. study and highlights complexities negotiations discourse ceremony. | chapter | en | Naturalisation|Ceremony|Citizenship|Allegiance|Negotiation|Ideology|Sociology|Law|Political science|Politics|Philosophy|Theology | https://doi.org/10.1075/bct.91.04kha | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4237712192', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1075/bct.91.04kha'} | Yemen | C144024400 | Sociology | Benjamins current topics |
‘They need our help’: Non-governmental organizations and the subjectifying dynamics of the military as social cause | Katharine M. Millar (https://openalex.org/A5065484239) | 2,015 | The invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan spurred a range popular activity – from anti-war protests to war boosterism veterans’ advocacy purporting ‘support the troops’. Non-governmental organizations (NGOs), welfare groups, are crucial this transformation ‘the troops’ into social cause matter collective concern. As such, article proposes an initial qualification NGO representative practices as form media genre, characterized by striking similarity in presentation, structure and, particularly, explicitly normative tone. A poststructural discursive approach is utilized examine implications genre for production subjectivities power relations inherent ‘supporting via structured analysis public-produced texts selection typologically identified NGOs US UK. goes on highlight ways which representations counterintuitively objectify those they seek support, while simultaneously limiting political possibilities supporters. Overall, it argued that within context liberal state, support produced across spectrum work not only depoliticize conflict but ‘apoliticize’ troops morality. | article | en | Context (archaeology)|Politics|Sociology|Normative|Political science|Power (physics)|State (computer science)|Tone (literature)|Political economy|Public relations|Criminology|Law|History|Art|Physics|Literature|Quantum mechanics|Computer science|Archaeology|Algorithm | https://doi.org/10.1177/1750635215606867 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2339753549', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/1750635215606867', 'mag': '2339753549'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | Media, War & Conflict|London School of Economics and Political Science Research Online (London School of Economics and Political Science) |
‘They ought to do this for their parents’: perceptions of filial obligations among immigrant and Dutch older people | H.A.G. de Valk (https://openalex.org/A5005439744)|Djamila Schans (https://openalex.org/A5023787392) | 2,008 | ABSTRACT This paper presents a study of the perceptions filial obligations among immigrant and Dutch older people in The Netherlands. It is first questioned how to what extent these are determined by ethnic background or attributable socio-demographic factors. Secondly, we differ level acculturation. Data from main migrant sample Netherlands Kinship Panel Study (2002–2003) for respondents aged 50–80 years five groups used. analysis included 470 Dutch, 70 Turks, 73 Moroccans, 125 Surinamese 59 Antilleans. Immigrant was found be an important determinant perception child's towards parents. elders generally expected more weekly visits care their children, facilitation co-residence parents than case Dutch. Among elderly all groups, including attained education related obligation, but marital status current health were not. Finally, it that different aspects acculturation with Mediterranean Caribbean backgrounds. | article | en | Acculturation|Immigration|Ethnic group|Perception|Residence|Kinship|Psychology|Gerontology|Medicine|Demography|Sociology|Geography|Archaeology|Neuroscience|Anthropology | https://doi.org/10.1017/s0144686x07006307 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2091044086', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/s0144686x07006307', 'mag': '2091044086'} | Morocco | C144024400 | Sociology | Ageing & Society|Wiardi Beckman Foundation (Wiardi Beckman Foundation) |
‘They silenced our voices’; a genealogy of the linguistic othering of the Kurds in Iran | Mohammad Bazafkan (https://openalex.org/A5090268768) | 2,023 | Since the turn of twentieth century, Kurds in Iran have faced various forms linguistic exclusion. As part a genealogical project, this article aims to track lineages The exclusions are inscribed field discursivity, which, tracking one its lineages, turns our attention orientalist interventions. discusses two complementary projects: authentication Persian language and othering Kurdish language. These projects were made possible by hegemony territorial discourses over studies Iran. Orientalists proposed periodization Iranian languages, dividing them into old, middle, modern eras, with represented as sole that has ever existed throughout history, based on their decoding ancient manuscripts. Meanwhile, was completely marginalized, essence all languages and, consequently, Iranians. result, an ontological epistemic horizon emerged, which subsequent instances became possible. Finally, also examines ways resisted exclusions. | article | en | Orientalism|Hegemony|Persian|Sociology|Linguistics|History|Gender studies|Literature|Law|Politics|Political science|Philosophy|Art | https://doi.org/10.1177/14687968231210557 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4388127125', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/14687968231210557'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | Ethnicities |
‘They speak Arabic to make teachers angry’: High-school teachers’ (de)legitimization of heritage languages in Catalonia | Isabel Sáenz‐Hernández (https://openalex.org/A5071317847)|Cristina Petreñas (https://openalex.org/A5005486540)|Cecilio Lapresta Rey (https://openalex.org/A5025816927)|Josep Ubalde (https://openalex.org/A5053161363) | 2,023 | This study explores high-school teachers’ discourse on heritage language use regarding their students of immigrant background in Catalonia, Spain, where both Catalan and Spanish are official languages. For this purpose, 10 teachers from 5 schools with a high ratio foreign were interviewed. These interviews analysed using membership categorization analysis. The results show that the perceived appropriateness depends whether integrated enough eyes locals. Additionally, public is judged perspective listener deemed disrespectful. particularly salient Moroccan background, maintenance associated overly strict adherence to Islam. need for training how properly address linguistic cultural diversity classrooms discussed. | article | en | Catalan|Heritage language|Categorization|Arabic|Foreign language|Immigration|Perspective (graphical)|Diversity (politics)|Salient|Linguistics|Semitic languages|Psychology|Pedagogy|Sociology|Political science|Anthropology|Philosophy|Artificial intelligence|Computer science|Law | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.linged.2023.101232 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4386491182', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.linged.2023.101232'} | Morocco | C144024400 | Sociology | Linguistics and Education |
‘They treat us as a dependent nation’ | Mark D. Johnston (https://openalex.org/A5026706400) | 2,012 | Most Australians who served in the Middle East spent time Syria and Lebanon, or ‘Syria’ as they tended to call two. As all three Australian divisions were stationed there at various times between mid-1941 mid-1942, number was probably excess of 50 000. Some stayed forever, killed short, bloody purposely downplayed campaign June July 1941. The League Nations had given France a mandate occupy Lebanon early 1920s and, despite strong demands for independence, still held when fell 1940. Vichy forces, sympathetic Nazis, subsequently took control area. population more than million, three-quarters them Syria, most Arabic Muslim. | chapter | en | Mandate|Fell|Independence (probability theory)|League|Middle East|Ancient history|Political science|Population|Geography|Economic history|History|Demography|Law|Sociology|Cartography|Statistics|Physics|Mathematics|Astronomy | https://doi.org/10.1017/cbo9781139524339.009 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2223606836', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/cbo9781139524339.009', 'mag': '2223606836'} | Lebanon|Syria | C144024400 | Sociology | Cambridge University Press eBooks |
‘They want to give our children to white people and Christian people’: Somali perspectives on the shortage of Somali substitute carers | Camelia Chowdhury (https://openalex.org/A5058325084) | 2,021 | Children from some black and minority ethnic (BME) backgrounds are routinely placed with substitute carers who do not match their cultural, linguistic, religious backgrounds. The shortage of foster adopters specific means that the demand in care population often outweighs availability matched placement options. While shortages BME widely recognised, there is virtually no research into barriers faced by groups, so informed recruitment strategies to increase pool potential matches. This focuses on Somalis living a large English city where significant Somali despite people heritage comprising sizeable proportion population. Findings study suggest lack motivation among or adopt, but participants felt applicants either rejected deterred institutional barriers, social exclusion negative perceptions care, these factors closely interlinked. makes practical suggestions for assessment practice, also stresses importance cultural competence community engagement wider context if welfare agencies wish see more disenfranchised communities volunteering work them. | article | en | Somali|Ethnic group|Population|Context (archaeology)|Sociology|Psychology|Economic growth|Public relations|Political science|Geography|Philosophy|Linguistics|Demography|Archaeology|Anthropology|Economics | https://doi.org/10.1177/0308575921989827 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3135313870', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/0308575921989827', 'mag': '3135313870'} | Somalia | C144024400 | Sociology | Adoption & Fostering |
‘They wrote history with their bodies’: Necrogeopolitics, Necropolitical Spaces and the Everyday Spatial Politics of Death in Turkey | Lerna K. Yanık (https://openalex.org/A5059931565)|Fulya Hisarlıoğlu (https://openalex.org/A5091747224) | 2,019 | In this piece, through an alternative reading of biopolitics and merging the literature on necropolitics with critical geography, we develop concepts necrogepolitics necropolitical spaces. We argue that Turkish sovereign has very little difficulty in making death self-sacrifice a desired behaviour by spatialising power domestically internationally. Necrogeopolitics emerges as discursive practice conditions subject to die for geopolitical security interests sovereign, spaces, other hand, are both material spaces aim at same goal domestic level. Both condition subjects idea is appropriate if/when state under attack. This modification social engineered subtle, silent, everyday manner. discuss these instances intervention necrogeopolitisation Turkey’s territorial self, well specific necrospatial changes took place aftermath 15 July 2016 coup attempt. | chapter | en | Biopower|Turkish|Sovereignty|Politics|State (computer science)|Power (physics)|Subject (documents)|Geopolitics|Everyday life|Reading (process)|Political science|Sociology|Aesthetics|Political economy|Gender studies|Law|Art|Philosophy|Linguistics|Physics|Algorithm|Quantum mechanics|Library science|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474450263.003.0003 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3164557564', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474450263.003.0003', 'mag': '3164557564'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Edinburgh University Press eBooks |
‘They’re all tribals’: Essentialism, context and the discursive representation of Sudanese refugees | Scott Hanson-Easey (https://openalex.org/A5029246553)|Martha Augoustinos (https://openalex.org/A5047436433)|Gail Moloney (https://openalex.org/A5080081199) | 2,014 | The theory of psychological essentialism provides an account how and why some social groups are represented as if they possessed inhering, immutable group-defining ‘essence’. Whilst much the empirical theoretical work on has attended to characterising its cognitive components through utilisation survey measures, this article, adopting a synthetic discursive approach, examines naturally-occurring conversations talkback radio. We demonstrate speakers attribute Sudanese refugees with essentialised cultural or tribal properties. These qualities were employed for violent behaviour refugees, both in Sudan Australia, relatively invariant collectively shared attributes. Although participants recurrently depicted sharing essence, these latent propensities constructed only manifest group members. contend that essentialist ontologies can be established implicit lay theories, causally linking culture behaviour, acting ideologically rationalisations illiberal racist ends. discuss approach affords insights into nuanced practice everyday talk. | article | en | Essentialism|Refugee|Sociology|Ideology|Context (archaeology)|Social psychology|Gender studies|Epistemology|Psychology|Politics|Political science|Philosophy|Law|Paleontology|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1177/0957926513519536 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2127024598', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/0957926513519536', 'mag': '2127024598'} | Sudan | C144024400 | Sociology | Discourse & Society |
‘Thinking makes it so’: reflections on the ethics of displaying Egyptian mummies | Jasmine Day (https://openalex.org/A5082104282) | 2,014 | Controversy about museums’ possession and exhibition of human remains has usually affected those identified as ancestral by indigenous peoples. Egyptian mummies, with their long tradition exhibition, seemed exempt from such considerations until the covering unwrapped in gallery at The Manchester Museum 2008. museum’s representatives argued that this responded to visitors’ objections, but sub sequent widespread protest against measure suggested it had been carried out inadequate public consultation. With reference case, I will present two arguments expand scope current debates display. first argument favours consideration museum visitors cultures other than represented exhibited legitimate stakeholders remains’ management, including personal reasons historical precedents for favouring second argument, which reveals spurious bases many objections mummies’ display demonstrates derivation misconceptions promulgated media, shows grounds should be more critically examined. If perpetuated rather halted, mummies could used actively combat disparaging media stereotypes. Human is not inherently offensive, can regarded whose cultural backgrounds fail prepare them encounters dead. Removing dead avoids engagement ethics facing challenge finding ways respect facilitating them. | article | en | Exhibition|Argument (complex analysis)|Possession (linguistics)|Indigenous|Offensive|Law|Sociology|Immortality|Environmental ethics|History|Aesthetics|Political science|Media studies|Art|Philosophy|Literature|Art history|Ecology|Biochemistry|Linguistics|Chemistry|Management|Biology|Economics | https://doi.org/10.12697/poa.2014.23.1.03 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2169643414', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.12697/poa.2014.23.1.03', 'mag': '2169643414'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | Papers on anthropology|CiteSeer X (The Pennsylvania State University) |
‘This Human Matter’: the Survivors According to the Emissaries and the Survivors According to Themselves | Hanna Yablonka (https://openalex.org/A5026227498) | 1,999 | During the years preceding formation of state Israel, image Holocaust survivor (in mind veteran Jewish settlers in Eretz Israel) was based mainly on reports sent by emissaries Europe, rather than firsthand experience. Clear distinctions must be made, therefore, between certain descriptions survivors’ real character one hand, and effect these had attitudes subsequently developed veterans to survivors, their arrival country, other. This an on-going, a static, process, which makes it necessary study preconceptions local population with regard as well faced survivors Israel. | chapter | en | Holocaust survivors|Judaism|The Holocaust|Population|Character (mathematics)|State (computer science)|History|Psychology|Political science|Demography|Sociology|Law|Archaeology|Computer science|Geometry|Mathematics|Algorithm | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-14152-4_5 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2505990761', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-14152-4_5', 'mag': '2505990761'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Palgrave Macmillan UK eBooks |
‘This Is How We Do It Here’: The Persistence of the Physical Punishment of Children in Ghana in the Face of Globalizing Ideals | Afua Twum-Danso Imoh (https://openalex.org/A5016535655) | 2,012 | In recent years, a worldwide campaign to end the physical punishment of children around world has gained momentum. The United Nations Convention on Rights Child, adopted in 1989 by UN General Assembly and now ratified all countries except two (the USA Somalia), contributed building this For example, Article 19 stipulates: States Parties shall take appropriate legislative, administrative, social educational measures protect child from forms or mental violence, injury abuse, neglect negligent treatment, maltreatment exploitation, including sexual while care parent(s), legal guardian(s) any other person who child. (1989) | chapter | en | Guardian|Neglect|Convention|Political science|Legislature|Punishment (psychology)|General assembly|Criminology|Convention on the Rights of the Child|Corporal punishment|Law|Psychology|Human rights|Social psychology|Psychiatry | https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137283344_7 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2504974400', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137283344_7', 'mag': '2504974400'} | Somalia | C169437150 | Human rights | Palgrave Macmillan UK eBooks |
‘This Is Like Rwanda’: How the Road to Libya Ran Through Rwanda | Morgan T. Rees (https://openalex.org/A5015647721) | 2,021 | This chapter explains President Barack Obama's decision to intervene in Libya 2011 and actively suggest that there could be no future for with Muammar Gaddafi power. It outlines the professed foreign policy set forth by incoming administration — throughout 2008 presidential campaign, he had been a fierce critic of George H.W. Bush's declaration War on Terror. Then shows how Obama succumbed principled types ideas when faced prospect mass atrocity, becoming drawn into conflict 2011. Secretary Defence Robert Gates advanced more cognitive ideas, arguing was ‘no strategic interest’, but interpretations Samantha Power, Susan Rice, Hillary Clinton prevailed. The discusses pursued decisive action Security Council pushed resolution protection Libyan civilians ‘by all necessary measures’. | chapter | en | George (robot)|Declaration|Foreign policy|Administration (probate law)|Political science|Presidential system|Power (physics)|Security council|Summit|Law|Public administration|Political economy|Politics|Sociology|Geography|Cartography|History|Art history|Physics|Quantum mechanics | https://doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781529215908.003.0006 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4285332740', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781529215908.003.0006'} | Libya | C144024400|C2991800021 | Security council|Sociology | Policy Press eBooks |
‘This Is a Historical Israeli Play’: Spectatorship, Ownership and the Israeli Localizations of<i>Salomé</i> | Yair Lipshitz (https://openalex.org/A5004726214) | 2,017 | This article traces the reception of Oscar Wilde's play Salomé in Israeli theatre by focusing on engagement two artists – writer and translator Pinchas Sadeh director Ofira Henig with at different periods. In , Wilde utilizes his perception Judaism, as well Song Songs, for creation a theatrical space which spectatorship ownership are subverted displaced. At same time, ironically, biblical ‘Jewish’ presence was fundamental claims made some Hebrew culture, asserting that somehow belonged to culture Land Israel. Despite these claims, actual proved play's ‘belonging’ far more tenuous. The examines how tensions between seen unseen, owning disowning placement displacement out almost opposite directions Sadeh's ideological reasoning translating Henig's production it. | article | en | Judaism|Hebrew|Ideology|Space (punctuation)|Aesthetics|Displacement (psychology)|Literature|Jewish culture|History|Land of Israel|Art|Sociology|Media studies|Law|Politics|Political science|Philosophy|Psychology|Linguistics|Psychoanalysis|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1017/s0307883317000578 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2782742382', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/s0307883317000578', 'mag': '2782742382'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Theatre Research International |
‘This Really has the Potential to Destroy us’: Jeremy Corbyn's Management of the Problem of Anti‐semitism in the Labour Party <sup>1</sup> | Eric Shaw (https://openalex.org/A5052728503) | 2,021 | Abstract During Jeremy Corbyn's period as leader, Labour was convulsed by a row over claims of widespread anti‐semitism in the party, with Corbyn under sustained attack for his alleged complacency—and even connivance. The main purpose this article is to help explain how leadership managed ‘anti‐semitism crisis’. first section reviews sequence events, key aspects crisis and various steps taken leadership. then analyses two sets factors which drove response. second utilises concept ‘schemas’, cognitive shortcuts shed light on framed problem endemic anti‐semitism. It argues that leadership's schemas Israel were integrally linked those it held played major role determining course action took. third contends decisions choices also governed its approach party management, particular central precepts, ‘the adversarial frame reference’ ‘ethic ultimate ends’. overall conclusion inadequacy schematic understanding managerial precepts failure resolve crisis. | review | en | Political science|Section (typography)|Adversarial system|Sociology|Law|Business|Advertising | https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-923x.12994 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3173312120', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-923x.12994', 'mag': '3173312120'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | The Political Quarterly |
‘This War is Out of Our Hands’ | Frederic Wehrey (https://openalex.org/A5046361080) | 2,022 | Abstract This chapter recounts how Libya became the site of an internationalized conflict. Tracing internationalization conflict from 2011 NATO intervention to more recent civil war, touches upon key role new technologies, social media, and air strikes, as well political powers, including Qatar, UAE, Turkey, United States, European countries, Egypt, Russia, others. At same time, keeps a focus on central Libyans themselves in shaping its internationalization. | chapter | en | Political science|Internationalization|Politics|Intervention (counseling)|Political economy|Spanish Civil War|Civil society|Economy|Development economics|Sociology|Law|International trade|Business|Economics|Psychology|Psychiatry | https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197673591.003.0006 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4317368701', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197673591.003.0006'} | Egypt|Libya|Qatar|Turkey | C144024400|C47768531 | Development economics|Sociology | Oxford University Press eBooks |
‘This diarrhoea is not a disease …’ local illness concepts and their effects on mothers’ health seeking behaviour: a qualitative study, Shuhair, Yemen | Hana Hasan Webair (https://openalex.org/A5051139623)|Abdulla Salim Bin Ghouth (https://openalex.org/A5082760618) | 2,014 | Globally, about seven million children under the age of five died in 2011. Local illness concepts are thought to be related inappropriate health-seeking behaviour, and therefore, lead child mortality. The aim this study was contribute definition common local with their effects on behaviour for childhood illnesses. A qualitative focus group conducted between April 1 6, 2013. Participants were drawn purposefully from vaccination unit at Shuhair Health Centre Yemen. Four discussions conducted. total number participants 31 mothers least one a history fever, diarrhoea, cough, or difficulty breathing during 14 days preceding study. Data collected analysed using micro-interlocutor analysis. mean years (SD ± 4). There remarkable concordance across groups. During discussions, six (Senoon, lafkha, halib, didan, raqaba, ayn) mentioned. determined type treatment. Most these illnesses not treated medically. Lafkha, ayn always classified as “not medical treatment”, whereas senoon didan sometimes treatment”. For symptoms, i.e. breathing, therapy usually an option; never Mothers trust traditional medicine believe that it is beneficial harmful. do disclose use doctors because oppose practices open enough types widespread, they determine treatment used. Interventions improve children’s health should educate parents. Traditional option primary care considered. | article | en | Medicine|Focus group|Biostatistics|Qualitative research|Public health|Family medicine|Pediatrics|Psychiatry|Epidemiology|Nursing|Social science|Marketing|Sociology|Internal medicine|Business | https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-14-581 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2111440311', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-14-581', 'mag': '2111440311', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24920306', 'pmcid': 'https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/4064820'} | Yemen | C107130276|C138816342|C144024400 | Epidemiology|Public health|Sociology | BMC Public Health|Europe PMC (PubMed Central)|PubMed Central|PubMed |
‘This identity is part of you, you cannot run away from it’: identity experiences among young Israelis of Ethiopian origin | Liat Yakhnich (https://openalex.org/A5016372187)|Simcha Getahune (https://openalex.org/A5054513019)|Sophie D. Walsh (https://openalex.org/A5023775814) | 2,021 | While theory around identity processes is abundant, scarce literature has examined how immigrants themselves identify and experience issues related to their identity. This phenomenological study aims understand young Israelis of Ethiopian origin relate what, for them, are the salient involved in negotiations. Nineteen participants, who immigrated Israel from Ethiopia as children adolescents, were interviewed this study. Data analysis yielded themes participants’ experiences identity-related issues: sense its’ components, skin colour identity, personal versus group routes searching The findings highlight interplay between society negotiation have practical theoretical implications. | article | en | Identity (music)|Identity negotiation|Identity formation|Negotiation|Salient|Social psychology|Psychology|Personal identity|Sociology|Gender studies|Self-concept|Political science|Social science|Aesthetics|Law|Philosophy | https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183x.2020.1866514 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3119012119', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183x.2020.1866514', 'mag': '3119012119'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies |
‘This is Not the Holy Land’: Gendered Filipino Migrants in Israel and the Intersectional Diversity of Religious Belonging | V. Margaret Jackson (https://openalex.org/A5044189350) | 2,013 | Social research has highlighted the positive outcomes of religious faith and practice for integration belonging amongst migrants different genders. However narratives Filipino in Israel suggest that religion, gender may not go hand-in-hand. By applying Anthias’ intersectional framework ‘translocational positionality’, a wider range can be taken into account beyond gendered patterns participants activists communities. Religious belief intersect with other social locations, leading to expression complex orientations belonging: where people believe they fit order. Going categories religion take intersections is essential understanding experiences “non-organised” believers – non-believers as well active participants. | article | en | Faith|Gender studies|Narrative|Diversity (politics)|Sociology|Sociology of religion|Religious diversity|Ethnology|Anthropology|Theology|Philosophy|Linguistics | https://doi.org/10.1163/18785417-00301002 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4235281387', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1163/18785417-00301002'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Religion and Gender |
‘This is Palestine’: history and modernity in guidebooks to Mandate Palestine | Sarah Irving (https://openalex.org/A5037049156) | 2,019 | Tourist guides to colonised territories are usually understood as instruments of the coloniser, imposing ideas native inferiority through orientalism and convictions primitiveness. This article, however, shows how Palestinian Arabs Zionist Jews in later period British Mandate rule used guidebooks, written English particularly aimed at a readership Commonwealth soldiers on leave, means asserting conveying their rival claims Palestine popular Anglophone audiences. In particular, they combined more conventional coverage historical religious sites with insistence modernity technological progress be found amongst respective cultures histories. I understand this both tactical usage concept intervene image-making about Middle East, conscious effort by insist that modern values, associated language notions progress, were inherent social practices. | article | en | Modernity|Mandate|Mandatory Palestine|Orientalism|Palestine|Commonwealth|Zionism|Law|Political science|Sociology|History|Media studies|Ancient history|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1080/20581831.2019.1594613 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2923198776', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/20581831.2019.1594613', 'mag': '2923198776'} | Palestine | C144024400 | Sociology | Contemporary Levant |
‘This is a Prison…A Death in Life’: Reza Shah’s troubled exile on the Island of Mauritius | Shaul Bakhash (https://openalex.org/A5086992803) | 2,018 | Reza Shah, the feared and powerful master of Iran for nearly two decades, spent last years his life in lonely exile, on island Mauritius, then South Africa. His exile was hardly a happy one. The place conditions were dictated not by himself but British, relationship between remained uneasy. Britain’s handling Shah – degree freedom choice they prepared to allow him family determined exigencies war. sought loosen bonds British control. In Tehran, son successor, Mohammad also played role. He used what leverage he had with help ease father’s while endeavored protect Iran’s interests under difficult foreign occupation. push-and-pull cross-purposes entailed this triangular defined Shah’s both Mauritius Johannesburg. This article examines Mauritian period exile. | article | en | Successor cardinal|Prison|Ancient history|History|Sociology|Archaeology|Mathematics|Mathematical analysis | https://doi.org/10.1080/00263206.2018.1501681 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2898930088', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/00263206.2018.1501681', 'mag': '2898930088'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | Middle Eastern Studies |
‘This is a high time for hypersonic missiles’ | Rhys Crilley (https://openalex.org/A5002295839) | 2,023 | Chapter 4 covers the period from November 2019 to end of January 2020. Taking its title a song released by Sam Fender (Newcastle’s answer young Bruce Springsteen) and voted BBC Radio 1’s ‘Hottest Record Year’, this chapter argues that norm around non-use nuclear weapons is further eroded recent steps develop deploy new technologies across globe. The focuses on deployment low-yield as well such hypersonic missiles show present novel risks dangers facilitating arms race. author then goes beyond conventional account technology in age arguing popular culture central shaping how world comes know, think, feel about technological developments weapons. By engaging with rise doom-laden apocalyptic indie pop music likes Phoebe Bridgers, media coverage UK General Election December 2019, alongside American assassination Iranian general Qasem Soleimani 2020, examines salience are now once again gaining public imagination. In doing so illustrates construct representations enable certain policies political actions age. | chapter | en | Nuclear weapon|Globe|Politics|Political science|Media studies|Engineering|Law|Sociology|Psychology|Neuroscience | https://doi.org/10.7765/9781526170453.00010 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4388411725', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.7765/9781526170453.00010'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | Manchester University Press eBooks |
‘This is my home country or something in-between’ – Finnish-Somali youth sharing their experiences through performative narratives | Helena Oikarinen-Jabai (https://openalex.org/A5033416278) | 2,011 | ABSTRACT In this article I will focus on a workshop run with group of youth mostly from Somali backgrounds. The workshops were in cooperation Youth’s Multicultural Living Room and Youth Department the City Helsinki. are part my larger research project ‘A Finn, Foreigner or Transnational Hip-hopper?’. study was conducted within framework participatory research, examines identification negotiations second-generation Finnish immigrant youth. apply ethnographic methods, particular, those performative design, which briefly discuss here. at hand it noted that participating placed themselves borders liminal spaces,especially because racism prejudices they frequently encounter. Therefore, concentrate topics belongings, Finnishness transnational identifications as represented words visual narratives participants. give space here to their own images have produced.Finally, outline kinds horizons observed ambivalence can create. | article | en | Performative utterance|Somali|Liminality|Narrative|Sociology|Gender studies|Citizen journalism|Ambivalence|Media studies|Ethnography|Negotiation|Aesthetics|Political science|Psychology|Social psychology|Social science|Anthropology|Art|Linguistics|Philosophy|Literature|Law | https://doi.org/10.1386/jaac.3.2.151_1 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2314639136', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1386/jaac.3.2.151_1', 'mag': '2314639136'} | Somalia | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Arts & Communities |
‘This is not Our Country’: Declining Diversity in the Islamic Republic of Iran | James Barry (https://openalex.org/A5028659969) | 2,015 | The Muslim WorldVolume 105, Issue 3 p. 281-298 Article ‘This is not Our Country’: Declining Diversity in the Islamic Republic of Iran James Barry, Barry Deakin University, MelbourneSearch for more papers by this author First published: 25 June 2015 https://doi.org/10.1111/muwo.12100Citations: 3Read full textAboutPDF ToolsRequest permissionExport citationAdd to favoritesTrack citation ShareShare Give accessShare text full-text accessPlease review our Terms and Conditions Use check box below share version article.I have read accept Wiley Online Library UseShareable LinkUse link a article with your friends colleagues. Learn more.Copy URL Share linkShare onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditWechat Citing Literature Volume105, Issue3July 2015Pages RelatedInformation | review | en | Islam|Islamic republic|Diversity (politics)|Citation|Library science|Sociology|Political science|Media studies|History|Law|Computer science|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1111/muwo.12100 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1503732490', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/muwo.12100', 'mag': '1503732490'} | Iran|Islamic Republic of Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | The Muslim World |
‘This is ordinary behaviour’: Categorization and culpability in Hamas leaders’ accounts of the Palestinian/Israeli conflict | Alan McKinlay (https://openalex.org/A5031894916)|Chris McVittie (https://openalex.org/A5023473044)|Rahul Sambaraju (https://openalex.org/A5022591805) | 2,011 | The present paper examines the talk of three senior figures from Palestinian Hamas political movement. Data are drawn a series journalistic interviews that were conducted in months leading up to invasion Gaza by Israel December 2007. Using membership categorization analysis, we explore categories and category-bound attributes interviewers use questions about responsibility for potentially culpable actions ways these taken up, challenged, or reworked interviewees presenting their own versions. analytic findings show deploy bound with terrorism while develop alternative categorizations resistance. Interviewers construct Palestinians as victims Hamas' them Israeli aggression international indifference. In warranting constructions, contrast current behaviours community those past align previously Western nations resisting illegitimate occupations. Through descriptions actions, attribute wider addressing events ongoing conflict. | article | en | Culpability|Categorization|Construct (python library)|Terrorism|Social psychology|Psychology|Politics|Aggression|Resistance (ecology)|Criminology|Sociology|Political science|Law|Epistemology|Ecology|Philosophy|Computer science|Biology|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1111/j.2044-8309.2011.02021.x | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2165630673', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/j.2044-8309.2011.02021.x', 'mag': '2165630673', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21507017'} | Gaza|Israel | C144024400|C203133693 | Sociology|Terrorism | British Journal of Social Psychology|PubMed |
‘This is our home, but we cannot stay here forever’: Second-Generation Asian Youths in Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates | Naomi Hosoda (https://openalex.org/A5056137696)|Kyoko Matsukawa (https://openalex.org/A5033347126) | 2,019 | This chapter investigates future prospects and a sense of belonging among second-generation Asians based on case studies Filipino Indian youths in the Arab Gulf states (AGS), particular Kuwait United Emirates. Due to strict migration exclusive citizenship policies AGS, region mainly grow up within their respective ethnic groups where they are segregated from host society as well other communities. Many them simultaneously unaccustomed physical social environment countries that parents come from. Their thus appears be multifaceted ‘home’ is an ethnically community country, but permitted stay only temporary residents. As result, these forced search for places can cultivate real belonging. | chapter | en | Ethnic group|Citizenship|Ethnically diverse|First generation|Sense of community|Immigration|Political science|Ethnic community|South asia|Geography|Gender studies|Development economics|Economic growth|Sociology|Demography|Ethnology|Social science|Population|Law|Politics|Economics | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-6899-8_5 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2969956842', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-6899-8_5', 'mag': '2969956842'} | Kuwait|United Arab Emirates | C144024400|C47768531 | Development economics|Sociology | Asia in transition |
‘This land is not for sale’ | Allison Drew (https://openalex.org/A5053465860) | 2,014 | In the 1930s impoverished rural Algerians swarmed into already densely-populated urban areas. The traditional medina became both ruralised and Europeanised. new urbanites maintained tight networks with their relatives, linking town countryside ever more closely, while public space expanded. Initially, in late 1920s, Communist demand for independence had led to severe repression. However, as political expanded mid-1930s, Party attracted Algerian members precisely because of its call independence; an autonomous was launched 1936. Although most nationalist leaders were not then calling independence, appeals fight colonialism struck emotional chord politicised Algerians. Nonetheless, Comintern’s popular front strategy, developed France, inherent European bias. This partiality seen focus on anti-fascist struggle based primarily a Europe dependent colonial resources damping down avoid alienating settlers concerned fighting fascism. Thus, PCA’s organisational autonomy did mean autonomy. | chapter | en | Independence (probability theory)|Politics|Communism|Autonomy|Colonialism|Political economy|Political science|Nationalism|Development economics|Sociology|Law|Economics|Statistics|Mathematics | https://doi.org/10.7765/9781847799210.00013 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2885456328', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.7765/9781847799210.00013', 'mag': '2885456328'} | Algeria | C144024400|C47768531 | Development economics|Sociology | Manchester University Press eBooks |
‘This made me feel honoured’: a participatory action research on using process drama in English language education with ethics of care | Özgehan Uştuk (https://openalex.org/A5085677667) | 2,022 | This study investigates English as a foreign language learners' emotions and questions the authenticity of communication in classrooms Turkey. To become more aware to make speaking module engaging, teacher-researcher decided utilise process drama participatory action research intervention. The data were collected over three-week drama. Drawing on ‘ethics care' ‘social emotional learning', findings demonstrated that authentic empowered learners when content was relevant their emotion labour. When learners’ are scrutinised explicitly through drama-in-education, they feel respected engaged. | article | en | Drama|Citizen journalism|Action research|Participatory action research|Action (physics)|Process (computing)|Pedagogy|Intervention (counseling)|English as a foreign language|Psychology|Sociology|Computer science|Art|Literature|Political science|Law|Physics|Quantum mechanics|Anthropology|Operating system|Psychiatry | https://doi.org/10.1080/13569783.2022.2106127 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4289593852', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/13569783.2022.2106127'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Research in Drama Education: The Journal of Applied Theatre and Performance |
‘This silence doesn’t find favor in my eyes’ | R. Vardi (https://openalex.org/A5054660474) | 2,017 | Abstract Examination of the figurative construction [X find favor in Y’s eyes] ([X ffi Y]) Biblical and Israeli Hebrew reveals semantic pragmatic differences its use. In Hebrew, reflects an ancient cultural conceptualization ( Sharifian 2011 ) xen ‘favor’ which it is associated with eyes God or humans high social status. The distribution Y] this language emphasizes hierarchies based on favor. Although originating from use does not reflect that had motivated emergence. analysis shows meaning function two variants, a focus contexts social-cultural identity participants. This study illustrates involvement scenarios linguistic expression. | article | en | Conceptualization|Silence|Meaning (existential)|Hebrew|Biblical Hebrew|Hebrew Bible|Linguistics|Biblical studies|Identity (music)|Psychology|Sociology|Epistemology|Philosophy|Aesthetics|Theology | https://doi.org/10.1075/ijolc.4.1.06var | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2612537486', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1075/ijolc.4.1.06var', 'mag': '2612537486'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | International journal of language and culture |
‘Thou Hast Set Me on the Rack’ | Amy Lidster (https://openalex.org/A5062364616)|Sonia Massai (https://openalex.org/A5043858563) | 2,023 | This interview offers Iqbal Khan’s directorial perspective on his influential production of Othello (2015). The casting Hugh Quarshie as and Lucian Msamati Iago made a play more about intra-racial than inter-racial relations. However, Khan explains how the inclusion references to torture prisoners war by allied forces during Iraq War helped him highlight ways in which is its protagonist’s doubt place person colour world dominated people with different traditions that exclude him. According Khan, equally (if not more) invested exploring nature Othello’s work experience leader mercenary forces. Besides, points out, questions haunt all us. Some these – including what makes up one’s systems loyalty, justice judgement, or whom one accountable are especially problematic at times war, because they often reveal slippage between lack control (and victimhood) abuse power complicity). | chapter | en | Complicity|Torture|Insider|Thou|Witness|Sociology|Loyalty|Power (physics)|Honour|Economic Justice|Aesthetics|Law|Art|Political science|Philosophy|Human rights|Theology|Physics|Quantum mechanics | https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009042383.027 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4385871791', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009042383.027'} | Iraq | C139621336|C144024400|C169437150 | Economic Justice|Human rights|Sociology | Cambridge University Press eBooks |
‘Thou shalt not kill’: a survey experiment on the effects of moral primes on war attitudes in Turkey | Osman Sabri Kıratlı (https://openalex.org/A5013125153) | 2,019 | Through an original survey experiment on a nationally representative sample of the Turkish population, this article demonstrates that respondents who are primed immorality use force against others substantially more willing to support only conditional military intervention in civil war another country. Further statistical analyses reveal activation moral beliefs largely depends degree approval statement and previously held foreign policy predispositions isolationism. These findings contribute research priming public opinion regarding general and, particular, interventions wars. | article | en | Priming (agriculture)|Isolationism|Immorality|Social psychology|Public opinion|Population|Intervention (counseling)|Psychology|Turkish|Psychological intervention|Spanish Civil War|Political science|Law|Morality|Sociology|Foreign policy|Politics|Demography|Philosophy|Linguistics|Botany|Germination|Psychiatry|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1080/14683849.2019.1692199 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2989798506', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14683849.2019.1692199', 'mag': '2989798506'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Turkish Studies |
‘To Fight is to Exist’ | Somdeep Sen (https://openalex.org/A5027482684) | 2,016 | It is not a particularly novel academic endeavour to explore Hamas’ armed resistance. Nevertheless, this essay contributes the conversation by deliberating on organization's military faction through stories my informants told of their experiences and memories With these in mind, I argue resistance revered among Palestinians because its ability unmake make for Palestinian struggle. struggle, while incapable defeating Israel, minimally unmakes rendering victims fearful challenging viability maintaining occupation. In doing so it exacts far greater human material costs from than does Israelis. Nonetheless, makes allowing each act be named as tragic repercussions an occasion suffering. way, occupation perceived effort efface legacy existence historic homeland, violence permits colonized arrest process unnaming ensuring that Palestine inhabitants’ Palestinianness are recognizable both adherents adversaries. | article | en | Resistance (ecology)|Homeland|Palestine|Conversation|Law|Political science|Sociology|Criminology|Politics|History|Ancient history|Ecology|Communication|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1080/1369801x.2016.1142883 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2337582353', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/1369801x.2016.1142883', 'mag': '2337582353'} | Israel|Palestine | C144024400 | Sociology | Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies |
‘To Live within Islam’: The Chaldean Catholic Church in modern Iraq, 1958–2003 | Kristian Girling (https://openalex.org/A5068746807) | 2,015 | Since June 2014 the Chaldean Catholic Church has faced an existential crisis. The recent attacks of terrorist forces so-called Islamic State Iraq and Levant in northern Iraqi provinces Duhok, Erbil, Mosul Sulaymaniya have resulted increasing levels persecution forced displacement. This essay reflects on a more secure period history, during which community made strong contribution to development modern state Iraq, established 1921. Although proportionally small size, will show that contributed ways far outweighed their numbers, especially sphere inter-communal relations. | article | en | Persecution|Islam|History|Ancient history|State (computer science)|Terrorism|Political science|Law|Archaeology|Politics|Algorithm|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1017/s0424208400050294 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2586137596', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/s0424208400050294', 'mag': '2586137596'} | Iraq | C203133693 | Terrorism | Studies in Church History |
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