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“Entrepreneurizing” College Programs to Increase Entrepreneurial Intentions: A Mediation Framework | Mahmoud Ibrahim Fallatah (https://openalex.org/A5050042261)|Tahar Lazhar Ayed (https://openalex.org/A5070907295) | 2,023 | The impact of entrepreneurship on the development emerging economies is widely recognized. Research has focused studying factors that increase in societies, including role education increasing entrepreneurial intentions among students. In this paper, we contribute to and literature by examining college programs intentions. Further, study mediating roles perceived benefits individual creativity. Using a sample 438 students from public university Saudi Arabia, our findings reveal enrolled have higher levels those non-entrepreneurial programs, creativity partially mediate aforementioned relationship. paper opens door for future research provides several managerial implications. | article | en | Entrepreneurship|Creativity|Mediation|Entrepreneurship education|Psychology|Sample (material)|Marketing|Entrepreneurial education|Public relations|Higher education|Social psychology|Business|Sociology|Political science|Economic growth|Economics|Social science|Chemistry|Finance|Chromatography | https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci13020050 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4319597488', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci13020050'} | Saudi Arabia | C144024400 | Sociology | Administrative Sciences |
“Entrepreneurizing” College Programs to increase Entrepreneurial Intentions: A Mediation Framework | Mahmoud Ibrahim Fallatah (https://openalex.org/A5050042261)|Tahar Lazhar Ayed (https://openalex.org/A5070907295) | 2,022 | The impact of entrepreneurship on the development emerging economies is widely recognized. Research has focused studying factors that increase in societies, including role education increasing entrepreneurial intentions among students. In this paper, we contribute to and literature by examining college programs intentions. Further, study mediating roles perceived benefits individual creativity. Using a sample 438 students from public university Saudi Arabia, our findings reveal enrolled have higher levels those non-entrepreneurial programs, creativity partially mediate aforementioned relationship. paper opens door for future research provides several managerial implications. | article | en | Creativity|Entrepreneurship|Mediation|Entrepreneurship education|Psychology|Sample (material)|Public relations|Entrepreneurial education|Marketing|Social psychology|Business|Sociology|Political science|Social science|Chemistry|Finance|Chromatography | https://doi.org/10.5465/ambpp.2022.12768abstract | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4286620440', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.5465/ambpp.2022.12768abstract'} | Saudi Arabia | C144024400 | Sociology | Proceedings - Academy of Management |
“Equivalent Linear Composition” as an Efficient Stratification Factor in Multipurpose Surveys | Arman Bidarbakht-nia (https://openalex.org/A5004293697)|Vahed Maroufy (https://openalex.org/A5035316500) | 2,008 | Horticulture survey is a multi-purpose which conducted ad hoc by Statistical Center of Iran (SCI). Availability variables in the sampling frame suggests multivariate stratification each province based on its desired for acquiring higher efficiency. There are several ways to stratify considering all variables, such as using sum observation clustering, first principal component, and specially an almost new method uses multiple-frame techniques. We introduce, equivalent linear composition factor, illustrate how it works more efficiently then other methods this particular survey. | article | en | Stratification (seeds)|Principal component analysis|Sampling frame|Multivariate statistics|Statistics|Sampling (signal processing)|Econometrics|Cluster analysis|Frame (networking)|Mathematics|Factor analysis|Stratified sampling|Survey data collection|Computer science|Geography|Seed dormancy|Botany|Germination|Dormancy|Biology|Telecommunications|Population|Demography|Filter (signal processing)|Sociology|Computer vision | https://doi.org/10.18869/acadpub.jsri.4.2.217 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2531425126', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.18869/acadpub.jsri.4.2.217', 'mag': '2531425126'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Statistical Research of Iran |
“Equivalent to Israelism” | S Dorman Jacob (https://openalex.org/A5037979505) | 2,013 | This chapter examines the narratives that circulated ideas of ancient Israelites in world Bishop William S. Crowdy and others inherited. It considers history interaction between Jews European descent people African Caribbean North America from seventeenth century to present, argues Black-white “contact” did not automatically produce twentieth-century Black Jews. The Methodist, Masonic, Anglo-Israelite ethnological discourses developed, on one hand, rationalize subjection colonized peoples yet, other formed basis an early theology liberation for Britain's marginalized poor. Though Bishops his contemporary Christian were both dedicated Freemasons, who brought much their fraternal order into Israelite churches, there is no “smoking gun” linking like or widely Freemasonry Anglo-Israelism. However, circumstantial evidence suggesting had access Masonic legends Israelites. Older Masonic-Israelite American traditions Biblical exegesis probably played a part formation own identification as | chapter | en | Israelites|Circumstantial evidence|History|Exegesis|Narrative|Hebrews|Diaspora|Religious studies|Ancient history|Gender studies|Literature|Art|Philosophy|Sociology|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195301403.003.0003 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2504552824', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195301403.003.0003', 'mag': '2504552824'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Oxford University Press eBooks |
“Es porque tienen ganas de aprender”: How a Non-profit Teacher Creates a Learning Environment to Help College-Aged Syrian Displaced Students Adapt and Learn Spanish in México | Brenda Sarmiento-Quezada (https://openalex.org/A5057117062) | 2,021 | This chapter draws from an ethnographic study of Syrian displaced young adults living in México, who are commencing their university studies. Since the beginning conflict 2011, many these spent several years refugee camps or cities under siege before arriving México through special arrangements made by a non-governmental organization (NGO). Using and discourse analytic approach (Rymes B, Classroom analysis: tool for critical reflection. Routledge, 2016; Wortham S, Reyes A, Discourse analysis beyond speech event. 2015), this looks at how Spanish language arts teacher is able to foster learning environment where students engaged willing participate new educational environment. Although today education programs migrants dominated monolingual ideologies practices, there growing concern among educators administrators about best promote academic success transnational student population (Cummins J, Can J Appl Linguist 10:221–240, 2007; García O, Kleyn T, Translanguaging with multilingual students: classroom moments. New York, Naidoo L, Int Educ 26:210–217, https://doi.org/10.1080/14675986.2015.1048079, 2015; Warriner D, Curric Inq 47:50–61, https://doi.org/10.1080/03626784.2016.1254501, 2017). argues that understanding pedagogical practices enacted instructors can give insight into advancing goals students. | chapter | en | Ethnography|Sociology|Pedagogy|Translanguaging|Refugee|Humanities|Gender studies|Political science|Art|Anthropology|Law | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-79470-5_22 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3193668623', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-79470-5_22', 'mag': '3193668623'} | Syria | C144024400 | Sociology | Educational linguistics |
“Essential Collaborators”: Locating Middle Eastern Geneticists in the Global Scientific Infrastructure, 1950s–1970s | Elise K. Burton (https://openalex.org/A5014109402) | 2,018 | Abstract In the aftermath of World War II, a new international infrastructure based on United Nations agencies took charge coordinating global biomedical research. Through this infrastructure, European and American geneticists hoped to collect test blood samples from human populations across world understand processes heredity evolution trace historical migrations different groups. They relied heavily local scientific workers help them identify access interest, although they did not always acknowledge critical role non-Western collaborators played in their studies. Using publications, personal correspondence, oral histories, I investigate collaborative relationships between Western scientists, counterparts Middle East, subjects genetic comparatively examine experiences Israeli Iranian scientists physicians engaged anthropology medical genetics mid-1950s late 1970s, noting how both applied nationalist narratives data struggled establish value knowledge labor. argue that experience transnational collaboration is representative relegated “developing” regions subordinate positionality as collection agents or native informants. Meanwhile, within own countries, elite professional identity granted authority manipulate research subjects, who often belonged marginalized minority communities, interpret biology history contexts Jewish Persian nationalism. | article | en | Elite|Middle East|Nationalism|Narrative|Identity (music)|Political science|Sociology|Social science|Law|Politics|Philosophy|Linguistics|Physics|Acoustics | https://doi.org/10.1017/s0010417517000433 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2782295204', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/s0010417517000433', 'mag': '2782295204'} | Iran|Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Comparative Studies in Society and History|Apollo (University of Cambridge) |
“Estos gringos no entienden nada”: Anastasio Somoza and the Regional Dimension of the 1954 Coup d’etat in Guatemala | Roberto Garcı́a (https://openalex.org/A5006387512) | 2,022 | Between 1944 and 1954, Guatemala had a radical democratic experience that significantly impacted its closest neighbors. During time, two revolutionary governments, one led by Juan José Arévalo the other Jacobo Árbenz, promoted set of political, economic, social reforms unprecedented in Central America. These did not follow linear process but were made possible within framework broad freedoms. Surrounded dictatorships authoritarian rulers, was gradually becoming kind refuge for many exiled persecuted people from different locations, though most came American Caribbean countries. The reform cycle accelerated remarkably after approval agrarian mid-1952, which radicalized conservative stance Guatemala’s neighbors angered United Fruit Company, country’s major agriculture company. After numerous attempts to overthrow both leaders, local forces, convergence with their regional counterparts, managed convince new US administration, headed Dwight Eisenhower, danger role. success covert coup Iran (1953) also acted as catalyst facilitated execution similar, secret plan finally cause collapse Árbenz government. coup, ultimately achieved objective June constitutes explored emblematic themes international relations Latin America during Cold War. Its consequences have endured into 21st century. | reference-entry | en | Democracy|Dictatorship|Latin Americans|Authoritarianism|Politics|Agrarian reform|Agrarian society|Political science|Political economy|Government (linguistics)|Covert|Economic history|Development economics|Sociology|Geography|History|Law|Agriculture|Economics|Linguistics|Philosophy|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199366439.013.1003 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4280568133', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199366439.013.1003'} | Iran | C144024400|C47768531 | Development economics|Sociology | Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Latin American History |
“Ethnic Schema Typology”: A Bidimensional Model | Shmuel Shamai (https://openalex.org/A5039616211)|Zinaida Ilatov (https://openalex.org/A5002799635) | 2,017 | The paper deals with the re-construction and re-formation of ethnic identities during acculturation process. “Ethnic identity schemata” have been developed to characterize four types cultural among new immigrants from former Soviet Union Israel, who clearly differ most segments Israeli society, culturally demographically. A random sample has interviewed. study conducted in a small Jewish town inhabited by Israeli-born Jews Union. schema typology” identified groups, namely, Russian (Soviet) identity, Dual/Hybrid combining identities, “undifferentiated” identity. Effects language acquisition, usage outside home, religious practices, sense place were all related “ethnic typology”. Profiles groups explored on basis their common particular characteristics. | article | en | Typology|Ethnic group|Acculturation|Schema (genetic algorithms)|Immigration|Jewish identity|Judaism|Identity (music)|Cultural identity|Gender studies|Sociology|Soviet union|Ethnology|Social psychology|Political science|Geography|Psychology|Anthropology|Social science|Law|Aesthetics|Negotiation|Computer science|Philosophy|Archaeology|Machine learning|Politics | https://doi.org/10.1080/09766634.2017.1401775 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2768128483', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/09766634.2017.1401775', 'mag': '2768128483'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of sociology and social anthropology |
“Ethnicity moderates the outcomes of self-enhancement and self-improvement themes in expressive writing”: Correction to Tsai et al. (2015). | 2,017 | Reports an error in "Ethnicity moderates the outcomes of self-enhancement and self-improvement themes expressive writing" by William Tsai, Anna S. Lau, Andrea N. Niles, Jordan Coello, Matthew D. Lieberman, Ahra C. Ko, Christopher Hur Annette L. Stanton (Cultural Diversity Ethnic Minority Psychology, 2015[Oct], Vol 21[4], 584-592). In this article, there were three errors Results section. Each are described erratum alongside correct results. The interpretations findings remain same. (The following abstract original article appeared record 2014-32908-001.) current study examined whether writing content related to self-enhancing (viz., downward social comparison situational attributions) self-improving upward persistence) motivations differentially among 17 Asian American European participants. Content analysis essays revealed no significant cultural group differences likelihood engaging versus reflections on negative personal experiences. However, apparent relation between self-motivation processes changes anxiety depressive symptoms at 3-month follow-up. Among Americans, that reflected predicted positive outcomes, whereas persistence poorer outcomes. For about was attributions Findings provide evidence suggesting culturally distinct mechanisms for effects disclosure. (PsycINFO Database Record | article | en | Psychology|Ethnic group|Diversity (politics)|Cultural diversity|Social psychology|Anthropology|Sociology | https://doi.org/10.1037/cdp0000132 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2945338719', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1037/cdp0000132', 'mag': '2945338719', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27841448'} | Jordan | C144024400 | Sociology | Cultural Diversity & Ethnic Minority Psychology|PubMed |
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“Even I Was Tempted”: The Moral Ambivalence and Ethical Practice of Veiling-Fashion in Turkey | Banu Gökarıksel (https://openalex.org/A5068857157)|Anna Secor (https://openalex.org/A5019399360) | 2,012 | Veiling-fashion, with its array of brands and ever-changing styles, has been on the rise in Turkey past decade. Although producers these styles present them as perfect melding fashion piety, our analysis focus groups consumers Istanbul Konya 2009 shows that veiling-fashion is, practice, rife ambivalence. Veiling is undertaken relation to moral code Islam, but fashion, consumption, works part an ever-shifting economy taste distinction. In Baudrillard's terms, morally ambivalent, caught between function modest covering according Islam social signification. their negotiation this ambivalence, turn into ethical how they form themselves both a (Islam) aesthetics, politics, pleasures sociospatial environments. The practice thus engages complex spatial field bodies, homes, streets, military or state spaces, public arenas. Veiling-fashion describe daily practices terms problem self-governance, management nefis, bodily material desires aroused by consumption display. nefis through technology women subjects ethico-politics today. | article | en | Ambivalence|Politics|Dress code|Islam|Consumption (sociology)|Sociology|Negotiation|Aesthetics|Social practice|Piety|Taste|Political science|Law|Social science|Social psychology|Psychology|Art|History|Archaeology|Neuroscience|Performance art|Art history | https://doi.org/10.1080/00045608.2011.601221 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2035733596', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/00045608.2011.601221', 'mag': '2035733596'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | |
“Even a Freak Like You Would Be Safe in Tel Aviv”: Transgender Subjects, Wounded Attachments, and the Zionist Economy of Gratitude | Saffo Papantonopoulou (https://openalex.org/A5091638534) | 2,014 | “Even a Freak Like You Would Be Safe in Tel Aviv”:Transgender Subjects, Wounded Attachments, and the Zionist Economy of Gratitude Saffo Papantonopoulou (bio) what are you?? if your not male or female, perhaps something between?? then can you explain to me ridiculous & ignorant hate against only country Middle-East that someone like could live peaceful life, almost without prejudice, having law on side, also same rights as female heterosexual??? because darling, would be strung up by yr pigtails stoned death, tortured imprisoned, any those “peace loving” “democratic” non-judgemental” [sic] Muslim countries surround Israel!! —YouTube comment directed at There is about anger akin this gift exchange. Once given you, it passed along quickly possible. … street, army fired over our heads, but us, first impulse was return death straight back original donor, with no lapse time. But, case, killed. So pass along, just leaps out, somewhere else another were lot people who returned their everyday life unable control anger, exploded into senseless rage slightest trifles for months afterwards. —Alan Klima, The Funeral Casino: Meditation, Massacre, Exchange Dead Thailand In 2007, Israeli foreign ministry officially launched campaign called Brand Israel. With professional corporate PR firms hired revitalize apartheid state’s international image, total $20 million set aside state propaganda year alone.1 This rebranding campaign, which persists today, has consisted multiple different tactics. tactic received most attention, one [End Page 278] I am concerned here, been dubbed Palestine solidarity activists “pinkwashing” (Schulman 2011). Haneen Maikey, cofounder queer Palestinian organization Al Qaws, defines pinkwashing “the cynical use gay government order divert attention from occupation apartheid, promoting itself progressive respects rights, and, contrary, portraying society Palestinians homophobic” (Maikey 2013). Jasbir Puar (2007) coined term “homonationalism” refer process. Since launch Israel, there proliferation activist organizing around pinkwashing. 2013, much academic work culminated conference, titled “Homonationalism Pinkwashing,” held City University New York Graduate Center April 2013. Both Maikey keynote speakers conference. While so far focused deployment cisgender subjectivities, question want pose, then, where, age neoliberalism homonationalism, transgender subject relative colonial economies gratitude? Ironically, extent beginning addressed within academy, responses relates subjectivities politics have followed gradual “inclusion” subjects homonationalism. During her speech raised rise, recent years, trans version citing example U.S. vice president Joseph Biden’s statement issues civil issue time.” A during Q&A session, remains an issue, incitement discourse—the “call response” describes between response Is moment, now, when discussed relationship homonationalism? Did wait invoked Biden wave homonationalism before we theorize it? call-and-response particularly troubling, seems reenact narrative historical... | article | en | Gratitude|Hatred|Law|Sociology|History|Psychology|Political science|Social psychology|Politics | https://doi.org/10.1353/wsq.2014.0002 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1990727893', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1353/wsq.2014.0002', 'mag': '1990727893'} | Israel|Palestine|State of Palestine | C144024400 | Sociology | Women's studies quarterly |
“Even crap can be fertilizer”: The experience of volunteering at sexual assault crisis centers for women survivors of sexual assault | Keren Gueta (https://openalex.org/A5015802603)|Yael Cohen-Leibovich (https://openalex.org/A5014359736)|Natti Ronel (https://openalex.org/A5019972057) | 2,020 | This qualitative study illuminates the experience of volunteering at sexual assault crisis centers among women survivors assault. In-depth interviews were conducted with 11 who had been four different across Israel for 1 to 17 years. The findings reveal three main themes. First, there are five types motivation volunteer such centers, all grounded in participants’ Second, fosters recovery by promoting an empowered identity reconstruction and social integration. Third, both challenges risks recovery, as exposure sexual-assault triggers, arise from experiences centers. Moreover, indicate various mechanisms that shape risks–benefits dynamic involved volunteering, demands role. Thus, this shifts understanding prosocial behavior a binary assessment “positive” or “negative” more comprehensive appraisal individual, role, organizational levels. | article | en | Sexual assault|Prosocial behavior|Psychology|Qualitative research|Clinical psychology|Suicide prevention|Social psychology|Poison control|Medicine|Medical emergency|Sociology|Social science | https://doi.org/10.1177/0959353520955141 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3083782246', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/0959353520955141', 'mag': '3083782246'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Feminism & Psychology |
“Even if the Sons of Rum are not like Him” The Spatial and Temporal Journey of a Late 19th Century Egyptian Song | Olga Verlato (https://openalex.org/A5001231075) | 2,018 | This paper follows the material and discursive circulation of Egyptian popular song “Fī-l-Jihādiyya” as it traveled from urban context to Upper Egypt throughout 19th century. The narrates farewell a mother her son recruited war, helpless attempt save him. I explore how centuries-old local forms mobility enacted by authors performers intersected with infrastructural changes in transportation under British colonization increasingly since third quarter Additionally, reflecting on long duree song’s performative replication, investigate continuities within military social infrastructure century, argue that ongoing exploitation soldiers helps explain endurance “Fī-l-Jihādiyya’s” relevance. thus provide case for study infrastructures interrelated realms analysis, specifically respect different implications mobilities my analysis uncovers. | article | en | Mobilities|Performative utterance|Context (archaeology)|Quarter (Canadian coin)|History|Late 19th century|Circulation (fluid dynamics)|Period (music)|Sociology|Art|Anthropology|Archaeology|Aesthetics|Engineering|Aerospace engineering | https://doi.org/10.17192/meta.2018.10.7587 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2895931278', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.17192/meta.2018.10.7587', 'mag': '2895931278'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | Middle East : Topics & Arguments |
“Even the dead have human rights”: A conversation with Homi K. Bhabha | Frank Schulze–Engler (https://openalex.org/A5026150001)|Pavan Kumar Malreddy (https://openalex.org/A5008182834)|John Njenga Karugia (https://openalex.org/A5043425680) | 2,018 | This conversation with the renowned critic and theorist Homi K. Bhabha took place in Frankfurt/Main on November 2, 2016, occasion of Third Annual Conference Africa’s Asian Options (AFRASO) project at Goethe University titled “Afrasian Transformations: Beyond Grand Narratives”, where delivered a keynote lecture, “Intimations Afterlife: On Migration, Memory Dialectics Translation”. Here, he elaborates themes that keynote, which had drawn work Walter Benjamin, V.S. Naipaul Hannah Arendt to capture migratory affects Syrian refugee crisis. He discusses enabling impact anxiety, dialectics its translation, polarity contemporary migrant condition best described Benjaminian language history as montage, or, Bhabha’s own coinage, “camera mortis”. refers throughout key concepts his recent thinking, such “scales affect”, “natality/fatality” | article | en | Conversation|Narrative|Dialectic|Sociology|Literature|Art history|History|Philosophy|Art|Theology|Communication | https://doi.org/10.1080/17449855.2018.1446682 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2795546523', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/17449855.2018.1446682', 'mag': '2795546523'} | Syria | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Postcolonial Writing |
“Ever-growing Amman”, Jordan: Urban expansion, social polarisation and contemporary urban planning issues | Robert B. Potter (https://openalex.org/A5034662204)|Khadija Darmame (https://openalex.org/A5004895323)|Nasim Barham (https://openalex.org/A5054954532)|Stephen Nortcliff (https://openalex.org/A5084966002) | 2,009 | Amman the primate capital city of Hashemite Kingdom Jordan currently has a population in excess 2 million, but 1924 it consisted little more than collection dwellings and some 2000–3000 inhabitants. The present paper sets out to document explain phenomenal expansion “ever-growing Amman”. physical geography urban region early growth are considered at outset this leads directly consideration highly polarised social structuring that characterises contemporary Amman. In doing this, original data derived from recent Greater Municipality's Geographical Information System presented. respect, essential modernity is exemplified. employment industrial bases range pressing issues then considered, including transport congestion, provision water under conditions stress privatisation, regional development planning for city. concludes by emphasizing growing international geopolitical salience start 21st century. | article | en | Geography|Urban planning|Capital city|Urbanization|Economic geography|Population|Modernity|Environmental planning|Regional science|Economy|Economic growth|Political science|Civil engineering|Sociology|Demography|Engineering|Economics|Law | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.habitatint.2008.05.005 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2144651190', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.habitatint.2008.05.005', 'mag': '2144651190'} | Jordan | C144024400 | Sociology | Habitat International |
“Every Iraqi's Nightmare”: Blogging Peace in Occupied Baghdad | Wesley Attewell (https://openalex.org/A5057253029) | 2,011 | Abstract: The importance of war blogs is increasingly acknowledged, but their political dimensions remain largely unexplored. This paper provides a series critical readings Riverbend's Baghdad Burning and addresses two main issues. First, there systematic tension between the ways in which Riverbend “subalternized” (by her readers herself) attempts to reclaim ground upon post‐invasion Iraq represented. Second, invasion has fundamentally reworked figure “Iraqi” constructed. These epistemological ontological processes are always complex partial: they occur at variety geographical scales mobilized by diversity actors, making it very difficult pin them down time space. Nevertheless, highlight difficulties reducing project resistance simple act speaking out: telling reader what life “really like” occupied Baghdad. | article | en | Nightmare|Diversity (politics)|Politics|Variety (cybernetics)|Space (punctuation)|Resistance (ecology)|Simple (philosophy)|Sociology|Media studies|Environmental ethics|Political science|Aesthetics|Epistemology|Law|Philosophy|Psychology|Computer science|Ecology|Linguistics|Artificial intelligence|Psychotherapist|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8330.2011.00919.x | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2129257818', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8330.2011.00919.x', 'mag': '2129257818'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | Antipode |
“Every Parade of Ours is a Pride Parade”: Exploring LGBTI+ digital activism in Turkey | Onur Kiliç (https://openalex.org/A5053197461) | 2,021 | This article analyses the #HerYürüyüşümüzOnurYürüyüşü (Every Parade of Ours is a Pride Parade) hashtag campaign for 2019 month in Turkey, expressing collective frustration LGBTI+ community against long-lasting bans events and public assembly. Drawing on digital ethnography from Twitter, explores networked resistances within complexity online offline entanglements activism during Istanbul 2019. The multimodal discourse analysis conducted this focuses interactions affordances embodied street actions rearticulating queer political places. study emphasizes important role (re)making place as trans-located experience, well affording emergent resistances. | article | en | Parade|Pride|Affordance|Queer|Foregrounding|Sociology|Ethnography|Media studies|Embodied cognition|Politics|Gender studies|Political science|Anthropology|Art|Psychology|Law|Computer science|Literature|Artificial intelligence|Cognitive psychology | https://doi.org/10.1177/13634607211060510 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4200034003', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/13634607211060510'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Sexualities |
“Every Slight Movement of the People . . . is Everything”: Sondra Hale and Sudanese Art | Susan Slyomovics (https://openalex.org/A5028083256) | 2,015 | This essay traces the intertwined topics of collaboration and multisited ethnography in writings anthropologist Sondra Hale on Sudanese artists art. Hale’s trajectories movements out Sudan traverse parallel, sometimes overlapping tracks with she studied, championed, curated. Studying its may have begun Khartoum during first three-year period there from 1961 to 1964; however, this analyzes subsequent based places where encountered artists, residing abroad exile, Cairo, Asmara, Addis Ababa, Oxford, Hales’ Los Angeles home, as well American venues for meetings Studies Association. | article | en | Ethnography|Movement (music)|Visual arts|History|Art|Art history|Anthropology|Sociology|Aesthetics | https://doi.org/10.5070/f7383027725 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W989354479', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.5070/f7383027725', 'mag': '989354479'} | Sudan | C144024400 | Sociology | Ufahamu |
“Every Spectator Is Either a Coward or a Traitor” | Mariano Mestman (https://openalex.org/A5002314360) | 2,021 | This chapter focuses on the screening experience of The Hour Furnaces, one most important films movement. It considers this film and its spectators a singular case militant for three principal reasons: first, because it introduces theory Third Cinema. Secondly, unlike international produced under governments put into power by revolutionary processes during “the long 60s” – in Algeria postindependence, or Cuba after 1959, to mention only two emblematic cases is made oppose military government Argentina. A third compelling aspect that, due length, sections were screened separately combined different ways depending audience. Cine Liberacion public appearance when premiered at IV Pesaro Film Festival June 1968. | other | en | Militant|Movie theater|Principal (computer security)|Government (linguistics)|Power (physics)|Media studies|Art|Political science|Advertising|Visual arts|Sociology|Law|Computer security|Computer science|Business|Philosophy|Politics|Physics|Linguistics|Quantum mechanics | https://doi.org/10.1002/9781119116172.ch19 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3159270396', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1002/9781119116172.ch19', 'mag': '3159270396'} | Algeria | C144024400 | Sociology | |
“Everybody Loves a Redemption Story around Election Time”: Rob Ford and Media Construction of Substance Misuse and Recovery | Líam Kennedy (https://openalex.org/A5071369437)|Jenna Valleriani (https://openalex.org/A5014233714) | 2,017 | The crack cocaine scandal that embroiled former Toronto Mayor Rob Ford presents an opportunity to explore how we think and talk about substance (mis)use recovery. Examining 1,836 articles from four Canadian newspapers, analyze the ways news media frame Ford's use of cocaine. We find drug was often linked a police investigation into gangs guns, much made his association with “Somali” dealers. Not only does this framing perpetuate prevailing stereotypes (crack by racialized individuals living in poor violent communities), but also it encourages public consider drugs criminal justice issue contributes stigma associated use. Moreover, repeatedly suggested problematic could be solved if he took leave job entered treatment facility. However, refusal express shame seek immediate him unworthy compassion instead rendered deserving censure. argue promoting narrow pathway addiction recovery redemption ignores realities justifies continued marginalization those who fail meet strict code conduct. | article | en | Newspaper|Framing (construction)|Shame|Criminology|Compassion|Addiction|Sociology|Stigma (botany)|Media studies|Psychology|Law|Political science|History|Psychiatry|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.3138/cjccj.2017.0007 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2742531951', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.3138/cjccj.2017.0007', 'mag': '2742531951'} | Somalia | C144024400 | Sociology | Canadian journal of criminology and criminal justice |
“Everyday I’m Çapuling” | Özen Odağ (https://openalex.org/A5050092110)|Özden Melis Uluğ (https://openalex.org/A5082712302)|Nevin Solak (https://openalex.org/A5003513988) | 2,016 | Abstract. This contribution examines the 2013 Gezi Park protests in Turkey by drawing on social identity model of collective action (SIMCA) and slacktivism versus facilitation debate literature digitally enabled action. Contrary to hypothesis that claims online lack an apparent impact real world, current study indicates a facilitating role protests. By means large-scale survey (N = 1,127) subsequent latent path analysis, demonstrates endurance movement was kept alive both offline actions. The relationship between offline/online protest motivations mediated three predictors derived from SIMCA: perceived injustice, identity, efficacy. Results show protestors Turkey, independent whether they became active digital or were likely again extent developments as unjust, identified strongly with Çapulcus [Turkish for looters] group, this group be efficient changing injustice country. | article | en | Collective action|Injustice|Online and offline|Social psychology|Collective efficacy|Action (physics)|Psychology|Collective identity|Social identity theory|Turkish|Just-world hypothesis|Identity (music)|Social movement|Sociology|Political science|Social group|Physics|Quantum mechanics|Politics|Acoustics|Law|Linguistics|Philosophy | https://doi.org/10.1027/1864-1105/a000202 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2550999186', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1027/1864-1105/a000202', 'mag': '2550999186'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Media Psychology |
“Everyone Deserves a Smartphone?”: Understanding the Media’s Legitimation of Mobile Technology Use by Syrian Refugees | Andrea Alarcon (https://openalex.org/A5029875808)|Jeeyun Baik (https://openalex.org/A5005787012)|Do Own Kim (https://openalex.org/A5015635454) | 2,019 | This study investigates English-speaking media’s legitimation of smartphone uses by Syrian refugees to explore how “otherness” is negotiated through technologies. Qualitatively examining the media ... | article | en | Legitimation|Syrian refugees|Refugee|Psychology|Internet privacy|Political science|Media studies|Sociology|Advertising|Computer science|Business|Law|Politics | https://doi.org/10.1080/15205436.2019.1666993 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2972667847', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/15205436.2019.1666993', 'mag': '2972667847'} | Syria | C144024400|C3018716944 | Sociology|Syrian refugees | Mass Communication and Society |
“Everyone Had to be Part of This:” Social Media and Uprising Participation Decisions | Carolyn Gideon (https://openalex.org/A5065152802)|Abigail Kukura (https://openalex.org/A5090439799) | 2,021 | Ten years after the Arab Spring there remains much that we do not understand about role of social media in uprisings. An enthusiastic western news was quick to label 2009 Iranian uprising ‘The Twitter Revolution’ despite marginal level penetration Iran at time. The same 2021 immediately attributed US Capitol proliferation disinformation on media, many additional complicated factors. While scholars different fields have attempted explain uprisings since 2011, is little more January than Green Iran. objective this project develop a framework for better understanding relationship between and citizen decisions participate persists through examples seen 2009.
This study contributes literature by providing game theoretic structure based strategic interdependence individual behavior activity oppressive states democracies. We explore considering as multi-player game, using Schelling’s (1978) critical mass model consider potential impact behavior. then apply February 2011 revolution Egypt Movement protests Iran, testing it with data from in-depth interviews participation decisions. If such see impacts (and thus outcomes) if can change either individuals’ underlying feelings thresholds (i.e. shape population’s curve), or their perception number others who will join position along curve). analyze Egyptians Iranians test applicability specific effects use. find ways individuals make largely consistent model. support these less strong, but suggests information regarding levels, assessing benefits costs participating, triggering emotions, sometimes changing opinions government. | article | en | Social media|Political science|Public relations|Internet privacy|Advertising|Media studies|Business|Sociology|Law|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3898194 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3192222512', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3898194', 'mag': '3192222512'} | Egypt|Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | Social Science Research Network |
“Everyone Has the Right to Drink Beer”: A Stakeholder Analysis of Challenges to Youth Alcohol Harm-Reduction Policies in Lebanon | Rima Nakkash (https://openalex.org/A5025685233)|Lilian Ghandour (https://openalex.org/A5002210479)|Nasser Yassin (https://openalex.org/A5005493196)|Sirine Anouti (https://openalex.org/A5004714667)|Ali Chalak (https://openalex.org/A5086415508)|Sara Chehab (https://openalex.org/A5004181312)|Aida El-Aily (https://openalex.org/A5077948936)|Rima Afifi (https://openalex.org/A5005338810) | 2,019 | Alcohol use is a major risk factor in premature death and disability, especially among youth. Evidence-based policies to prevent control the detrimental effect of alcohol have been recommended. In countries with weak policies-such as Lebanon, stakeholder analysis provides critical information influence policy interventions. This paper assesses views stakeholders regarding national harm reduction for youth.We interviewed total 22 key over period 8 months 2015. Stakeholders were selected purposively, include representatives governmental non-governmental organizations industry that could answer questions related core intervention areas: affordability, availability, regulation marketing, drinking driving. We analyzed interview transcripts using thematic analysis.Three themes emerged: Inadequacy current policies; governance disregard rule law determinant status quo; diverting responsibility towards 'other' stakeholders. addition, argued against evidence-based time-worn strategies identified globally.Our findings indicate are far from becoming priority Lebanon. There clear need shift narrative victim blaming structural conditions. | article | en | Stakeholder|Thematic analysis|Psychological intervention|Alcohol industry|Status quo|Harm reduction|Harm|Corporate governance|Public relations|Business|Political science|Qualitative research|Public health|Medicine|Advertising|Sociology|Law|Nursing|Social science|Finance | https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16162874 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2968718585', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16162874', 'mag': '2968718585', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31408935', 'pmcid': 'https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/6719017'} | Lebanon | C138816342|C144024400|C529928208 | Harm reduction|Public health|Sociology | International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health|Europe PMC (PubMed Central)|PubMed Central|PubMed |
“Everyone Has to Find Themselves in the Story”: Exploring Minority Group Representation in the Citizenship Curriculum in Northern Ireland and Israel | Helen Hanna (https://openalex.org/A5047690178) | 2,016 | This article explores understandings of minority group representation in citizenship education Northern Ireland and Israel, from the point view students, teachers, policy makers. It is set against background minority–majority dichotomy within societies divided along ethnonational lines, challenge delivering a common curriculum to diverse such context. Starting with interpretations international law that state should be culturally appropriate flexible needs particular community, considers several interrelated ideas: proportional educational governance, students being able “find themselves story” curriculum, debate over versus differentiated curriculum. Interjurisdiction comparisons allow for exploration varied as socialization, potential responses balancing unity diversity or multicultural society. | article | en | Curriculum|Citizenship|Context (archaeology)|Socialization|Sociology|Diversity (politics)|Multiculturalism|Pedagogy|Representation (politics)|Political science|Gender studies|Law|Social science|Politics|Paleontology|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1080/15595692.2015.1084922 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2331840700', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/15595692.2015.1084922', 'mag': '2331840700'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education |
“Everyone Is Normal, and Everyone Has a Disability”: Narratives of University Students with Visual Impairment | Nitsan Almog (https://openalex.org/A5076788471) | 2,018 | University students with visual impairment in Israel and worldwide face multiple academic social barriers must develop techniques, strategies skills to adjust the university environment. The current article is based on a longitudinal qualitative study aimed at incorporating students’ voices offers some insight into ways experience their journeys. research method combined grounded theory emancipatory disability paradigm, which draws explicitly from people disabilities’ collective thus directly challenges this group’s widespread oppression. This combination allowed researcher focus initial experiences as subjectively perceived. Sixteen all defined legally blind, four universities Israel, were interviewed over 2-year period of studies. findings present two complementary narratives interviewees used while configuring identities. will that suggest during journeys, needed manage process integrating identity both disabled students, choosing when where perform each determining what implications choice along one’s related costs benefits. study’s recommendations can help professionals support services improve inclusion equality higher education. | article | en | Oppression|Inclusion (mineral)|Focus group|Grounded theory|Narrative|Identity (music)|Disability studies|Qualitative research|Social identity theory|Psychology|Sociology|Face (sociological concept)|Pedagogy|Higher education|Diversity (politics)|Medical education|Social psychology|Gender studies|Social group|Social science|Medicine|Linguistics|Philosophy|Physics|Politics|Political science|Anthropology|Acoustics|Law | https://doi.org/10.17645/si.v6i4.1697 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2902566011', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.17645/si.v6i4.1697', 'mag': '2902566011'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Social Inclusion|Social Science Open Access Repository (GESIS – Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences) |
“Everyone’s Child”: The Challenge of Judging Israeli Soldiers in the Shadow of the Conflict | Renana Keydar (https://openalex.org/A5058266588) | 2,019 | This article addresses one of the most important and high-profile legal dramas in Israel recent years: trial soldier Elor Azaria, who shot killed an incapacitated Palestinian assailant West Bank city Hebron. It seeks to explain why trial, which was compared O.J. Simpson USA, generated such unprecedented public controversy. I argue that rather than ostensible central question soldier’s mens rea, trial’s significance is revealing competing images Israeli upon his encounter with law. Against categorization as a perpetrator (first accused, then convicted), supporters propagate alternative image innocent, victimized son, invoking contested metaphor “everyone’s child.” The argues this polarized view son-soldier nexus, foundational republican ethos Jewish-Israeli society, affects accountability soldiers official duty holders. first consider David Grossman’s novel To End Land (2008) text imagines anew hierarchies between filial son national soldier, identifying two distinct yet intertwined processes filialization infantilization underlying change. Based on insights derived from literary discourse, move offer close reading court proceedings Azaria case, analyzing law’s response these conflicting son-soldier. | article | en | Ethos|Law|Law and literature|Shadow (psychology)|Political science|Sociology|Psychology|Psychoanalysis | https://doi.org/10.1177/1743872119852078 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2944982160', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/1743872119852078', 'mag': '2944982160'} | Israel|West Bank | C144024400 | Sociology | Law, Culture and the Humanities |
“Everything Has Changed, and Nothing Has Changed in Journalism”: Revisiting Journalistic Sourcing Practices and Verification Techniques during the 2011 Egyptian Revolution and Beyond | Aljosha Karim Schapals (https://openalex.org/A5047084330)|Zahera Harb (https://openalex.org/A5072265915) | 2,021 | Using the Egyptian Revolution as a case study, this article studies journalistic sourcing and verification through in-depth interviews with journalists in United Kingdom. While coverage of event British media was dominated by civic, unofficial sources, conducted 2014 revealed that only included these if no other sources were available. In fact, voiced concern regards to online rarely direct, first-hand accounts. Follow-up 2020 point developments journalism practice has undergone since, particularly relation open-source content verification. Overall, picture we paint journalists’ handling sourced from social is one wedged between expressed enthusiasm cautious scepticism. | article | en | Journalism|Enthusiasm|Nothing|Skepticism|Social media|Media studies|Political science|Content analysis|Citizen journalism|Public relations|Sociology|Law|Social science|Psychology|Social psychology|Philosophy|Epistemology | https://doi.org/10.1080/21670811.2020.1856702 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3107057302', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/21670811.2020.1856702', 'mag': '3107057302'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | Digital Journalism|City Research Online (City University London)|QUT ePrints (Queensland University of Technology) |
“Everything Here Is Temporary” | Nadia El‐Shaarawi (https://openalex.org/A5002047170)|Devon E. Hinton (https://openalex.org/A5027779665)|Alexander Laban Hinton (https://openalex.org/A5068155702) | 2,014 | Psychological problems ... begin from Iraq and continue where they (refugees) live now or settled in Egypt. It is concern about the war itself, second life, shortage of life facilities. Also unclear future; future an important thing to person, human being. If not clear, some will begin.(Laith, NGO physician, Cairo, 2007) | chapter | en | Economic shortage|Refugee|Human life|Political science|Development economics|Environmental ethics|History|Law|Economics|Philosophy|Humanity|Linguistics|Government (linguistics) | https://doi.org/10.1017/cbo9781107706859.012 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2501038172', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/cbo9781107706859.012', 'mag': '2501038172'} | Egypt|Iraq | C47768531 | Development economics | Cambridge University Press eBooks |
“Everything You Ever Dreamed”: Post-9/11 Trauma and Fantasy in Ali Smith’s <i>The Accidental</i> | Emily Horton (https://openalex.org/A5063130331) | 2,012 | Noting a recent critical trend to read contemporary fiction in terms of trauma theory, this article explores Ali Smith’s The Accidental both as negotiation and critique fashion. Recognizing trauma’s centrality the novel personal guilt public catastrophe relation an implicit Iraq War background, I argue that reaffirms theory’s importance, even it criticizes post-9/11 appropriations traumatic sentiment. By undermining romantic patriarchal readings function state-of-alert, satirizes salient discourses its final unease with culture. | article | en | Accidental|Psychoanalysis|Fantasy|Romance|Psychological trauma|Psychology|Relation (database)|Criminology|Sociology|Literature|Art|Psychiatry|Physics|Database|Computer science|Acoustics | https://doi.org/10.1353/mfs.2012.0052 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2047990996', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1353/mfs.2012.0052', 'mag': '2047990996'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | Modern Fiction Studies |
“Everything starts within”: New Age Values, Images, and Language in Israeli Advertising | Marianna Ruah-Midbar (https://openalex.org/A5054467203)|Nurit Zaidman (https://openalex.org/A5021482433) | 2,013 | ABSTRACT This article focuses on the appropriation of New Age values, images, and language by different sectors mainstream in a Western society—in Israel. The findings support earlier research about shift values societies. Specifically, this is towards admiration nature, Far Eastern lore, search for ‘balanced’ way life, so on, accordance with values. analyzes how, what purpose, advertisements appropriate elements. analysis 100 from last decade leads to conclusion that all sectors, including relatively conservative ones (such as academic institutions), borrow elements Age, but differ intensity form appropriation: some are interested simply attracting attention, while others directly discusses differentiation between receptivity specific explores possible motivations use elements, such more sectors’ esoteric Age. | article | en | Mainstream|Appropriation|Admiration|Sociology|Advertising|Media studies|Political science|Psychology|Law|Social psychology|Business|Linguistics|Philosophy | https://doi.org/10.1080/13537903.2013.831652 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2120904434', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/13537903.2013.831652', 'mag': '2120904434'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Contemporary Religion |
“Everything’s Connected”: Using Systems Maps for Inquiry Learning | Gretchen S. Goode (https://openalex.org/A5034584233)|Laurie MacGillivray (https://openalex.org/A5045765463) | 2,023 | AbstractVisual representations of the complex interactions and interdependencies within systems facilitate holistic understanding inform decision-making for systemic improvements. Notes1 Davis, B., Sumara, D., & Luce-Kapler, R. (2015). Engaging minds: Cultures education practices teaching (3rd ed.). Routledge.2 Cabrera, L. Systems thinking made simple: New hope solving wicked problems (2nd Plectica Publishing.3 Senge, P. M., Cambron-McCabe, N., Lucas, T., Smith, Dutton, J., Kleiner, A. (2000). Schools that learn: A fifth discipline fieldbook educators, parents, everyone who cares about education. Knopf Doubleday.4 Alim, H. S., Paris, Wong, C. (2020). Culturally sustaining pedagogy: critical framework centering communities. In N. I. S. Nasir, D. Lee, Pea, M. McKinney de Royston (Eds.), Handbook cultural foundations learning (pp. 261-276). Taylor Francis.5 NGSS Lead States. (2013). Next generation science standards: For states, by states. The National Academies Press.6 Ben-Zvi Assaraf, O., Orion, (2005). Development system skills in context earth Science Teaching, 42(5), 518-560; (2010). Four case studies, six years later: Developing junior high school them over time. Journal Research 47(10), 1253-1280.7 Hmelo-Silver, E., Jordan, R., Eberbach, C., Sinha, (2017). with a conceptual representation: quasi-experimental study. Instructional Science, 45(1), 53-72.8 Curwen, Ardell, A., MacGillivray, (2019). Hopeful discourse: Elementary children’s activist responses to modern day slavery grounded thinking. Literacy Research: Theory, Method, Practice, 68(1), 139-161.9 L., Lambert, (2018). second grade classroom: Students engaged address statewide drought. Frontiers Education, 3, 90.10 Hmelo-Silver et al. p. 5311 C.D. Francis. 263.12 Davis 215. | article | en | Context (archaeology)|Systems thinking|Sociology|Interdependence|Publishing|Pedagogy|Mathematics education|Psychology|Social science|Art|Computer science|Literature|History|Artificial intelligence|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1080/00094056.2023.2199066 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4387008533', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/00094056.2023.2199066'} | Jordan | C144024400 | Sociology | Childhood Education |
“Evolusi-Devolusi” Pemerintahan Demokratis dalam Nalar Filosofis Abdolkarim Soroush | Imron Mustofa (https://openalex.org/A5007607499) | 2,021 | This article tries to offer Abdolkarim Soroush answer problem of inaccuracy religious attitudes in addressing religion and democracy as a government system. In Soroush’s view, peoples sees ideology no longer valid, when they keep on single interpretation solid idea. They prefer compound, nonsecterian charitable ideas. study uses philosophical-critical analysis method. The confirms: offers new kalām (theology) approach intermediary way between Islam social problems. As an intellectual-mondial, he want present that can be universally understood, follows world community common sense, is not just traditional textual approach. option quite sensitive full risk, like his criticism toward Iranian post-revolutionary government. | article | en | Islam|Ideology|Interpretation (philosophy)|Criticism|Government (linguistics)|Sociology|Epistemology|Political science|Democracy|Law|Philosophy|Theology|Politics|Linguistics | https://doi.org/10.21111/klm.v19i2.6732 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3208583544', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.21111/klm.v19i2.6732', 'mag': '3208583544'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | Kalimah: jurnal studi agama-agama dan pemikiran Islam |
“Evolutionary” and “revolutionary” events affecting HRM in Israel: 1948–2008 | Jacob Weisberg (https://openalex.org/A5084830009) | 2,010 | In Western countries, HRM strategies, policies and practices commonly develop in a gradual incremental “evolutionary” way, but unforeseen domestic or external events can also engender “revolutionary” rapid changes. This paper reviews the major evolutionary revolutionary changes arising from internal sources that Israel has experienced since founding of State 1948, which stem primarily political, economic, societal technological spheres. Israel's been required to take on new roles adjust these A set propositions derived 2-dimensional conceptual model associating source (internal/external) with nature (evolutionary/revolutionary) change is put forward account for responses operations Israel. | review | en | Politics|Political science|Set (abstract data type)|Political economy|Conceptual framework|Economic system|Sociology|Economics|Law|Social science|Computer science|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hrmr.2009.08.004 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1972512974', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hrmr.2009.08.004', 'mag': '1972512974'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Human Resource Management Review |
“Ex Parte Milligan” Reconsidered: Race and Civil Liberties from the Lincoln Administration to the War on Terror ed. by Stewart L. Winger and Jonathan W. White | Rachel K. Deale (https://openalex.org/A5026985061) | 2,021 | Reviewed by: “Ex Parte Milligan” Reconsidered: Race and Civil Liberties from the Lincoln Administration to War on Terror ed. by Stewart L. Winger Jonathan W. White Rachel K. Deale (bio) Terror. Edited White. (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2020. Pp. 371. Cloth, $45.00.) In 1991, Mark E. Neely Jr. argued in his Pulitzer Prize–winning The Fate Liberty: Abraham that Supreme Court’s landmark Ex parte Milligan decision would have little effect future cases, as merely elucidated a muddy nineteenth-century legal question. But wake 9/11, Terror, invasions Afghanistan Iraq, historians are reconsidering Neely’s interpretation asserting case is still relevant. Reconsidered presents civil liberties during Reconstruction “war terror.” White, volume based papers delivered 2016 at conference 150: Constitution Military Commissions American Wars Terror” hosted Illinois State University. Divided into four parts, collection examines meaning martial law, Copperheads Middle West, decision, precedential power Milligan. first section reconsiders law showing suspension helped provide Black Americans with more freedom. three chapters demonstrate Federal government fully committed ending slavery occupied cities, men women experienced greater liberty. White’s “Martial Law Expansion War” makes this point exceptionally clear how “military occupation opened up number social, political, opportunities for minority groups (53). S. Schantz’s “The Janus-Faced Character Martial War, or Strange Case Lieutenant Alanson Sanborn Dr. David M. Wright” reemphasizes demonstrating Lincoln’s compassion did not extend southerners who refused treat captured white officers troops fairly. When Wright executed officer First United States Colored Infantry, took matters own hands making sure he made an example those harmed soldiers their officers. contributions support Laura Edwards’s argument that, order paint clearer understanding administration’s handling liberties, need connect race, emancipation, history together. examining [End Page 305] context it becomes evident often restricted defend expand liberties. As result, established important precedents lives postwar society. Part 2 Republican response antiwar Copperhead sentiment Midwest. Here Christopher Phillips, A. James Fuller, Stephen Towne show threat was real. doing so, they maintain administration acted within reason when attempting put down movement. 3 focuses raises many thought-provoking questions concerning judiciary’s role, Bill Rights wartime, war. Michael Les Benedict’s examination origins Davis’s opinion shows Davis broke new ground arguing trying civilians military tribunal violation rights trial jury under Rights. Benedict points out time Court upheld accused traitor. “constitutional liberty, federalism, touchstone Constitution” (217). Winger’s chapter analyzes “the place international use war powers” (16). While recent scholarship has emphasized war, suggests... | review | en | Ex parte|Law|Spanish Civil War|Civil liberties|Administration (probate law)|White (mutation)|Sociology|Political science|Politics|Biochemistry|Chemistry|Gene | https://doi.org/10.1353/cwe.2021.0026 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3172023553', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1353/cwe.2021.0026', 'mag': '3172023553'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | The Journal of the Civil War Era |
“Exemplary” teachers: The perception of prospective teachers of role model teachers and their contribution to their professional identity | Yael Cohen-Azaria (https://openalex.org/A5040106663)|Sara Zamir (https://openalex.org/A5039023824) | 2,021 | This study examined the characteristics of “exemplary” teachers according to Israeli–Arab prospective teachers, and influence those perceptions on their professional identity. The is based qualitative paradigm using in-depth semi-structured interviews with 33 students studying education in an academic college located center Israel. Findings show that educational identity begins form while still at school, exposure exceptional teacher past. teacher’s digression from traditional model pedagogy Arab led them formulation modern mindsets as educators agents change. | article | en | Identity (music)|Perception|Pedagogy|Teacher education|Digression|Qualitative research|Professional development|Psychology|Mathematics education|Sociology|Social science|Art|Physics|Literature|Neuroscience|Acoustics | https://doi.org/10.1177/00220574211046555 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4200117755', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/00220574211046555'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Education |
“Exercise during hemodialysis and health promoting behaviors: a clinical trial” | Alireza Dashtidehkordi (https://openalex.org/A5003150940)|Nahid Shahgholian (https://openalex.org/A5020007679)|Fatemeh Attari (https://openalex.org/A5002388818) | 2,019 | Health promoting behaviors are among the determinants of health. Hemodialysis causes significant changes in lives patients and affects their health behaviors. Accordingly, this study aimed at investigating effect exercise during hemodialysis on promotion undergoing hemodialysis. This was a two-stage (before after) clinical trial. The sample consisted 60 two hospitals Isfahan who were selected randomly divided into groups control intervention using random allocation method. A 8-week program by stationary bicycles (Mini-bike) designed for group, while group underwent 10-min limbering 8 weeks. Data collected demographic questionnaire Promoting Lifestyle Profile II (HPLP-II) before after analyzed SPSS21 software. Based independent t-test results, no difference observed between mean score its areas (P > 0.05). However, results test showed that areas, except responsibility = 0.052) spirituality 0.211), significantly different (p < with bicycle could promote Thus, is recommended to be considered as part therapeutic protocol these departments. trial found accordance ethical principles national norms standards conducting medical research Iran. IRCT registration number: IRCT20150116020675N3 . Registration date: 2019-01-18, 1397/10/28 Approval ID: IR.MUI.RESEARCH.REC.1397.014 Date: 2018-07-01 Evaluated by: Vice-Chancellor Research Affairs -Medical University | article | en | Medicine|Hemodialysis|Physical therapy|Health promotion|Intervention (counseling)|Clinical trial|Nephrology|Randomized controlled trial|Internal medicine|Nursing|Public health | https://doi.org/10.1186/s12882-019-1276-3 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2941460067', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1186/s12882-019-1276-3', 'mag': '2941460067', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30890122', 'pmcid': 'https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/6425622'} | Iran | C138816342|C185618831 | Health promotion|Public health | BMC Nephrology|Europe PMC (PubMed Central)|PubMed Central|PubMed |
“Explode into small pieces”: Suicidal ideation among child sexual abuse survivors | Noga Tsur (https://openalex.org/A5031085213)|Afnan Attrash-Najjar (https://openalex.org/A5031898336)|Carmit Katz (https://openalex.org/A5054150010) | 2,022 | Child sexual abuse (CSA) has been acknowledged as predisposing survivors to an increased risk of suicidal ideation and attempts. Despite this being widely recognized, the study suicidality mainly focused on psychopathology, while less attention given survivors' experiences perceptions.This aims uncover perceptions among adult CSA survivors.The sample consisted 41 written narratives that included references suicide.Written were collected from participants part Israeli Independent Public Inquiry change public policy. An inductive thematic analysis guided exploration stories.The findings portrayed several main themes regarding before, during after thoughts behaviors. These elucidated their motivations leading attempts, including wish end one's self suffering, self-blame, communicate request for recognition. Additionally, stories illuminated following depicting inadequate treatment difficulties with psychiatric labeling a mental health disorder.The new insights link between trauma, posttraumatic within social interaction context. Furthermore, these call medical psychosocial practitioners view post-CSA suffering trauma-related rather than personal psychopathology adjust practices adapt needs. | article | en | Suicidal ideation|Psychosocial|Psychopathology|Context (archaeology)|Sexual abuse|Psychology|Thematic analysis|Psychiatry|Poison control|Suicide prevention|Clinical psychology|Mental health|Child abuse|Medicine|Qualitative research|Medical emergency|Paleontology|Social science|Sociology|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chiabu.2022.105780 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4284673364', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chiabu.2022.105780', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35803028'} | Israel | C134362201|C144024400 | Mental health|Sociology | Child Abuse & Neglect|PubMed |
“Extraordinary Modern People”: Dominions of the Sikhs, 1794 | Amandeep Singh Madra (https://openalex.org/A5081354044)|Parmjit Singh (https://openalex.org/A5082337685) | 2,004 | Little is known of John Griffith, the author copperplate script memorandum now preserved in India Office library. He was, for some time, Resident at Basra factory Iraq, then chief Surat Factory India, followed by a short stint as Governor Bombay 1795. It was from 1794 that he wrote to Alexander Adamson, an Assistant Treasurer and Transfer Master Bombay, with details most important inhabitants on banks river Indus. His introductory remarks clarify rationale his work: “The Manners Disposition People, who occupy its [the Indus’s] Banks, are perhaps various face Country, which they inhabit. The slightest information subject present Political Commercial State hitherto, general but obscurely known, may be considered not entirely unworthy Attention.” Griffith begins account Sind Multān before touching upon Sikhs. ends detailed Kandahār, time would have been principal city Durrānīs whose plunderous invasions plagued Punjab almost century. | chapter | en | Indus|Principal (computer security)|Politics|Subject (documents)|Governor|State (computer science)|Factory (object-oriented programming)|Memorandum|Face (sociological concept)|Ancient history|History|Reign|Law|Economic history|Political science|Sociology|Engineering|Social science|Library science|Paleontology|Algorithm|Structural basin|Computer science|Biology|Programming language|Aerospace engineering|Operating system | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-11998-8_13 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2501296079', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-11998-8_13', 'mag': '2501296079'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | Palgrave Macmillan US eBooks |
“Eyes Have They, But They See Not”: Israeli Election Laws, Freedom of Expression, and the Need for Transparent Speech | Amit M. Schejter (https://openalex.org/A5068648476)|Moran Yemini (https://openalex.org/A5082111805) | 2,009 | A critical-historical description and analysis of the development laws regulating electioneering in broadcasting their interpretation by policymakers courts over a period nearly fifty years Israel demonstrates how conceptual basis for regulation scheme originally offered law as early 1959 has been turned on its head. The result is chaotic system which rules of, borderline between, permissible forbidden are unclear. While perceived dead letter, permitted seems at times to be unrestricted, perhaps because theory behind it makes unenforceable. At same time, there growing skepticism about efficacy electoral campaigning whole, fostering extreme proposals reform including abolish regulation. This study offers an alternative approach, based different speech, “transparent speech.” | article | en | Skepticism|Law|Interpretation (philosophy)|Expression (computer science)|Freedom of expression|Period (music)|Political science|Law and economics|Sociology|Computer science|Philosophy|Epistemology|Human rights|Linguistics|Aesthetics|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1080/10811680903238043 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2026299479', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/10811680903238043', 'mag': '2026299479'} | Israel | C144024400|C169437150 | Human rights|Sociology | Communication Law and Policy |
“FROM ORACLES TO CANON”— AND THE ROLE OF METAPHOR | Kirsten Nielsen (https://openalex.org/A5084363890) | 2,003 | Abstract In this paper, Kirsten Nielsen gives a survey of her own studies in “the role metaphor”. book There is Hope for Tree. The Tree as Metaphor Isaiah she showed how vital the tree metaphor creation theology Isa 1–39 and underlined that metaphors are open reuse reinterpretation. Looking back at results now critical towards efforts to date oracles full points need an ideological approach metaphors. At end turns intertextual reading metaphor. Her main example Kings 21 where interprets vineyard Israel, using various intertexts like 5,1–7 Hos 1–2. claim readings brings conclusion scholars discuss what responsible exegesis is. To issue offers four theses. | article | en | Metaphor|Reinterpretation|Exegesis|Literature|Reading (process)|Philosophy|Sociology|Art|Linguistics|Aesthetics | https://doi.org/10.1080/14697680208629732 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2002874691', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14697680208629732', 'mag': '2002874691'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Scandinavian Journal of the Old Testament |
“FROM THE UTTER DEPTH OF DEGRADATION TO THE APOGEE OF BLISS”: THE GENDERINGS OF DIASPORIC ZIONISM AND JEWISH HOLOCAUST EDUCATION | Jordana Silverstein (https://openalex.org/A5041967891) | 2,012 | This article examines some of the memories Holocaust produced in education a selection Jewish high schools Melbourne and New York at beginning twenty-first century. It is being suggested here that narratives about taught these are part shaped by gendered Zionist outlook. takes up question why this is, doing so provides an explanation types narratives. In particular, explores ways pedagogy places story creation sovereign State Israel end unit study on Holocaust, thus linking two “events” important way. also what it makes gendered, work such narratives, collective memories, do formulation particular notions diasporic thinking. | article | en | The Holocaust|Narrative|Judaism|Zionism|BLISS|Sociology|Aesthetics|Gender studies|History|Literature|Law|Philosophy|Art|Archaeology|Political science|Computer science|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1080/14725886.2012.720512 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2087495676', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14725886.2012.720512', 'mag': '2087495676'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Modern Jewish Studies |
“Facial Expression After Face Transplant: The First International Face Transplant Cohort Comparison” | Miguel I. Dorante (https://openalex.org/A5031462075)|Alice Wang (https://openalex.org/A5090233891)|Branislav Kollar (https://openalex.org/A5063893687)|Bridget J. Perry (https://openalex.org/A5066337359)|Mustafa Gökhan Ertosun (https://openalex.org/A5051469389)|Andrew Lindford (https://openalex.org/A5090197641)|Emma-Lotta Kiukas (https://openalex.org/A5078288730)|Ömer Faruk Özkan (https://openalex.org/A5085593031)|Özlenen Özkan (https://openalex.org/A5068376448)|Patrik Lassus (https://openalex.org/A5078480251)|Bohdan Pomahač (https://openalex.org/A5080446644) | 2,023 | Assessment of motor function restoration following face transplant (FT) is difficult, as standardized, bilateral tests are lacking. This study aims to bolster support for software-based analysis through international collaboration.FaceReader (Noldus, Wageningen, The Netherlands), a facial expression software, was used analyze posttransplant videos eight FT patients from Boston, Massachusetts (range, 1 9 years after transplant), two Helsinki, Finland 3 4 and three Antalya, Turkey 6.5 8.5 transplant). Age-matched healthy controls respective countries had no history prior procedures. Videos contained performing expressions evaluated by software using the Facial Action Coding System. movements were assigned intensity score values between 0 (absent) (fully present). Maximum compared with calculate percentage restoration.Of 13 patients, full FT, five partial female patients. Compared controls, median 36.9% (interquartile range, 28.8% 52.9%) all ( P = 0.151). smile 37.2% 31.5% 52.7%) 0.065). When nerve coaptation performed at distal branch level, average 42.7% ± 3.61% 27.9% 6.71% proximal trunk level 0.032). Use interpositional grafts influence on outcomes.Software-based suitable assess FT. International collaboration strengthens outcome data FT.Therapeutic, IV. | article | en | Medicine|Interquartile range|Transplantation|Trunk|Facial nerve|Facial expression|Surgery|Communication|Ecology|Biology|Sociology | https://doi.org/10.1097/prs.0000000000010242 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4318919433', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1097/prs.0000000000010242', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36727808'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery|PubMed |
“Faith in a Better Future”: Josep Lluis Sert's American Embassy in Baghdad | Samuel Isenstadt (https://openalex.org/A5044394919) | 1,997 | The following essay considers Josep Lluis Sert's American Embassy in Baghdad (1955–1961) as an attempt to project a new basis for political influence abroad that was compatible with rapidly changing postcolonial world. Although the United States began its program of embassy construction accord role world power, government required architects be sensitive local conditions site and host country. In Iraq, this meant distinguishing America from both rival Soviet Union England, America's ally but increasingly despised by Iraqis uninvited sway over their government, well addressing questions climate capacities. To negotiate complexities cold war balance ambitions conditions, Sert drew on modernism itself process transition due part application broader range building types social tasks, which is instance, representational pressures such institutional patronage entails. | article | en | Politics|Negotiation|Power (physics)|Government (linguistics)|Modernism (music)|Political science|Faith|Sociology|Law|Economic history|Political economy|History|Art history|Theology|Philosophy|Linguistics|Physics|Quantum mechanics | https://doi.org/10.1080/10464883.1997.10734720 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2054283898', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/10464883.1997.10734720', 'mag': '2054283898'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Architectural Education |
“Family and society empowerment”: a content analysis of the needs of Iranian women who experience domestic violence during pregnancy: a qualitative study | Malikeh Amel Barez (https://openalex.org/A5076518189)|Khadijeh Mirzaii Najmabadi (https://openalex.org/A5057099919)|Robab Latifnejad Roudsari (https://openalex.org/A5039108364)|Mojtaba Mosavi Bazaz (https://openalex.org/A5075515174)|Raheleh Babazadeh (https://openalex.org/A5000636754) | 2,023 | Domestic violence threatens maternal physical, psychological and emotional safety. Victim/survivor pregnant women required interventions based on their actual needs with the purpose of reducing domestic its negative consequences. The present study aimed to explore experiences victimized Iranian identify neglected needs.This qualitative descriptive was performed from September 2019 August 2021 in Mashhad, Iran. Semi-structured interviews 14 (8 6 after birth) who were victims violence, 11 key informants various discipline specialties until data saturation achieved. Participants selected through purposive sampling. Qualitative analyzed conventional content analysis adopted by Graneheim & Lundman.The main theme emerging "family society empowerment" that implied necessity family, health system, legal, social inter sectoral empowerment reduce during pregnancy. "Family comprised three categories such as "need empower couples pregnancy", "demand for improved care services", strengthen inter-sectoral, legal supports".Victim/survivor experienced individual, interpersonal needs. Family constituted women. Awareness policymakers system managers these could be basis designing a supportive program according victim/survivor women's In addition educational skill couples, it is essential organizations cooperate each other provide integrated coordinated services facilitate access resources. | article | en | Empowerment|Domestic violence|Nonprobability sampling|Qualitative research|Nursing|Content analysis|Health care|Psychological intervention|Psychology|Social support|Medicine|Poison control|Suicide prevention|Social psychology|Sociology|Environmental health|Political science|Population|Social science|Law | https://doi.org/10.1186/s12905-023-02525-7 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4384025113', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1186/s12905-023-02525-7', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37438772'} | Iran | C144024400|C160735492|C542059537 | Domestic violence|Health care|Sociology | BMC Women's Health|PubMed Central|PubMed |
“Farm Corporations” on the DEZ – Iran's Approach to Rural Development | William L. Park (https://openalex.org/A5080250430) | 1,972 | Shamsabad is a small rural village in the Khusestan region of southwestern Iran and within sight ancient Persepolis, magnificent city Persian Empire. In 1969, its 80 farm families 60 laborer were living at near subsistence levels mud-walled about size 20 blocks. They dependent upon non-technical comparatively primitive agriculture which had existed for many generations. | article | en | Subsistence agriculture|Empire|Agriculture|Persian|Agricultural economics|Geography|Rural development|Rural area|Economy|Socioeconomics|Economic growth|Economics|Political science|Archaeology|Law|Philosophy|Linguistics | https://doi.org/10.1017/s0163548400000170 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4212934046', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/s0163548400000170'} | Iran | C2988676352 | Rural development | Journal of the Northeastern Agricultural Economics Council|AgEcon Search (University of Minnesota, USA) |
“Fasad, Hijra and Warlike Diaspora” from the Geographic Boundaries of Early Islam to a New Dar al-Hikma: Europe | Marco Demichelis (https://openalex.org/A5062559442) | 2,019 | This paper aims to emphasize the influence that “Classic” Islamic Thought had on contemporary European-Islamic one regarding conceptualization and action of emigration (hijra-hajara) through geographical juridical redefinition Old Continent as a new “house” (dar/bayt) in hosting Muslim population. The analysis should also be considered relation sectarian violent phase which followed peaceful so-called “Arab Spring” current deflagration part Middle East. During proto-Islamic historical phase, term muhajirun was adopted define those who made hijra, referring prophet Muhammad’s followers 622. They aimed live according religious behaviour started different from their polytheist society origin; same used categorize partially populated conquered territories following decades: Syria, Egypt, Mesopotamia, Iranian plateau, etc., decided take root become in-urbanized. juridical, political, perception, before after 2011, consider “emigration” perspective, which, not so differently original hijra conceptualization, is rooted abandoning land warlike violence reach geography where individual affiliation can safeguarded. | article | en | Islam|Conceptualization|Diaspora|Emigration|Population|Political science|Geography|History|Sociology|Ethnology|Law|Archaeology|Demography|Philosophy|Linguistics | https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10040277 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2940181487', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10040277', 'mag': '2940181487'} | Egypt|Iran|Syria | C144024400 | Sociology | Religions|Deposito Adademico Digital Universidad De Navarra (University of Navarra) |
“Fashioning” the Post-War Self in Jessica Goodell’s Shade It Black | Merve Kaya (https://openalex.org/A5070335350) | 2,018 | As a young girl who sets her eyes on “what men are capable of doing,” Jessica Goodell takes the challenge to serve U.S. Marine Corps as heavy equipment mechanic, since aspiration tank crew member is not found appropriate for woman. When she deployed Iraq, however, finds herself serving mortuary clerk . She has written Shade It Black: Death and After in Iraq (2011), five years after return home. During service, subjected discrimination by both male female Marines. Back home, veteran with PTSD, feels tormented memories philosophical moral questions about war. adopts feminine fashion codes part survival strategy, giving up masculine style symbolizing all that associated war feeling guilt resulting from it. This article will focus Goodell’s two identity conversions: choosing “proper femininity” military experience political journey being supporter sober critic Taking memoir text physical self- fashioning , this study observe relationship between these conversions analyzing gendered aspect soldiering Marines served well unique role clerk. | article | en | Femininity|Memoir|Feeling|Girl|Military service|Politics|Cowardice|Supporter|Gender studies|Psychology|Identity (music)|Sociology|Psychoanalysis|History|Law|Social psychology|Art|Art history|Political science|Aesthetics|Genealogy|Developmental psychology | https://doi.org/10.21547/jss.423205 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2884367413', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.21547/jss.423205', 'mag': '2884367413'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | Gaziantep University Journal of Social Sciences|DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals)|DergiPark (Istanbul University) |
“Fatally Tied Together”: The Intertwined History of Kurds and Armenians in the 20th Century | David Leupold (https://openalex.org/A5047460667) | 2,019 | More than a century years ago Talât Pasha declared famously that in the Eastern Provinces “The Armenian question does not exist anymore”. Today, far from being resolved, former binary coding (Armenian/Turkish) is even further complicated by third element— ongoing Kurdish ( doza Kurdistanê ). While most research and journalistic works frame issue as two separate events merely coincide(d) same geographical space, this work explores their interdependence historical trajectories of peoples fatally “tied together” across spatio-temporal scale. In my paper I identify opposing lines continuity through which both are tied together: friendly fatal ties. With regard to first (friendly ties), turn SSR Armenia her role fostering culture advancing nationalism. Hereby, argue marginalized community Kurmanji-speakers—the Yezidis, previously othered “devil-worshippers” şeytanperest )— emerged vanguard forging novel, secularized national identity. latter (fatal link irrevocable erasure Ottoman Armenians emergence an imagined “Northern Kurdistan” stretching over large parts historic Armenia. This, finally, raises complicity Genocide—as state-mobilized regiments, tribal members ordinary residents—in geography where, Recep Maraşlı put it, descendants “are children perpetrators victims alike”. | article | en | Armenian|Genocide|Nationalism|Turkish|History|Sociology|Gender studies|Genealogy|Ancient history|Political science|Law|Politics|Linguistics|Philosophy | https://doi.org/10.1163/1573384x-20190409 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2989874836', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1163/1573384x-20190409', 'mag': '2989874836'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Iran and the Caucasus |
“Fathers Are Very Important, but They Aren’t Our Contact Persons”: The Primary Contact Person Assumption and the Absence of Fathers in Social Work Interventions | Nadav Perez‐Vaisvidovsky (https://openalex.org/A5058847819)|Ayana Halpern (https://openalex.org/A5029391322)|Reli Mizrahi (https://openalex.org/A5025126040)|Zhara Atalla (https://openalex.org/A5060711653) | 2,023 | Research on the engagement of fathers in family- and child-oriented social work interventions has focused individual factors relating to father, mother, or worker. Much less attention been paid impact organizational aspects services themselves. This article uses methodology institutional ethnography examine this those provided by municipal Departments Social Services Israel. We found that service delivery was structured primary contact person assumption—that one should be designated as routine course an intervention. Together with gendered, political, cultural support preference for structuring assumption results a full partial exclusion from interventions. | article | en | Psychological intervention|Social work|Intervention (counseling)|Preference|Psychology|Ethnography|Social psychology|Service (business)|Politics|Sociology|Developmental psychology|Political science|Business|Marketing|Psychiatry|Anthropology|Law|Economics|Microeconomics | https://doi.org/10.1177/10443894221145751 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4321377960', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/10443894221145751'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Families in Society |
“Fed up with the historical homeland”: Re-emigrating from Israel and creating the image of the “Zionist hell” | Галина Зеленина (https://openalex.org/A5085471729) | 2,023 | Israeli secret analytical reports from the late 1970s expressed anxiety over growth of neshira — “dropping out” Jews who left Soviet Union on visas but chose to reside in other Western countries. Neshira went hand with another disturbing phenomenon yerida, departure new immigrants Israel Europe or America, their return Union. The press kept reporting about “re-emigrants” a completely different intonation, as did KGB reports. article examines negative impressions transmitted, perhaps an aggravated form, by journalists, and presented ego-documents immigrants, future re-emigrants included. stories absorption experience related egodocuments therefore deemed trustworthy confirm relative authenticity newspaper reveal that main reason for disappointment were not financial, climatic difficulties, attitude bureaucracy fellow citizens perceived deliberate humiliation human dignity. When relating experience, former demonstrated commitment familiar values, including preference spiritual material (e. g., dignity prosperity), social stratification habits, such differentiation between educated cultural big cities provincial, shtetl, Jews. | article | en | Dignity|Emigration|Homeland|Humiliation|Prosperity|Immigration|Law|Political science|Patriotism|Sociology|Economic history|History|Politics | https://doi.org/10.22394/2412-9410-2023-9-4-286-314 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4390053660', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.22394/2412-9410-2023-9-4-286-314'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Шаги |
“Feeling Almost like Everyone Else” – Israel’s Electronic Monitoring Program: Perceptions and Attitudes among Released Prisoners and Their Supervisors | Efrat Shoham (https://openalex.org/A5042565445)|Rotem Efodi (https://openalex.org/A5039421243)|Shirley Yehosha-Stern (https://openalex.org/A5013437020) | 2,014 | The growing use of various methods for electronic monitoring (EM) in the Western criminal justice system has led researchers to examine social and personal consequences this type monitoring. This article examines perceptions toward EM program among supervised released prisoners their supervisors Israel. Questionnaires were given all participating 2010, as well 12 Parole Board members. program’s strong focus on occupation, therapy, developing a good relationship with therapist, compared alternative continued custody, appears have most express, or at least declare, high level positive expectations future sense partnership normative circles surrounding them. However, expressed ambiguity over goals operational protocols. While emphasized importance rehabilitation therapeutic elements EM, members showed mixed reactions program. | article | en | Feeling|General partnership|Normative|Economic Justice|Psychology|Ambiguity|Perception|Social psychology|Focus group|Public relations|Medical education|Applied psychology|Medicine|Law|Political science|Sociology|Computer science|Neuroscience|Anthropology|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.5539/ilr.v3n1p159 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2160715512', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.5539/ilr.v3n1p159', 'mag': '2160715512'} | Israel | C139621336|C144024400 | Economic Justice|Sociology | International law research |
“Feeling Tells Better Than Language”: Emotional Expression and Gender Hierarchy in the Sermons of Fethullah Gülen Hocaefendİ | Esra Özyürek (https://openalex.org/A5082034073) | 1,997 | Over the past two years, televised sermons of Fethullah Hocaefendi have thrust him into public limelight, lending his name celebrity status as a prominent religious-cum-political figure. His long standing influence leader one most powerful Islamic communities in contemporary Turkey, Nur Cemaati , is now common knowledge. Currently, this group owns largest mass circulating newspapers ( Zaman ), TV channel Samanyolu ) and vast network hundreds educational institutions extending all way from Turkey to Central Asia. The teachings Gülen Hoca are widely disseminated through books well cassette recordings sermons, readily available for sale on counters commercial bookstores. For “secularized” however, Hoca's renown extends beyond prominence. He famous fact that he weeps ecstatically during contrary what expected man today. | article | en | Limelight|Politics|Newspaper|Secularization|Islam|Feeling|Expression (computer science)|Hierarchy|Sociology|Media studies|Political science|Law|Philosophy|Theology|Social psychology|Psychology|Computer science|Electrical engineering|Programming language|Engineering | https://doi.org/10.1017/s0896634600002624 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2495935499', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/s0896634600002624', 'mag': '2495935499'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | New Perspectives on Turkey |
“Feelings are strong here”: A Proximate Reading of Solastalgia in <i>The Last Pulse</i> | Lurong Liu (https://openalex.org/A5077046303) | 2,023 | ABSTRACTIn Anson Cameron’s The Last Pulse, the monkeywrenching protagonist blasts a dam in Queensland, rides on resulting flood southwards and spreads his solastalgia around, an affect Glenn Albrecht defines as homesickness at home induced by local ecological loss. From water disputes overseas to those between eastern Australian states, from character’s drought-stricken town South Australia Murray–Darling Basin, novel allows readers experience multiscalar capable of mobilising environmental activism, well mooring playing with “arts flow” informed Indigenous ethics. scale distance-conscious method “proximate reading” can be applied read dynamic such expanded sentient ecology; this way, it provide crucial insights into how readers’ feelings thinking are constantly reconfigured alongside shifting borders within beyond watershed novel.KEYWORDS: Solastalgiaproximate readingMurray–Darling Basinwatershed consciousnessmonkeywrenchingarts flow Disclosure StatementNo potential conflict interest was reported author(s).Notes1 Wai Chee Dimock, “Scales Aggregation: Prenational, Subnational, Transnational,” American Literary History 18, no. 2 (2006): 219.2 Lawrence Buell, Writing for Endangered World (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2001), 246.3 World, 264.4 “Catchments Basin,” Murray-Darling Basin Authority, updated 11 March 2022, https://www.mdba.gov.au/water-management/catchments.5 Ken Gelder, “Proximate Reading: Literature Transnational Reading Frameworks,” Journal Association Study Literature, Special Issue: Common Readers Cultural Critics (2010): 1.6 Reading,” 4.7 Suzanne Keen, “Narrative Empathy,” Toward Cognitive Theory Narrative Acts, ed. Frederick Luis Aldama (Austin: Texas 2010), 68. Keen notes that due nature fictionality, affective cognitive responses generated during reading do not necessarily lead empathy or altruism real life.8 Albrecht, Earth Emotions: New Words (Ithaca: Cornell 2019), 38.9 “‘Solastalgia’: A Concept Health Identity,” PAN: Philosophy Activism Nature 3 (2005): 49.10 Emily O’Gorman, Flood Country: An Environmental (Collingwood, VIC: CSIRO Publishing, 2012), 7.11 Tim Cresswell, On Move: Mobility Modern Western (Hoboken: Routledge, 2006), 3–4.12 Important laws regulations were developed passed response Millennium drought, example, Water Act 2007 (Cth) Plan 2012.13 This episode alludes upstream Ethiopia downstream Egypt caused Ethiopia’s controversial Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam Blue Nile River; Egyptian politicians caught live TV proposing military action over but later denied it. See Ahmed Maher, “Egyptian Politicians Caught on-Air Gaffe,” BBC News, 4 June 2013, https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-22771563; Warning Dam,” 10 https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-22850124.14 A. “Negating Solastalgia: Emotional Revolution Anthropocene Symbiocene,” Imago 77, 1 (2020): 45.15 Solastalgia,” 19.16 Travis Wagner, “Reframing Ecotage Ecoterrorism: News Discourse Fear,” Communication 2, (2008): 25–39.17 Cameron, Pulse (Sydney: Vintage, 2014), 38.18 40.19 Jessica K. Weir, Murray River Ecological Dialogue Traditional Owners (Canberra: Aboriginal Studies 2009), 19–20.20 Intelligent sabotaging targets only properties rejects violence against people, idea based Malm also distinguishes intelligent terrorism. Andreas Malm, How Blow Up Pipeline (London: Verso Books, 2021).21 “Towards Politics Mobility,” Environment Planning D: Society Space 28, 17–31.22 50.23 In Sara Ahmed’s concept “affective economies”, affects circulate various sociocultural relationships generate surfaces boundaries bodies. Ahmed, “Affective Economies,” Social Text 22, (2004): 117–39.24 24.25 26.26 Vernon Owen Grumbling Michael Daley, “The Progressive Political Foundations Edward Abbey’s Advocacy,” Interdisciplinary (2021): 163.27 Alexa Weik von Mossner, Affective Ecologies: Empathy, Emotion, (Columbus: Ohio State 2017), 82.28 Tom Quirk, Realism Huckleberry Finn,” Mark Twain’s Adventures Finn, Harold Bloom (New York: Infobase 2007), 9.29 25.30 162.31 176.32 Deborah Bird Rose, “Arts Flow: Poetics ‘Fit’ Australia,” Dialectical Anthropology 38, (2014): 431–45.33 Flow,” 435.34 441.35 “Popular Dreamtime Stories,” welcometocountry.org, 6 January 2021, https://www.welcometocountry.org/aboriginal-dreamtime-stories/.36 102.37 Anne Davies, “Traditional Take Fight Rights Governments,” Guardian, 29 August https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2021/aug/30/traditional-owners-in-murray-darling-basin-take-fight-for-water-rights-to-governments.38 72.39 accident occurs result Em Barwon’s dispute “ownership” fish. claims fish is her rod, while Barwon asserts comes water. midst argument, falls overboard when strikes him head tackle box determination retrieve fish.40 91.41 440.42 21.43 Emotions, 121.44 70.45 75.Additional informationFundingThis work supported Foundation China (FASIC) under Grant Program 2021 (http://www.fasic.org.au/index.php/features/australian-studies-in-china-program). | article | en | Reading (process)|Indigenous|Affect (linguistics)|Feeling|The arts|Sociology|History|Ecology|Media studies|Environmental ethics|Law|Political science|Psychology|Social psychology|Philosophy|Communication|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1080/14443058.2023.2287473 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4389224380', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14443058.2023.2287473'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Australian Studies |
“Fencing policy” of Israel in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict | Anna Kotasińska (https://openalex.org/A5081976334) | 2,020 | The article deals with the issue of shaping Israel’s specific fencing policy towards Palestinians, which was manifested, among others, by construction so-called security barrier and commencement building an underground wall preventing population Gaza Strip from entering Israel. above is a continuation Israeli-Palestinian dispute, has lasted several dozen years whose complexity makes it difficult to achieve lasting peace. | article | en | Fencing|Gaza strip|Dozen|Political science|Population|Palestine|Arab–Israeli conflict|Political economy|Development economics|Law|Ancient history|History|Sociology|Economics|Computer science|Demography|Mathematics|Arithmetic|Parallel computing | https://doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0014.0259 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3010868416', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0014.0259', 'mag': '3010868416'} | Gaza|Gaza Strip|Israel | C144024400|C47768531|C58250639 | Arab–Israeli conflict|Development economics|Sociology | Scientific Journal of the Military University of Land Forces |
“Fighting against Clandestine Migration”: Sub‐Saharan Migrants’ Political Agency and Uncertainty in Morocco | Sébastien Bachelet (https://openalex.org/A5010863144) | 2,018 | Abstract Drawing on ethnographic research in Morocco among irregular migrants from Central and Western Africa, this article shifts the exploration of what it means to be political by examining how migrants’ participation is entangled with their attempts overcome uncertainty inherent lives. Recent scholarship has exposed decentered boundaries between citizen illegal migrant, placing a prominent focus subjectivity radical potential protests. However, studies protests have often been limited “West.” Through an examination development association Morocco, I show movements must account for multiple, uncertain, sometimes seemingly contradictory claims demands. Failing do so risks curtailing any subjectivization contributing further marginalization. The illustrates aspirations cannot reduced regularization host country and, crucially, hampered agency articulated constricted mobility closely cooperating Europe migration matters. | article | en | Agency (philosophy)|Scholarship|Politics|Subjectivity|Ethnography|Political science|Political economy|Sociology|Migrant workers|Gender studies|Economic growth|Law|Social science|Economics|Anthropology|Philosophy|Epistemology | https://doi.org/10.1111/plar.12265 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2895122625', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/plar.12265', 'mag': '2895122625'} | Morocco | C144024400 | Sociology | PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review|Edinburgh Research Explorer (University of Edinburgh) |
“Films for Humanity”: De-victimization of the Female in At Five in the Afternoon and The Milk of Sorrow | A. G. Lawler (https://openalex.org/A5086989045) | 2,023 | Within today’s cinema and other media, there is a dominant problematic depiction of female vulnerability victimization that renders women victims, helpless subjects to be pitied, particularly from non-Western regions the globe. This article explores ways in which Samira Makhmalbaf’s Iranian film At Five Afternoon ( Panj é asr , ) Claudia Llosa’s Peruvian The Milk Sorrow La teta asustada seek destabilize presentations dominate modern screens. findings reveal both films grant their protagonists agency through external internal factors such material objects own voices redefine vulnerability, turn creating filmic narratives speak broader issues shared by humanity. | article | en | Sorrow|Humanity|Depiction|Narrative|Vulnerability (computing)|Globe|Agency (philosophy)|Movie theater|Gender studies|Sociology|History|Media studies|Psychology|Art|Literature|Political science|Art history|Social science|Law|Computer security|Neuroscience|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1386/fm_00284_1 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4387934290', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1386/fm_00284_1'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | Film Matters |
“Fiqhi” Contributions of the Ulama of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Ananalytical Study | Rashida Parveen (https://openalex.org/A5032895164)|Muhammad Amin (https://openalex.org/A5053593782) | 2,018 | “Fiqh” or “Al-Fiqh” is one of the most important fields Islamic Religious Sciences. It deals with nature and rulings practices usually observed by Muslims in their daily lives regarding being lawful otherwise. In this field, contributions religious scholars province Khyberpakhtunkhwa are highly admirable. Being a gate-way for Sub-Continent including China, scholastic pursuits progressing Syria, Iraq subsequently Asia Minor, particularly impressed/influenced Fiqhi developments region (Khyberpakhtunkhwa). The reason said influence on specific area (region) has also been elaborated article. An massive creative work along original research studies were carried out inhabitant general that Province, particular since long duly producing remarkable books field. There another characteristic people region: majority them followers “Fiqh-e-Hanfi” article, only as sample, an analytical review “Ulema” hailing from (like Syed Amin –al-Haque”, Maulana Shaista Gul” , “Maulana Hamd-Allah-Jan” “Sheikh-AlQuran, Muhammad Tahir”) presented to prove above-cited hypothesis.In addition all above details some more have special focus works Scholars region. Most works- (other than those mentioned article) published forms presentable books. This will helpful young researchers future. | review | en | Fiqh|Khyber pakhtunkhwa|Islam|China|Sociology|Social science|Law|Political science|History|Sharia|Archaeology|Socioeconomics | https://doi.org/10.37605/fahm-i-islam.1.2.2 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4240325452', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.37605/fahm-i-islam.1.2.2'} | Iraq|Syria | C144024400 | Sociology | .فھم اسلام |
“First Contact” and Other Israeli Fictions: Tourism, Globalization, and the Middle East Peace Process | Rebecca L. Stein (https://openalex.org/A5090041524) | 2,002 | Research Article| September 01 2002 “First Contact” and Other Israeli Fictions: Tourism, Globalization, the Middle East Peace Process Rebecca L. Stein Search for other works by this author on: This Site Google Public Culture (2002) 14 (3): 515–544. https://doi.org/10.1215/08992363-14-3-515 Views Icon Article contents Figures & tables Video Audio Supplementary Data Peer Review Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Tools Permissions Cite Citation Stein; Process. 1 2002; doi: Download citation file: Zotero Reference Manager EasyBib Bookends Mendeley Papers EndNote RefWorks BibTex toolbar search Dropdown Menu input auto suggest filter your Books JournalsAll JournalsPublic Advanced The text of article is only available as a PDF. © Duke University Press2002 PDF first page preview Close Modal Issue Section: Controversies You do not currently have access to content. | review | en | Icon|Globalization|Tourism|Download|Citation|Section (typography)|Search engine optimization|Media studies|Sociology|History|World Wide Web|Political science|Computer science|Advertising|Law|Search engine|Archaeology|Business|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1215/08992363-14-3-515 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2153669300', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1215/08992363-14-3-515', 'mag': '2153669300'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Public Culture|DukeSpace (Duke University) |
“Fish out of Water” | Gamze Erdem Coşgun (https://openalex.org/A5054839953)|Esra Karakuş (https://openalex.org/A5016930908) | 2,023 | Language teacher identity is one of the most underresearched topics that has risen in importance to understand language teachers, especially recent years with increase sociocultural frameworks. To end, present chapter aimed explore pre-service EFL teachers' professional via metaphors. Participants were 20 fourth-year teachers studying at a state university Turkey. Data collected through an open-ended questionnaire including fill-in-the-blank statements and analyzed qualitatively constant comparative method. The findings suggested candidates viewed themselves as learners. In addition, there also participants who considered scaffolder, director, nurturer, knowledge provider, entertainer, cooperative leader. light results, it expected educators curriculum developers can gain insights into candidates' inner thoughts, feelings, beliefs reflect their teaching identity. | chapter | en | Identity (music)|Feeling|Psychology|Curriculum|Pedagogy|Teacher education|Sociocultural evolution|Mathematics education|Fish <Actinopterygii>|Sociology|Social psychology|Physics|Anthropology|Acoustics|Fishery|Biology | https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-6684-7275-0.ch009 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4324046345', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-6684-7275-0.ch009'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Advances in higher education and professional development book series |
“Flattening the curve”: Communication, risk and COVID-19 pandemic in Turkey | Mohamed Ben Moussa (https://openalex.org/A5017750144)|Aziz Douai (https://openalex.org/A5005794007)|Mehmet Yalcin Parmaksiz (https://openalex.org/A5025994470) | 2,023 | This study examines Turkish online news media coverage of the COVID-19 outbreak in country. It explores framing narratives, particularly how they reflected and promoted elite polarization or consensus debate. The findings shed light on political power dynamics during first stage national response to pandemic. highlights calculations partisans who are keen building a fragile an increasingly polarized society. | article | en | Framing (construction)|Turkish|Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)|Pandemic|Elite|Political science|Politics|Polarization (electrochemistry)|Media studies|Sociology|Geography|Law|Medicine|Philosophy|Linguistics|Chemistry|Disease|Archaeology|Physical chemistry|Pathology|Infectious disease (medical specialty) | https://doi.org/10.1177/07395329231155149 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4321785098', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/07395329231155149'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Newspaper Research Journal|PubMed Central |
“Flattery helps”: Relational practices in statecraft | Gadi Heimann (https://openalex.org/A5012930514)|Zohar Kampf (https://openalex.org/A5009542606) | 2,021 | This paper provides an explanation for how coworkers manage to cultivate close relationships in extremely competitive workplace. Our case study is the workplace of statespersons, considered impersonal, rule-governed, and interest-motivated social environment, as such, indications counterparts overcome alienation suspicion developing trustful relations. Interviews with twenty-one senior Israeli officials concerning mundane professional practices they employed during their service reveal a gamut relational implemented various formal informal events order initiate, maintain, strengthen personal relationship foreign counterparts. A competent performance these constitutes meaningful relationships, allowing statespersons challenges posed by impersonal diplomatic | article | en | Flattery|Alienation|Order (exchange)|Public relations|Social psychology|Service (business)|Sociology|Psychology|Business|Political science|Marketing|Law|Finance | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.langcom.2021.04.001 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3157569701', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.langcom.2021.04.001', 'mag': '3157569701'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Language & Communication |
“Fleeing heir of the Kemalists”. A Picture of a Revolutionary Entourage in the Face of the Challenges and Threats Tugging Contemporary Anatolia | Daniel Broccato (https://openalex.org/A5093449350) | 2,023 | The article attempts to carry out a comparative analysis of the 20th-century socio-political conditions and their influences that contemporarily shape implementation provisions Kemalist ideology in Republic Turkey. Based on six-pillar principles Kemalism, author examines actual participation creating foundations democracy. presents elementary phases historical myths characterizes policy pursued this area. In particular, occurrence antagonisms revolutionary entourage modern Anatolia are explored. existence “parallel state”, military coups, as well widespread infiltration Fethullah Gülen’s supporters into state structures distinguished. searches for connections between creation “desirable citizen” model civil disobedience initiatives. evolution party systems revive intact legacy Mustafa Kemal case progressing conservatism light Kemalism issues which an important place is also devoted article. It boils down showing swinging motion Turkish understanding | article | en | Ideology|Democracy|Politics|Civil disobedience|Law|Turkish|Sociology|State (computer science)|Mythology|Political science|Face (sociological concept)|Political economy|Social science|History|Classics|Philosophy|Linguistics|Algorithm|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.17951/bc.2023.8.203-236 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4389487164', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.17951/bc.2023.8.203-236'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Annales Universitatis Mariae Curie-Skłodowska |
“Flexible Personhood”: Loving Animals as Family Members in Israel | Dafna Shir-Vertesh (https://openalex.org/A5058496684) | 2,012 | ABSTRACT This article discerns how human–animal boundaries are played with and blurred through familial love of pets in Israel. It explores the ways interspecies relationships Israel enable incorporation animals into (human) sphere extent limits this inclusion. The analysis households 52 couples reveals treated as loving loved members family, very similar to small children. At same time, long‐term ethnographic research that many do not endure: when life changes unexpected situations pose obstacles love, people involved may redefine or terminate it. Pets “flexible persons” “emotional commodities”; they incorporated human lives but can at any moment be demoted moved outside home family. [ humanness, animality, flexibility, boundaries, ] | article | en | Personhood|Ethnography|Human animal|Flexibility (engineering)|Sociology|Non-human|Inclusion (mineral)|Gender studies|Aesthetics|Environmental ethics|Anthropology|Epistemology|Art|Philosophy|Biology|Ecology|Livestock|Statistics|Mathematics | https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1548-1433.2012.01443.x | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1989489072', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1548-1433.2012.01443.x', 'mag': '1989489072'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | American Anthropologist |
“Focusing” on What Presidents and Provosts Think of JMC Education | Dane S. Claussen (https://openalex.org/A5032038231) | 2,007 | If the word from a group of university presidents and provosts is indicative how journalism mass communication education doing in United States these days, our discipline extraordinarily well-there are no problems with JMC's place on campuses, negative or unresolved effects schools resulting crises industries professions. In mid-April, I had opportunity to attend, as an observer, Focus Group: University Presidents/Chancellors/Provosts, held suburban Chicago by Association Schools Journalism Mass Communication (ASJMC), sister organization for Education (AEJMC). Comments about their own campuses' programs were informative interesting. For example, Jo Ann M. Cora, president Ball State University, told her College Communication, Information Media raising $40 million-$20 million !-communication projects $20 more digital exchange projects. Joan Robinson, provost Morgan university, now classified research launching school fall 2008 new building. Carol Cartwright, emeritus Kent pointed that institution's moving into rehabbed George Dennison, Montana, noted his university's (second oldest States) 50,000-square-foot Leo Lambert, Elon mentioned other students campus being involved Project Pericles, twenty-campus effort which teams work social issue initiatives develop senses responsibility. Henry Bienen, Northwestern said Medill School setting up Qatar. As focus moderator Jim Spaniolo, Texas at Arlington former dean Arts Sciences Michigan said, participants did not disagree one another all. That was surprising, considering most them engaging some well-earned bragging. But assuming than buildings, administrative structures, foundation-funded special projects, overseas campuses (Qatar gives whole meaning term distance learning), still touched substance. Alvin Thornton, associate Howard encouraged hold government officials accountable public policy affecting media. North western's Bienen could should be analysis generally. And they seemed have generally agreed core areas ethics, (where relations and/or advertising fit model wasn't addressed, apparently because this interpreted conversation mean just that-journalism [print, broadcast, online, photo] only). Participants observers been given copies Carnegie Corporation New York's 2005 report, Improving Tomorrow's Journalists, hopes would comment on, least inspired by, its recommendations (collected McKinsey & Co. forty journalists media company executives). The reporting, ethics use technology rhetoric among consistent report. it prescribed, Emphasize basics craft... strong sense ethics. Projects State, Elon, plus those administrators, certainly satisfy panel's emphasis serve interest protect democracy. … | article | en | Political science|Sociology|Epistemology|Philosophy | https://doi.org/10.1177/107769580706200101 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1976934291', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/107769580706200101', 'mag': '1976934291'} | Qatar | C144024400 | Sociology | Journalism & Mass Communication Educator |
“Following orders” as a critique on healthcare allocation committees: An anthropological perspective on the role of public memory in bioethical legitimacy | Yael Assor (https://openalex.org/A5063626506) | 2,021 | Abstract The public perception of decision‐making procedures as fair processes is a central means for establishing their legitimacy to make difficult resource allocation decisions. According the ethical framework accountability reasonableness (A4R, hereafter), which specifies conditions healthcare allocation, disagreements about what constitutes relevant considerations are threat its perceived fairness. This article considers how an principle grounded in memory past traumatic events may become topic such disagreements. I demonstrate this through anthropological case study recent de bate concerning Israeli committee (HAC, thereafter), determines state subsidies new medical technologies part Israel’s system. Drawing upon ethnographic fieldwork HAC, show Adolf Eichmann’s trial bioethical problem committee’s legitimacy. Based on Arendt’s and Bauman’s writings that Nazi bureaucrats’ manner “following orders” was transgression, some patients contended has historical responsibility question strict adherence bureaucratic procedures. Since did not have direct link Holocaust, other seemed them more relevant. then present offer can settle disagreement maintain HAC’s according A4R. conclude by discussing contribution empirical data models | article | en | Bioethics|Legitimacy|Bureaucracy|Health care|Accountability|Sociology|The Holocaust|Law|Political science|Politics | https://doi.org/10.1111/bioe.12890 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3185059566', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/bioe.12890', 'mag': '3185059566', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34318494'} | Israel | C144024400|C160735492 | Health care|Sociology | Bioethics |
“Fondest Hopes of the West” | Joel Gordon (https://openalex.org/A5031663901) | 1,992 | Abstract In the aftermath of March crisis search for an evacuation agreement with Britain headed CCR agenda. With accord signed, officers hoped to proceed political reforms, bring transition period, if no longer revolution, end. The ultimate test new regime’s legitimacy remained resolution national question. They did not look toward negotiations optimism. Throughout first two years their rule, discussions went nowhere as Egyptian and British negotiators haggled over a variety issues, fundamental symbolic. Despite attempts by United States broker settlement, both sides deadlocked until spring 1954. Finally, that July Egypt England signed draft accord, they then initialed following October. | chapter | en | Legitimacy|Optimism|Politics|Negotiation|Settlement (finance)|Political science|Law|Economic history|Political economy|History|Sociology|Economics|Psychology|Social psychology|Finance|Payment | https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195069358.003.0010 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4388313471', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195069358.003.0010'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | |
“For Everyone, Everything”: Social Ethics, Consent, and the Zapatistas | Scott Schaffer (https://openalex.org/A5001638898) | 2,004 | Our discussion of the ethics freedom present in Algerian Revolution might lead us to pose a crucial question for development social predicated on practice resistance, namely its relevance Western societies. After all, one ask, how could societies adopt same kind when there is already well-entrenched individualized ethos at work here? How dramatically would such change affect our structures and daily lives? And we face dilemmas here that Algerians did after consolidation Revolution—namely, loss which revolutionaries stated they fought, civil war institutionalized terror people faced everyday, uncertainty ever changing situation? | chapter | en | Ethos|Consolidation (business)|Relevance (law)|Political science|Face (sociological concept)|Sociology|Environmental ethics|Resistance (ecology)|Law|Social science|Economics|Philosophy|Accounting|Ecology|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1057/9781403980151_6 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2479259824', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1057/9781403980151_6', 'mag': '2479259824'} | Algeria | C144024400 | Sociology | Palgrave Macmillan US eBooks |
“For God and the Country”: Agricultural Migrations and their Moralities in South India | V. J. Varghese (https://openalex.org/A5029588954) | 2,017 | Migration and the consequent expansion of agriculture to previously untamed areas has been one defining features Kerala's economic modernity. Entangled in intertwined history colonialism, capital native agency, mobilizing a new discourse development that broke radically with existing notions land management, it not only led conversion vast forests, hills “wastelands” into arable emergence capitalist agriculture, but also provided local Syrian Christian community identity as oriented towards progress development. As purogamana karshakar (forward-looking peasants) productive citizens committed national development, claimed particular affinity wielded an authority over In this chapter I will consider migration peasants from cultivated plains rural Travancore pristine sparsely inhabited mountain forests Malabar. Starting early decades twentieth century continuing well 1960s, picked up 1940s. Over more than forty years, tens thousands migrants colonized huge tracts fallow land, turning highly profitable farms plantations. argue Church was directly involved modernist enterprise “empty” environments sites human activity, production It did so by offering theological rationale for reclamation its hegemonic developmentalist ideology, leading political struggle laity protect arduously won material world Malabar state interventions. During expansive colonization space described “lost” largely heathen leadership, orientation modern entrepreneurship accumulation expounding sanctifying conduit social spatial mobility, hard work at heart. suggest engagement sphere, narratives stick any single line reasoning. straddled theological, nationalist, economic, ethical humanitarian rationalities ease careful calibration, moving freely between spiritual claims morality citizenship building bridges “anti-religious” communist ideology. | chapter | en | Modernity|Arable land|Colonialism|Ideology|Politics|Hegemony|Agency (philosophy)|Geography|Political science|Industrialisation|Agriculture|Political economy|Sociology|Social science|Archaeology|Law | https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316888704.012 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2602413116', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316888704.012', 'mag': '2602413116'} | Syria | C144024400 | Sociology | Cambridge University Press eBooks |
“For Heart, Patriotism, and National Dignity”: The Italian Language Press in New York City and Constructions of Africa, Race, and Civilization | Peter G. Vellon (https://openalex.org/A5062105070) | 2,011 | “For Heart, Patriotism, and National Dignity”: The Italian Language Press in New York City Constructions of Africa, Race, Civilization” examines how mainstream radical newspapers employed Africa as a trope for savage behavior by analyzing their discussion wage slavery, imperialism, lynching, colonialism, particular imperialist ventures into northern the 1890s Libya 1911-1912. language press constructed sinister, dark, continent, representing lowest rung racial hierarchy. In expressing moral outrage over American violence discrimination against Italians, utilized this image to emphatically convey its shock disgust. particular, prominenti capitalized on imagery construct narrative Italianness superiority order combat unflattering depictions immigrants arriving United States. | article | en | Patriotism|Racial hierarchy|Dignity|Civilization|Newspaper|Colonialism|History|Outrage|Gender studies|Sociology|Racism|Media studies|Law|Political science|Politics | https://doi.org/10.1525/esr.2011.34.1.89 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2767487555', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1525/esr.2011.34.1.89', 'mag': '2767487555'} | Libya | C144024400 | Sociology | Ethnic studies review|VCU Scholars Compass (Virginia Commonwealth University) |
“For Others, in Spite of Myself, from Myself”: A Levinasian-Feminist Reading of Charlotte Mary Matheson’s The Feather | Masoud Rostami (https://openalex.org/A5016879180)|Sahar Mortazavi (https://openalex.org/A5036640835) | 2,022 | When Charlotte Mary Matheson began writing The Feather in 1929, numerous movements regarding women's rights were emerging. However, despite various references to contemporary issues, Matheson’s book initially did not receive much attention from critics; it was only after a few decades that became one of the best-selling novels, especially Iran. In this article, feminist reading novel conducted on basis alterity Other and ethics French philosopher Emmanuel Levinas. common ground between theories feminism Levinasian philosophy is relationship Self Other, which according both theories, needs change. Traditionally, men accepted as dominant power or women second sex Other. On other hand, ethics, Levinas, emphasizes proper Hence, kind become important; thus, requires new definition. This shows how story, begins with carnal desires, eventually ends moral one. addition, female character rediscovers her independence identity, dominated by men. | article | en | Reflexive pronoun|Reading (process)|Feather|Philosophy|Sociology|Art|Psychoanalysis|Psychology|Epistemology|Linguistics|Biology|Ecology | https://doi.org/10.34785/j014.2022.853 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3216772184', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.34785/j014.2022.853', 'mag': '3216772184'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals) |
“For Thee America! For Thee Syria?”: Alexander Maloof, Orientalist Music, and the Politics of the Syrian Mahjar | Beau Bothwell (https://openalex.org/A5061625837) | 2,020 | Abstract In 1894 Syrian émigré Alexander Maloof arrived in the United States to join thriving community New York's “Syrian Quarter.” Working first as a music instructor and pianist, found success bandleader, composer, arranger, publisher, integrating Arabic US popular light classical styles. He wrote edited Arabic-language piano songbooks for Arabophone communities States, ran Records label, “Oriental” division of Gennett Company's “race records” enterprise. Drawing on discourse from around mahjar (diaspora), this article uses Maloof's output demonstrate music's role vibrant contested political conversations taking place world, homelands Beirut Damascus, initial settlements Cairo Paris, American colonies Sao Paulo, Buenos Aires York. Concluding with discussion 1919 “American Maid” (composed under pseudonym), I argue that thorough understanding history Orientalist Americas requires decentering European audiences order examine those questions animating York , most centrally fate greater Syria. | article | en | Orientalism|Politics|Diaspora|Thriving|History|Popular music|Art history|Literature|Art|Sociology|Political science|Law|Gender studies|Social science | https://doi.org/10.1017/s1752196320000310 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3109176062', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/s1752196320000310', 'mag': '3109176062'} | Syria | C144024400|C2776745293 | Sociology|Thriving | Journal of the Society for American Music |
“For Us It Is Otherwise” | Sylvain Perdigon (https://openalex.org/A5014021022) | 2,015 | In this paper I seek to attend the paradox of Palestinian refugee poverty in Lebanon, a engineered and deliberately perpetuated through play recent state sovereignties, incorporated material bodily lifeworlds majority Lebanon’s Palestinians. This is not effectuated recognizable form “political subject poverty”—a “I, poor”—who would emerge interpretative act establishing semiotic relationship some kind between her malnourishment, ill health, or exposure dampness dust on one hand other field social belonging which she claim inclusion. order do so, three brief ethnographic sketches draw attention processes disclosure self world strung together from everyday run-ins with that lives poor entail. If there politics poverty, argue, its distinctiveness lies shunning category citizenship manner fastens an ethical imaginary sovereign sovereignty life population. | article | en | Refugee|Poverty|Sociology|Politics|Optimal distinctiveness theory|Citizenship|Sovereignty|Population|Subject (documents)|State (computer science)|Political science|Gender studies|Law|Social psychology|Psychology|Algorithm|Library science|Computer science|Demography | https://doi.org/10.1086/682354 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1256434717', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1086/682354', 'mag': '1256434717'} | Lebanon | C144024400|C189326681 | Poverty|Sociology | Current Anthropology |
“For Us, Parliament Is a Tool for Liberation”: Elections as an Opportunity for a Transterritorial Sahrawi Population | Alice Wilson (https://openalex.org/A5074616848) | 2,016 | Elections are important tools not only of governance but also nation-building and international diplomacy. This chapter examines how elections can be adapted for such goals in the absence a conventional nation-state setting. The Polisario Front liberation movement Western Sahara organizes which Sahrawi refugees Algeria, as well Sahrawis living Moroccan-controlled diaspora, vote to elect range officers. Drawing on anthropological approaches cultural moral events, this some wider effects these elections. voters imagine themselves act transterritorial community nationalists. structuring electoral constituencies projects an idealized vision body politic. Holding facilitates connections with local, national audiences. Finally, Sahrawis’ frequent rehearsals their existence electorate may reinforce expectations popular consultation any solution conflict. | chapter | en | Diaspora|Political science|Parliament|Front (military)|Political economy|State (computer science)|Refugee|Diplomacy|Politics|Population|Gender studies|Sociology|Law|Geography|Demography|Algorithm|Meteorology|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-349-95035-5_15 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2559086956', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-349-95035-5_15', 'mag': '2559086956'} | Algeria|Morocco|Western Sahara | C144024400 | Sociology | Palgrave Macmillan US eBooks |
“For We ascend in holiness and do not descend.” Jewish ultra-Orthodox women’s agency through their discourse about media | Rivka Neriya-Ben Shahar (https://openalex.org/A5010209659) | 2,019 | “Permission” and “prohibition” are key terms in Jewish religious discourse. For generations they have dominated as part of the primarily male, rabbinic discourse talmudic literature. This paper will show that men no longer hold monopoly on these because contemporary Israeli ultra-Orthodox women include them their daily conversation multiple varied ways. The study examines exposure patterns perceptions 42 toward sectarian general mass media. In responses to detailed questionnaires, words “prohibited,” “forbidden” “a boundary” constantly recur along with a variety negatives, such “not permitted,” allowed” kosher”.This argues describing uses media, adopted terminology borrowed from what was previously male-dominated conversation. Some might argue simply working within bounds law which accept universally applicable; or perhaps reflecting used by husbands rabbis. However, this adoption indicates exercising own agency. With combined secular education, work is outside house, many principal breadwinners homes. I suggest highly intelligent navigation simultaneous roles both gatekeepers change agents. | article | en | Conversation|Judaism|Agency (philosophy)|Terminology|Sociology|Mass media|Gender studies|Law|Political science|Theology|Philosophy|Social science|Linguistics|Communication | https://doi.org/10.1080/14725886.2019.1594076 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2936887437', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14725886.2019.1594076', 'mag': '2936887437'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Modern Jewish Studies|Humanities Commons CORE (Modern Language Association / Columbia University) |
“For him the moon was always in Scandinavia”: Stevens in the Swedish University Classroom | Gül Bilge Han (https://openalex.org/A5032474882)|Paul Schreiber (https://openalex.org/A5010505416) | 2,017 | “For him the moon was always in Scandinavia”: Stevens Swedish University Classroom Gül Bilge Han and Paul Schreiber I. Sweden IN ONE OF HIS LETTERS to Irish modernist Thomas MacGreevy from October 1952, Wallace spoke of a “note” he had received “with little picture showing ground covered with snow before leaves fallen” (L 763). The note sent few weeks earlier by Ebba Dalin, professor American literature publisher translations Stevens’s poetry (Filreis 211). Dalin enclosed her newspaper clipping that showed photograph snowy landscape midst autumn, “a man walking across country his dog” “I have wished you were here,” told Stevens, inscribe poem strange “sensations” brought untimely arrival winter early (qtd. Filreis 237). Although never traveled capture its frosty landscape, inspired one late poems, “The Green Plant,” which depicts similar instance seasonal disruption: “barbarous green” plant sprouting unexpectedly amidst brown, red, yellow colors autumn (CPP 431). From collection poetry, Harmonium, last, Rock, climatic geographical features Scandinavia repeatedly appear as metaphorical figures for poetic imagination, tirelessly seeks transcend reality.1 But Professor seems recognized, read “poems winter” is them their extrinsic referential well figurative abstract meanings, particularly because stark immediacy imagery readers students North. As James Ransom noted essay published about two decades ago Teaching reflect on pedagogy be mindfully aware particular setting “scene” teaching takes place (74). Most significantly, practice dependent collective disposition background instructors participating process. In this essay, we will our experiences reading classroom at Stockholm undergraduate master’s offering an [End Page 207] exploration challenges rewards, strategies, it entails. Some these rewards surely familiar colleagues diverse cultural settings, while others might more specific context. Generally, found all been exposed analysis some basic level high school or studies elsewhere, but very taken course specifically any poet time they come up even level. This general unfamiliarity distinct anxiety among when discussing genre, driving force creating dedicated theory program initiated. course, frequently taught. demographic particulars community, most roots, whereas are drawn much wider international backgrounds. For instance, MA level, often case large number places Syria, China, Chile, US, other parts Europe. such transnational English students’ second or, sometimes, third language. To sure, majority strong language skills. Nonetheless, syntactic intricacy, intellectual density, specificities, shifting rhetoric poems certainly pose great challenge experienced motivated students. well-known difficulty redoubled second-language readers. Students definitely home short William Carlos Williams W. H. Auden, teach alongside Stevens. himself reflects on... | article | en | Poetry|Newspaper|Irish|History|Art history|Art|Literature|Philosophy|Sociology|Media studies|Linguistics | https://doi.org/10.1353/wsj.2017.0033 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2769444625', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1353/wsj.2017.0033', 'mag': '2769444625'} | Syria | C144024400 | Sociology | The Wallace Stevens Journal |
“For the Eradication of Polish and Jewish-Muscovite Rule in Ukraine”: An Examination of the Crimes of the Ukrainian Legion of Self-Defense | Yuri Radchenko (https://openalex.org/A5032496636)|Andrii Usach (https://openalex.org/A5017610211) | 2,020 | Abstract This study examines the German-sponsored Ukrainian Legion of Self-Defense (Ukrains’kyi Samooborony, ULS), both its rank and file German officers. Drawing upon sources in German, Ukrainian, American, Israeli archives, authors analyze Legion’s command structure, relationship to Third Reich, Organization Nationalists branch led by Andriy Atansovich Mel’nyk. The presentation political military careers lower-, mid-, upper-level Legionnaires reveals their participation killings Jews, Poles, other Ukrainians. also identify motivations many actors. A close analysis one case “cooperation” Holocaust mass murders, this article relates debate over whether perpetrators were “Ordinary Men.” | article | en | Ukrainian|German|The Holocaust|Law|Political science|Politics|Nazi Germany|Judaism|Sociology|Criminology|History|Archaeology|Philosophy|Linguistics | https://doi.org/10.1093/hgs/dcaa056 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3112884640', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/hgs/dcaa056', 'mag': '3112884640'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Holocaust and Genocide Studies |
“For the Public’s Improvement and for the Benefit of the Town:” Correspondence Between Rabbi Kook and Residents of the Moshavot in Eretz Israel on Ecological and Environmental Matters | Abraham Ofir Shemesh (https://openalex.org/A5044436326) | 2,017 | Rabbi Abraham Isaac Hacohen Kook (the Ra'aya) was one of the most prominent and creative Torah spiritual leaders in recent generations.1 His philosophy knowledge extended to many literary genres: bible, midrash (homiletic interpretation), kabbalah, theology, more. R. known for his command all fields, love mankind, Jewish people, Land Israel, had unique eloquent skills. philosophical theoretical doctrine includes various issues that occupy modern man, such as evolution, science religion, relationship between sacred mundane, society, tikun olam (repairing world).2 born Latvia 1865 served rabbi Zaumel Bauska congregations. In 1904, at beginning major trend immigration Palestine, he came city Jaffa moshavot (settlements, agricultural towns). 1921, appointed president Chief Rabbinate Council two chief rabbis, a position held until demise 1935.3 made an effort build maintain channels communication political alliances sectors, including secular Zionist leadership, Religious Zionists, more traditional non-Zionist Orthodox Jews.4 Since movement movement, opinion renewed Return Zion redemption precursor time Messiah. This outlook enhanced affiliation felt with particularly those dedicated building land. Full appreciation admiration devotion pioneers, both religious, regarded contact them being highest importance. personality leadership techniques significant impact Eretz Israel during Second Aliyah, is also evident memoirs contemporaries who left religious way life.5 | article | en | Judaism|Torah|Midrash|Land of Israel|Messiah|Politics|Religious studies|History|Sociology|Theology|Law|Political science|Philosophy | https://doi.org/10.1093/mj/kjx040 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2772739371', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/mj/kjx040', 'mag': '2772739371'} | Israel|Palestine | C144024400 | Sociology | Modern Judaism - A Journal of Jewish Ideas and Experience |
“For them it is just a story, for me it is my life.” Ethnography and the Security Gaze | M.J.M. de Koning (https://openalex.org/A5077568139) | 2,020 | Abstract In this article I reflect upon my own work on Salafism in the Netherlands, particularly with militant activists, order to think through some of ethical and methodological dilemmas that arose throughout research when many interlocutors left for Syria join Jahbat al-Nusra and/or IS(IS). This culminated becoming a witness an Expert Witness at trial, testifying against several known contacts. After introducing outlining experiences court, set out show how academic knowledge about activism is used process racialised categorisation closure. contributes critical reflections positionalities social scientists science public context racial securitisation politicisation. | article | en | Militant|Witness|Ethnography|Context (archaeology)|Sociology|Gaze|Expert witness|Epistemology|Political science|Law|Anthropology|Psychoanalysis|Politics|Psychology|History|Philosophy|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1163/22117954-12341418 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3023881273', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1163/22117954-12341418', 'mag': '3023881273'} | Syria | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Muslims in Europe|Data Archiving and Networked Services (DANS) |
“Forbidden Words”: Palestinian Women’s Literature in Israel—Between Conservatism and Subversion | Dorit Gottesfeld (https://openalex.org/A5055950618) | 2,014 | This article examines the writing of Rajāʾ Bakriya, Rāwiya Burbāra, and Maysūn Assadī, prominent new-generation Palestinian women writers in Israel, shows how their deviates from conservatism that is expected such writers. In writing, three authors take readers into woman’s world lust passion while challenging subverting norms using an original style language. The also that, work, refer mainly to reality lives Israeli Arabs, therefore distinct women’s literature written outside Israel. They portray this realistically, symbolically, or brief references which effect life on female protagonist’s spirit accentuated. | article | en | Subversion|Lust|Conservatism|Passion|Literature|Style (visual arts)|History|Sociology|Gender studies|Aesthetics|Art|Law|Political science|Psychology|Politics|Social psychology | https://doi.org/10.1163/15692086-12341243 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2067391168', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1163/15692086-12341243', 'mag': '2067391168'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Hawwa |
“Foreign Language Creation” and “Textless Back Translation”: A Case Study on Turkish Translations of Jason Goodwin’s Ottoman-Themed Works Written in English | Merve Avşaroğlu (https://openalex.org/A5011044177)|Ayşe Karadağ (https://openalex.org/A5054544813) | 2,020 | The aim of this article is to examine the first two books in Jason Goodwin’s detective Yashim series and their Turkish translations terms “back translation”. Research subjects are Janissary Tree (2006) its by Çiğdem Öztekin dated 2006 Fethi Aytuna 2016 as well Snake Stone (2007) Ali Cevat Akkoyunlu 2007 2017. theoretical framework based on concepts “foreign language creation”, a text describing specific culture foreign language, “textless back translation”, translation creation” into that culture. Describing Ottoman English, can be considered while translations, which bring own land, Depicting his thereby acting translator, writer’s decisions discussed within choice method creation”. Translating Turkish, translators’ In respect, Ting Guo’s (2017) entitled “On Foreign Language Creation Rootless Back Translation–A Case Study Snow Flower Secret Fan” taken reference point categories methods expanded with regard textual findings. It concluded individual translators support idea from domestic might take initiative rearrange source information target text. | article | en | Turkish|Foreign language|Linguistics|Target culture|Translation studies|Sociology|Computer science|Philosophy | https://doi.org/10.7575/aiac.alls.v.10n.5p.107 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3020167419', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.7575/aiac.alls.v.10n.5p.107', 'mag': '3020167419'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Advances in Language and Literary Studies |
“Foreign Worker” Perspectives between German Trade Unions and Turkish Worker Organisations after the Recruitment Ban: Evidence from the Migrant Activism in Frankfurt | Caner Tekin (https://openalex.org/A5084246485) | 2,023 | With the foreign worker recruitment ban in Federal Germany on 23 November 1973, public featured one of most controversial debates how long former guest workers would stay, and whether was a country immigration. Between German trade unions these questions also remained contested during 1970s. This paper looks into contestations explores conceptions “guest workers” represented by migrant organisations from stop (1973) until decade’s end. It discusses activities Turkish Frankfurt, which were led union functionaries had charters promoting unionism, compares them with programmatic positions Trade Union Confederation same timeframe. Although period disagreements above questions, activism at local level suggests growing cooperation between groups as well emerging agreements common migration issues, importantly workers’ return option, their family voting rights elections. | article | en | German|Turkish|Immigration|Migrant workers|Trade union|Political science|European union|Voting|Political economy|Demographic economics|Sociology|Economic growth|Economics|International trade|Law|Politics|Philosophy|Linguistics|Archaeology|History | https://doi.org/10.33182/ml.v20i1.2871 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4318620335', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.33182/ml.v20i1.2871'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Migration Letters |
“Foreign brands of course!” An ethnographic study exploring COO image perceptions and its influence on the preference of foreign clothing brands | Nadine Khair (https://openalex.org/A5012583506)|Elizabeth Lloyd-Parkes (https://openalex.org/A5045427063)|Jonathan Deacon (https://openalex.org/A5059868066) | 2,021 | This study explores Jordanian women’s preferences for foreign over local clothing brands through exploring perceptions of COO image. An ethnographic approach has been utilized, consisting 3 data generation stages: interactive group interviews; shopping observations; and one on responsive interviews. highlights new reasons preference brands, overlooked in previous studies, stemming from self social symbolism, consumption status conspicuous country origin Furthermore, a key outcome this research is the conceptualization “Country Purchase”. Implications are provided ways to improve their image eyes consumers – particularly women. Recommendations regarding brands’ pricing, store atmosphere image, symbolic value highlighted discussed. Previous extended by different brand developing countries introduces an inductive interpretive obtain descriptive rich providing understanding phenomena purchase fashion industry. | article | en | Clothing|Conceptualization|Preference|Ethnography|Consumption (sociology)|Advertising|Perception|Marketing|Business|Brand preference|Psychology|Sociology|Brand awareness|Political science|Economics|Computer science|Social science|Neuroscience|Anthropology|Law|Microeconomics|Artificial intelligence | https://doi.org/10.1080/20932685.2021.1921608 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3165384592', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/20932685.2021.1921608', 'mag': '3165384592'} | Jordan | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Global Fashion Marketing |
“Forever Foreign”: Made in Germany<i>Cosmopolitan Anxieties: Turkish Challenges to Citizenship and Belonging in Germany</i>. By Ruth Mandel. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2008. | Refika Sarıönder (https://openalex.org/A5072876818) | 2,009 | Previous articleNext article No Access“Forever Foreign”: Made in Germany Cosmopolitan Anxieties: Turkish Challenges to Citizenship and Belonging Germany. By Ruth Mandel. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2008.Refika SarıönderRefika SarıönderTransnationalization Development Research Center, Bielefeld University, Faculty of Sociology, Postfach 10 01 31, 33501 Bielefeld, ([email protected]). 20 II 09 Search for more articles by this author Transnationalization 09PDFPDF PLUSFull Text Add favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited Current Anthropology Volume 50, Number 6December 2009 Sponsored the Wenner-Gren Foundation Anthropological Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1086/605993 Views: 31Total views on site PDF download Crossref reports no citing article. | article | en | Turkish|Citizenship|Sociology|Media studies|Research center|Center (category theory)|German|Gender studies|Library science|Political science|Law|History|Philosophy|Linguistics|Chemistry|Politics|Computer science|Crystallography|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1086/605993 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1893438140', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1086/605993', 'mag': '1893438140'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Current Anthropology |
“Formalizing rights: The case for linking legal rights to noncitizen statuses in Jordan” | Lillian Frost (https://openalex.org/A5015747161) | 2,021 | Abstract How can Jordan's experiences hosting Palestinian refugees inform policymaking toward Syrian refugees? As the 10‐year anniversary of uprisings approaches, remain displaced with limited opportunities for repatriation, resettlement, or naturalization. Although there are many important differences between and refugees—particularly Syrians' right to a sovereign state's nationality—there increasing similarities these two protracted refugee groups. One most critical among is holding ambiguous membership statuses in Jordan, where groups hold more rights than other non‐Jordanians but fewer Jordanian citizens. The noncitizen refugees, such as those who fled Jordan from Gaza Strip after 1967 war, highlight destructive precarities that accompany an absence legal rights, including insecure access work, education, healthcare. These suggest securing some law help mitigate precarity sustained status. Further, has expressed willingness provide groups, investors children women non‐Jordanian men. Overall, formalizing critical, less politicized one tangible way improve daily lives Syrian, well other, refugees. | article | en | Refugee|Repatriation|Nationality|Political science|Sovereignty|Immigration|Syrian refugees|Law|Politics | https://doi.org/10.1111/dome.12250 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3205013626', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/dome.12250', 'mag': '3205013626'} | Gaza|Gaza Strip|Jordan|Syria | C3018716944 | Syrian refugees | Digest of Middle East Studies|Virginia Tech Works (Virginia Tech) |
“Forward psychiatry” in the military: Its origins and effectiveness | Edgar Jones (https://openalex.org/A5051626729)|Simon Wessely (https://openalex.org/A5091639078) | 2,003 | "Forward psychiatry" was devised in World War I for the treatment of shell shock and today is standard intervention combat stress reaction. It relied on three principles: proximity to battle, immediacy, expectation recovery, subsequently given acronym "PIE." Both US UK forces belatedly reintroduced PIE methods during II return servicemen active duty made confident claims its efficacy. Advanced units also appeared have minimized psychiatric battle casualties Korean Vietnamese Wars. Evaluations use by Israeli Lebanon conflict showed higher return-to-duty rates than at base hospitals. A reexamination these examples suggests that reported outcomes tended exaggerate effectiveness both as a acute reaction prophylaxis chronic disorders such PTSD. remains uncertain who being served intervention: whether it individual soldier or needs military. | article | en | Battle|Immediacy|Intervention (counseling)|Psychiatry|Military personnel|Duty|Military psychiatry|Psychology|Active duty|Combat stress reaction|Vietnamese|Medicine|Law|Mental health|History|Political science|Philosophy|Linguistics|Archaeology|Epistemology | https://doi.org/10.1023/a:1024426321072 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2089206015', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1023/a:1024426321072', 'mag': '2089206015', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12895024'} | Israel|Lebanon | C134362201 | Mental health | Journal of Traumatic Stress|PubMed |
“Found Objectionable” | Sonay Ban (https://openalex.org/A5090416269) | 2,023 | Abstract I explore how film censorship has increasingly shaped production and circulation at festivals, public screenings, theatrical releases in post‐2000 Turkey. argue that Turkey now works through two levels. First, direct intervention, whereby state institutions continue to censor production. Although the renaming of control commissions from previous decades via 2004 “Cinema Law” creates illusion boards have been abolished, fieldwork data proves otherwise. Secondly, designate various non‐state actors as proxies grant them well‐calculated power employ on their behalf when necessary. draw upon case studies analyze political climate suppressed cultural production, freedom expression, resistance Justice Development Party (AKP) government both bans artistic expression processes delegitimization, targeting, threats, violence. | article | en | Censorship|Politics|State (computer science)|Political science|Movie theater|Power (physics)|Law|Freedom of expression|Economic Justice|Media studies|Resistance (ecology)|Political economy|Sociology|Law and economics|Art|Human rights|Visual arts|Ecology|Physics|Algorithm|Quantum mechanics|Computer science|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1111/var.12302 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4386220858', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/var.12302'} | Turkey | C139621336|C144024400|C169437150 | Economic Justice|Human rights|Sociology | Visual Anthropology Review |
“Frankly, My Dear, I Don’t Want a Dam” in the US or in Iran: Environmental Movements and Shared Strategies in Differing Political Economies | Elham Hoominfar (https://openalex.org/A5021164981)|Claudia Radel (https://openalex.org/A5066288302) | 2,023 | In this comparative study, we explore why environmental movements against two neoliberal water transfer projects emerged and how they work in different political economies—a hegemonic capitalist democracy (Colorado, US) a centralized authoritarian system (Iran). We apply Polanyi’s Gramsci’s political–economic theories, using interviews document analysis to examine compare movement framing mobilization resistance strategies tactics through lens. The existing social literature leads us expect fundamental differences, but although find some particularly tactics, that these have unexpected similarities terms of strategies. Additionally, both cases, outcomes remain uncertain despite the ostensibly large differences opportunities. Colorado, project developers protesters may reach compromise agreement civil society channel courts. Iran, with state suppressing opponents whereas threatens local people’s livelihoods, has assumed more radical face. | article | en | Social movement|Framing (construction)|Authoritarianism|Politics|Political economy|Environmental movement|Compromise|Livelihood|Democracy|Political opportunity|Sociology|Civil society|New social movements|Social movement theory|Political science|Social science|Law|Ecology|Structural engineering|Biology|Agriculture|Engineering | https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12030161 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4323663897', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12030161'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | Social sciences |
“Fraternal” Other: Negotiating Ethnic and Religious Identities at a Muslim Sacred Site in Northern Cyprus | Rabia Harmanşah (https://openalex.org/A5017475127) | 2,021 | Abstract This article shows how everyday religious practices inform the processes of social identification, complicate presumed ethno-religious categories, and mediate local cultural differences in face political hegemonic practices. In context Turkish Republic Northern Cyprus, a de facto state recognized only by Turkey, Cypriots Turks are considered to share an ethnicity religion. “overlap” has been employed justify Turkey’s military intervention its political, economic, domination over island. Yet diversities “perceived” between among these groups exacerbated power dynamics, nationalist agendas, mutual biases. The explains subtle discussions around “genuine” Muslim identities, as well enforced coexistence constructed brotherhood on competing accounts “correct” interpretation Islam at tekke reflect intragroup asymmetries conflict institutionalized Sunni-Orthodox “heterodox” Islam. focuses two overlooked issues scholarship Cyprus—the relations settlers from role religion processes—as literature shared sacred sites analysis competitive intracommunal interactions. | article | en | Turkish|Politics|Islam|Scholarship|Gender studies|Sociology|Hegemony|Ethnic group|Nationalism|Context (archaeology)|Power (physics)|Political science|Geography|Anthropology|Law|Philosophy|Linguistics|Physics|Archaeology|Quantum mechanics | https://doi.org/10.1017/nps.2020.102 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3134966095', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/nps.2020.102', 'mag': '3134966095'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Nationalities papers |
“Fraudulent” Citizens of a Small Town: Occidentalism in Turkey | Sezai Ozan Zeybek (https://openalex.org/A5014806243) | 2,011 | Abstract: By looking at the electoral politics in a small town Turkey, this article aims to illustrate how political scene is polarised with counterpoised representations of East and West, alongside Occidentalist aspirations. The division supplies set ready‐made explanations regarding “backwardness, poverty corruption”. However, although different frameworks are employed line orientations respective parties, particular demands courses action systematically dismissed. poor repressed hardly listened to. Yet worse, they “explained” advance by antagonistic pair West. This an ethnographic exploration their fall neither side, attending them could challenge existing realm. | article | en | Backwardness|Politics|Realm|Language change|Ethnography|Sociology|Political action|Action (physics)|Poverty|Political science|Political economy|Law|Economic growth|Economics|Anthropology|Art|Physics|Literature|Quantum mechanics | https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8330.2011.00959.x | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2005030267', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8330.2011.00959.x', 'mag': '2005030267'} | Turkey | C144024400|C189326681 | Poverty|Sociology | Antipode |
“Free Kurdistan”: Difficult Road to Self-Determination (1970s — XXI Century) | Эгнара Гайковна Вартаньян (https://openalex.org/A5019863615) | 2,021 | The period of the struggle South (Iraqi) Kurdistan for self-determination, namely such events as its transformation into center Kurdish national movement in Middle East and proclamation Autonomous Region (KAR) 1974 is considered. creation a legal precedent, which has acquired an international character, commented on. recognition by Iraqi government right Kurds to territorial autonomy assessed undoubted success minority. It noted that development draft Interim Constitution was preceded long discussion between Shiite Arabs, Sunni Arabs on future administrative structure country. shown Baathist regime not going solve problem country truly democratic basis, but only created appearance solution issue order remove internal tensions. author dwells repressive measures Saddam Hussein against Kurds. mass character during Iranian-Iraqi war 1980—1988 emphasized. | article | en | Proclamation|Political science|Constitution|Democracy|Autonomy|Interim|Government (linguistics)|Character (mathematics)|Law|Middle East|Self-determination|Administration (probate law)|Political economy|Development economics|Sociology|Politics|Philosophy|Linguistics|Geometry|Mathematics|Economics | https://doi.org/10.24224/2227-1295-2021-10-328-342 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3211180054', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.24224/2227-1295-2021-10-328-342', 'mag': '3211180054'} | Iran|Iraq | C144024400|C47768531|C96572226 | Development economics|Self-determination|Sociology | Научный диалог|DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals) |
“Free Our Brothers!” | João Gabriell (https://openalex.org/A5023045333) | 2,019 | Why does a given oppressed group sometimes revolt and take to the streets, while other times it not? This is question that never easy answer. It requires detailed examination of its history in context (here, France), conditions means for self-organization, forms resistance takes, struggles hegemony within this social impose definition, what should comprise struggle emancipation. article an attempt how against slavery Libya, after presentation CNN video, was politicized by black people French context. We pay attention fact outrage exceeded frontiers political organization took form mass revolt, under “black” banner. But has also shown limits terms translating indignation into project To our understanding, those root weakness materialist analysis race migration as historical processes capitalist system, which cannot be understood solely ideology. | article | en | Emancipation|Ideology|Politics|Hegemony|Context (archaeology)|Sociology|Indignation|Political science|Resistance (ecology)|Gender studies|Law|History|Archaeology|Ecology|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1215/00382876-7616260 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2965981253', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1215/00382876-7616260', 'mag': '2965981253'} | Libya | C144024400|C2781153986 | Emancipation|Sociology | South Atlantic Quarterly |
“Free Speech” against Critique | Michael Vincente Pérez (https://openalex.org/A5050718332) | 2,018 | As an open online forum with over seventeen hundred subscribers, the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) “Faculty Issues and Concerns” listserv at Washington (UW) allows faculty to communicate across departments campuses on a variety topics. With stated purpose “advancing principles AAUP encouraging active discussion higher education issues rights,” provides unique site for exchange debate. In this essay, I highlight several exchanges that occurred between 2013 2015 concerning topic Palestine-Israel relate directly debates meaning academic norms freedom. argue demonstrate what we might call discursive pattern in which certain members seek constrain free speech so as effectively prevent critical discussions actions Israel. show, whether question divestment or critique Israel, these invoke undefined exclude critiques limit public | article | en | Meaning (existential)|Academic freedom|Divestment|Sociology|Variety (cybernetics)|Public relations|Palestine|Media studies|Political science|Higher education|Epistemology|Law|Philosophy|Ancient history|Artificial intelligence|Computer science|History | https://doi.org/10.1215/00382876-4282118 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2791979058', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1215/00382876-4282118', 'mag': '2791979058'} | Israel|Palestine|State of Palestine | C144024400 | Sociology | South Atlantic Quarterly |
“Freedom Belongs to Everyone”: The Experiences of Yazidi Women in Bashiqa and Bahzani | Zeri Khairy Gedi (https://openalex.org/A5028299164) | 2,022 | This CREID Policy Briefing provides recommendations to address the marginalisation, discrimination and exclusion faced by Yazidi women in Bashiqa Bahzani. Bahzani today are still living through trauma consequences of genocide committed Islamic State (ISIS). In addition, they face a range further challenges as marginalised from minority religion. While more girls young progressing education, harmful social norms, customs practices – originating both wider Iraqi society community itself create barriers for who want or need work outside home, access healthcare engage public life. Widows divorced specific seen without male protection. also stigma that comes being former captive ISIS, judged an “infidel” due their | report | en | Face (sociological concept)|Genocide|Stigma (botany)|Islam|Gender studies|Sociology|Political science|State (computer science)|Social exclusion|Criminology|Psychology|Law|Social science|History|Archaeology|Algorithm|Psychiatry|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.19088/creid.2022.009 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4311936637', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.19088/creid.2022.009'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | |
“Freedom Has Destroyed the Somali Family:” Somali Parents’ Experiences of Epistemic Injustice and its Influence on their Raising of Swedish Muslims | Rannveig Jetne Haga (https://openalex.org/A5074457628) | 2,014 | Freedom has destroyed the Somali family : parents' experiences of epistemic injustice and its influence on their raising Swedish Muslims | chapter | en | Somali|Injustice|Raising (metalworking)|Political science|Sociology|Gender studies|Criminology|Philosophy|Law|Engineering|Linguistics|Mechanical engineering | https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315764894-9 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2604918914', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315764894-9', 'mag': '2604918914'} | Somalia | C144024400 | Sociology | Routledge eBooks |
“Freedom is a treasure that only those who lose it can know”: a spatiotemporal exploration of 22 Iraqi women’s interlegalities | Katri Gadd (https://openalex.org/A5008343256)|Faleha Ubeis (https://openalex.org/A5092239490) | 2,023 | In this article, we discuss the spatiotemporal interlegalities of 22 women living in Iraq, understood as an emerging legal landscape characterised by and normative entanglements rather than parallel systems laws morals. Iraqi are situated at intersections coexisting spaces stratifications various scales multiple orders that have been deeply embedded religious tribal traditions throughout time. It is these experiences non-freedom struggles for freedom intimately felt possible contradictions among encountered. Herein, assess women’s opportunities to negotiate boundaries their spaces, abilities govern those constraints they encounter on routes freedom. We used a map metaphor elucidate processes finding way. Women’s context complex, indicative multi-layered negotiation within legally pluralistic landscape. The concept useful tool conceptualising multifaceted interconnections women. Middle East geography has not widely examined, but special characteristics regarding interplay essential contributing discussions, some theoretical premises unsuitable application contexts with pluralist lack democratic traditions. | article | en | Normative|Negotiation|Context (archaeology)|Situated|Sociology|Political science|Law|Epistemology|Geography|Computer science|Archaeology|Philosophy|Artificial intelligence | https://doi.org/10.11143/fennia.120307 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4381686422', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.11143/fennia.120307'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | Fennia |
“Freedom through this strange kind of love”: Impersonal be(com)ing and Barbara Adair’s<i>In Tangier We Killed the Blue Parrot</i> | Yuan-Chih Yen (https://openalex.org/A5079995151) | 2,019 | Barbara Adair’s first novel In Tangier We Killed the Blue Parrot, published in South Africa 2004, draws on American writers Paul and Jane Bowles’s time Tangier, Morocco, fictionalizes their struggles to write as well efforts love, not only each other but also same-sex Moroccan lovers. this article, I take seriously notion of impersonal intimacy articulated by Leo Bersani explore potentialities realizing sustaining an indeterminate in-between space be(com)ing that articulates. further suggest article opened offers a response obsession with known knowable categories identification Ashraf Jamal provocatively diagnosed over decade ago predicament African cultural production reception his insistence “rethink[ing] human how, constitutive part process, [to] restore capacity for love” (2005: 20). | article | en | Tangier disease|History|Space (punctuation)|Genealogy|Sociology|Philosophy|Linguistics|Biochemistry|Chemistry|Transporter|ABCA1|Gene | https://doi.org/10.1177/0021989419869420 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2972225812', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/0021989419869420', 'mag': '2972225812'} | Morocco | C144024400 | Sociology | The Journal of Commonwealth Literature |
“Friday cannot be black!”: Euphemizing a religious taboo through translation | Mehmet Yıldız (https://openalex.org/A5036801743) | 2,022 | This paper is the first to describe Black Friday in Turkey as a taboo from perspective of translation studies. It intends analyze euphemistic strategies employed by national and international companies that conduct business aims find out whether their euphemisms potentially assist them marketing products. The corpus study consists 15 Turkish translations ‘Black Friday’, which were retrieved websites 27 companies. analyzed consideration Warren’s (1992) classification euphemism procedures. analyses revealed predominantly adopted two strategies: overstatement implication. 16 observed use ten employ implications concerning describers (companies), described (Friday), event (Black Friday). Only one company was found have borrowing strategy. concluded euphemized ‘taboo’ phrase proved beneficial removing or replacing socioculturally unacceptable components helped featured companies’ campaigns be culturally socially more acceptable they increased sales profits just un-euphemized did other parts world. | article | en | Taboo|Euphemism|Black swan theory|Phrase|Turkish|Event (particle physics)|Sociology|Advertising|Political science|Business|History|Linguistics|Law|Philosophy|Physics|Archaeology|Quantum mechanics|Statistics|Mathematics | https://doi.org/10.29000/rumelide.1074530 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4212775221', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.29000/rumelide.1074530'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | RumeliDE Dil ve Edebiyat Araştırmaları Dergisi|DergiPark (Istanbul University) |
“Friends becoming foes”: a case of social rejection in Psalm 31 | Alec Basson (https://openalex.org/A5034392044) | 2,006 | The supplicant of Psalm 31 bemoans the fact that his neighbours and companions treat him like an outcast. What is even more disturbing one would expect this from enemies, as case in so many laments. friends family who were supposed to provide necessary support times affliction, however, deserted psalmist. line between friend foe became blurred. plaintiff faces rejection on two fronts: attacked by enemies ostracised friends. Through marginalisation poet no longer feature a member social group embodies identity. Instead being centre, he now operates periphery, thus bearing full brunt ancient Israel. This form tantamount life “outskirts” society. Focusing notion spatiality, paper aims at illustrating image-schema centre-periphery underlies behaviour 31. reside centre (important honourable), whereas psalmist exists periphery (unimportant disgraced). | article | en | Identity (music)|Schema (genetic algorithms)|Plaintiff|Sociology|History|Aesthetics|Law|Psychoanalysis|Philosophy|Political science|Psychology|Machine learning|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.4102/ve.v27i2.154 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2060403630', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.4102/ve.v27i2.154', 'mag': '2060403630'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | UpSpace Institutional Repository (University of Pretoria) |
“Friend”: Analyzing linguistic representation and modeling the category (Based on Russian and American media texts on the armed conflict in Syria) | Mikhail Sergeevich Zyryanov (https://openalex.org/A5040664841)|Valeriya V. Kashpur (https://openalex.org/A5063625526)|Tatiana L. Andreeva (https://openalex.org/A5006625549) | 2,021 | The article attempts to describe the lexical representation of semantic category “friend” by means noun in media texts covering armed conflict Syria, 2015–2016. An analysis Russian and American revealed 1163 864 nouns, respectively, which were distributed across 10 groups. Based on results obtained, an author's model has been constructed its actualizations corpus have compared. is a subject (the “nomination” LSG) that certain characteristics LSGs “form structure”, “quality attributes” “opposition”) for reasons “motivation” acts way “activity”, “interaction with ally / self” ‘foe’”) result “external consequences activity” “internal LSGs). national specificity lies different actualization meanings expressed nouns representing LSGs. content explication directed inwards, emphasizing substantive aspects, while one explicated outwards descriptive aspects being emphasized. When at contact, focused empathy, pays more attention ways organized interaction. Also attaches importance preventing activities “foe”, i.e. proactively defending themselves, allies values from harm. | article | en | Noun|Explication|Linguistics|Representation (politics)|Psychology|Opposition (politics)|Content analysis|Lexical item|Harm|Social psychology|Sociology|Political science|Law|Philosophy|Social science|Politics | https://doi.org/10.22250/2410-7190_2021_7_1_46_62 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3136698802', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.22250/2410-7190_2021_7_1_46_62', 'mag': '3136698802'} | Syria | C144024400 | Sociology |
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