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“Moderate” Arab States: From the Cold War to the Syrian Conflict | Yaniv Voller (https://openalex.org/A5074909672) | 2,021 | Abstract Moderation has been a recurring theme in international politics, particularly the politics of Middle East, where foreign and regional actors have often categorized others themselves as either “moderates” or “radicals.” However, very few works sought to deconstruct meaning moderation this context. Those that addressed issue mostly treated Western attempt simplify geopolitics dichotomize justify their choices allies policy toward region. This article argues “moderate” evolved from category analysis one practice. The so‐called moderates, after negotiating word's meaning, embraced it description themselves. Through an examination evolution Arabs label Cold War Syrian civil war, demonstrates word through negotiations among powers introduced moderates Furthermore, role practice come play geopolitics. | article | en | Geopolitics|Moderation|Negotiation|Meaning (existential)|Context (archaeology)|Political science|Politics|Foreign policy|Spanish Civil War|Theme (computing)|Cold war|Political economy|Sociology|Law|Social psychology|Psychology|History|Archaeology|Computer science|Operating system|Psychotherapist | https://doi.org/10.1111/mepo.12549 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3172814169', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/mepo.12549', 'mag': '3172814169'} | Syria | C144024400 | Sociology | Middle East Policy|Kent Academic Repository (University of Kent) |
“Modern” Graphic Design in Greece after World War II | Marina Emmanouil (https://openalex.org/A5047705094) | 2,014 | October 01 2014 “Modern” Graphic Design in Greece after World War II Marina Emmanouil is a lecturer at the Visual Communication Department Izmir University of Economics (Turkey), and teaches practice theory area visual communication design. She graduated with BA (Hons) holds an MA PhD History from Royal College Art. Her latest academic activities include co-ordination Balkan Locus-Focus Symposium (2012, Izmir) co-organization “Crisis Greek Word” exhibition “Greek Crisis Design” colloquium (2013, Izmir). marinaemmanouil.wordpress.com. Search for other works by this author on: This Site Google Scholar Author Article Information Online Issn: 1531-4790 Print 0747-9360 © Massachusetts Institute Technology2014 Issues (2014) 30 (4): 33–51. https://doi.org/10.1162/DESI_a_00295 Cite Icon Permissions Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn MailTo Views contents Figures & tables Video Audio Supplementary Data Peer Review Citation Emmanouil; II. 2014; doi: Download citation file: Ris (Zotero) Reference Manager EasyBib Bookends Mendeley Papers EndNote RefWorks BibTex toolbar search Dropdown Menu input auto suggest filter your All ContentAll JournalsDesign Advanced content only available as PDF. PDF first page preview Close Modal You do not currently have access to content. | review | en | Exhibition|Graphic design|Icon|Visual arts|Library science|Media studies|History|Art history|Art|Sociology|Computer science|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1162/desi_a_00295 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2023120339', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1162/desi_a_00295', 'mag': '2023120339'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Design Issues|Ghent University Academic Bibliography (Ghent University)|Ghent University Academic Bibliography (Ghent University) |
“Modes of mediation” for conceptualizing how different roles for accountants are made present | Heba Elsayed (https://openalex.org/A5023919432)|Mayada Abd El-Aziz Youssef (https://openalex.org/A5010923778) | 2,015 | Purpose – This paper aims to, using the concept of “modes mediation”, examine how different roles for accountants are “made present” in an Egyptian manufacturing company. The introduces notion mediation” as a perspective opposing popular archetypes accountants: “bean-counter” versus “business partner”. Modes mediation emphasise materiality artefacts, entities and technologies, well organisational space spatial settings. Design/methodology/approach draws on field study company where engaged business partners involved operations planning decision-making. data were collected over period four years through participant observation, interviews ethnographic techniques. Findings reveals relational nature accountants’ calculative agency shows intimately associated with web technologies working arrangements that represent particular mediation”. Research limitations/implications which is still under-explored role change literature, useful studying accountants. It enriches our understanding wider involvement decision-making goes beyond major drivers deliberate interventions discussed existing literature. Originality/value contributes to literature by drawing attention way modes mediation, involving certain material arrangements, enact forms agency. Minor alteration these can result | article | en | Mediation|Materiality (auditing)|Originality|Agency (philosophy)|Sociology|Value (mathematics)|Accounting|Business|Public relations|Political science|Qualitative research|Computer science|Social science|Aesthetics|Philosophy|Machine learning | https://doi.org/10.1108/qram-05-2014-0041 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1603451598', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1108/qram-05-2014-0041', 'mag': '1603451598'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | Qualitative Research in Accounting & Management |
“Mom Calling the Commanding Officer”: The Changing Relationship Between Mothers and Their Sons Serving in Israel Defense Forces | Orit Bershtling (https://openalex.org/A5036828391) | 2,023 | Anchored in feminist theory, this article examines the relationship between mothers and their sons serving Israel Defense Forces. A review of literature reveals that military is one main sources gender inequality reproduction traditional roles. The plays a pivotal role male socialization encourages soldiers to distance themselves both physically psychologically from deny any feminine traits may be attributed them. Yet qualitative study, which based on 28 interviews with sons, more complex picture. Although does serve as gatekeeper distances reinforces hypermasculinized culture, participants depict mothers’ active involvement daily life soldier without sense inferiority confronting apparatus. assume psychologists, save entanglement direct commanders, even organize sons’ service route. extension maternal practices into realm blurs binary conceptualization “men arms women at home” sheds light contemporary changes have taken place military–family relations Israel. | review | en | Realm|Conceptualization|Military service|Socialization|Officer|Gender studies|Psychology|Military personnel|Military organization|Combatant|Social psychology|Sociology|Criminology|Political science|Law|Ancient history|Artificial intelligence|Computer science|History | https://doi.org/10.1177/0095327x231172778 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4376277752', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/0095327x231172778'} | Israel | C144024400|C2778638182 | Combatant|Sociology | Armed Forces & Society |
“Mom, I'm Home”: Israeli Lebanon-War Films as Inadvertent Preservers of the National Narrative | Yuval Benziman (https://openalex.org/A5059266246) | 2,013 | Cultural texts take an important part in constructing a society's collective narrative. They play even greater role shaping the ethos of conflict and culture societies enrolled ongoing conflict. The article focuses on Israeli films produced last three decades that deal with Israel-Lebanon It is claimed although criticizing national narrative, these also work to preserve support it further. movies are able turn against narrative require its continuation at same time by framing Lebanon situation as one-time event has ended, isolating from other aspects Israeli-Arab conflict; forming soldier brotherhood unity; dissociating soldiers' acts their knowledge events which they part. therefore that, opposed common scholarly perception abandoned late 1970s, actually found new ways it. | article | en | Narrative|Political science|Sociology|Art|Literature | https://doi.org/10.2979/israelstudies.18.3.112 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1985188949', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.2979/israelstudies.18.3.112', 'mag': '1985188949'} | Israel|Lebanon | C144024400 | Sociology | Israel Studies |
“Money Is Your Government”: Refugees, Mobility, and Unstable Documents in Kenya’s Operation Usalama Watch | Sophia Balakian (https://openalex.org/A5053812870) | 2,016 | Abstract: During a 2014 security operation in Kenya known as Operation Usalama Watch, Somali refugees spoke of money their only valid ID, knowing that cash, contrast to identity documents, would be accepted by police and military. The article argues such extortion should not interpreted uncategorically an example refugees’ exclusion from state-derived citizenship rights. Rather, paying bribes resist forced removal Nairobi, constructed global diasporan tied free flows capital. By using substitute for appealed notion rights untethered the state. At same time, speaking government, they articulated critique against political system excluded them. | article | en | Somali|Refugee|Extortion|Government (linguistics)|Citizenship|State (computer science)|Capital (architecture)|Identity (music)|Political science|Language change|Expropriation|Law|Politics|Sociology|Political economy|Geography|Art|Philosophy|Linguistics|Physics|Literature|Archaeology|Algorithm|Computer science|Acoustics | https://doi.org/10.1017/asr.2016.36 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2508086296', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/asr.2016.36', 'mag': '2508086296'} | Somalia | C144024400 | Sociology | African Studies Review |
“Money bound you—money shall loose you”: Micro-Credit, Social Capital, and the Meaning of Money in Upper Canada | Albert Schrauwers (https://openalex.org/A5033999948) | 2,011 | In late 1832, a small religious sect, the Children of Peace, completed their second place worship, temple, in village Hope sparsely settled northern reaches Toronto's rural hinterland. Called by vision to “ornament Christian Church with all glory Israel,” Peace rebuilt Solomon's temple as seat New Jerusalem (Schrauwers 1993; 2009). As William Lyon Mackenzie, newspaper editor, mayor Toronto, and member elected assembly for riding enthused, this three-tiered building was “calculated inspire beholder astonishment; its dimensions—its architecture—its situation—are so extraordinary” ( CA 18 Sept. 1828). The having fled cruel uncaring English pharaoh, viewed themselves new Israelites lost wilderness Upper Canada; here they would end sectarianism rebuild God's kingdom on principle charity. It is important stress both symbolism intended function this, church; highly symbolic solely monthly alms sacrifice poor “Israelite fashion.” Charity Fund collected there utilized “the relief contributors, others” (Sharon Temple n.d.: 11), well support shelter homeless 2009: 47). Targeted recipients included victims cholera epidemic Toronto starving pioneer settlers outlying districts 23 Aug. 1832; Constitution 4 May 1837). | article | en | Worship|Sectarianism|Sacrifice|Glory|Meaning (existential)|Israelites|Supper|Creed|Religious studies|History|Law|Sociology|Ancient history|Political science|Archaeology|Politics|Philosophy|Physics|Optics|Epistemology | https://doi.org/10.1017/s0010417511000077 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2118232225', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/s0010417511000077', 'mag': '2118232225'} | Israel | C144024400|C2776518542 | Sectarianism|Sociology | Comparative Studies in Society and History |
“Moral Conundrums and Menacing Ambiguities”: Framing the Problem of Surrogate Motherhood | Susan Markens (https://openalex.org/A5015111560) | 2,007 | When public debate about surrogacy peaked in the late 1980s and early 1990s, concept of “family values” was renowned political discourse. It is not surprising that rhetoric surrounding surrogate motherhood its construction as a social problem tied to concerns over debates future family state's role protecting families. For some opponents, such hierarchy American Roman Catholic Church orthodox Jewish organization Agudath Israel America, practice represented one more threat stability continuance family. Surrogate for others marked worrisome changes value placed on relationships. Questions what defines who can be counted members were also part motherhood. | chapter | en | Framing (construction)|Rhetoric|Politics|Sociology|Family values|Continuance|Gender studies|Political science|Environmental ethics|Law|History|Philosophy|Theology|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520252035.003.0004 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4239805646', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520252035.003.0004'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | University of California Press eBooks |
“More Alike than Different”: a qualitative exploration of the relational experiences of multicultural couples in Turkey | Hale Bolak Boratav (https://openalex.org/A5061505263)|Tuğçe Nur Doğan (https://openalex.org/A5017732355)|Yudum Söylemez (https://openalex.org/A5073394702)|Senem Zeytinoğlu Saydam (https://openalex.org/A5048549145) | 2,021 | In this study, multicultural couples’ experience of the impact culture on their romantic relationships was explored. The sample included eight heterosexual couples cohabiting or married for at least 6 months, and who differed in ethnicity, religion, native language. Women were from Turkey men Germany, Greece, United Kingdom, France, Italy, Spain, Chile, with ages ranging 22 to 43. semi-structured in-depth interviews generated data about cultural differences participants observed partners how those affect relationship. thematic analysis revealed three major themes: “More Alike Than Different”; “The Difference Is Cultures, Not Relationship”, “There More Room For Growth”. Although had regarding social familial structures, they emphasized similarities which kept them together, engaged understanding empathic communication helped overcome differences. study also provided information that might help practitioners working couples. findings are discussed context literature similarity compatibility, limitations suggestions further studies presented. | article | en | Multiculturalism|Psychology|Romance|Ethnic group|Social psychology|Cultural diversity|Thematic analysis|Context (archaeology)|Developmental psychology|Qualitative research|Gender studies|Sociology|Geography|Anthropology|Pedagogy|Archaeology|Psychoanalysis | https://doi.org/10.1080/14681994.2021.1931095 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3173568503', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14681994.2021.1931095', 'mag': '3173568503'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Sexual and Relationship Therapy |
“More Muddled than Confused”: A Response to David Martin Jones and M. L. R. Smith, “Confused Britannia: Global Uncertainty and Homeland Insecurity” (<i>Studies in Conflict & Terrorism</i>, 31(6), June 2008) | Paul Rogers (https://openalex.org/A5072064476) | 2,008 | Click to increase image sizeClick decrease size Notes 1. David Martin Jones and M. L. R. Smith, “Confused Britannia: Global Uncertainty Homeland Insecurity,” Studies in Conflict Terrorism 31(6) (June 2008), pp. 572–580. 2. Paul Rogers, Security the War on Terror: Elite Power Illusion of Control (London: Routledge, 230 p. 3. Not all commentators agreed at time. One analysis, originally published 4 December 2001, concluded that “…an apparent US victory achieved before end year may, reality, be just a further stage longer-term civil war Afghanistan. This is supported by likelihood many Taliban al-Qaida units have already crossed border into north-west Pakistan, where there substantial local support for their position…”. A Afghanistan After Pluto Press, 2004), 210 33. 4. Some months prior war, some analysts pointed dangers assuming rapid easy victory. For example: “The United States has sufficient forces ensure regime destruction but regime's replacement occupying or client regime, even if not greatly destructive, should expected regional opposition presence. It likely, particular, organisations such as prove counter-productive peace security region.” Iraq: Consequences War, ORG Briefing, (Oxford: Oxford Research Group, 2002), 5. Available www.iraqbodycount.net/ (last accessed 19 August 2008). 6. detailed analysis problems globalization development, see Ha-Joon Chang, Bad Samaritans Random House Business Books, 7. Jane Macartney, “China Creates Crack Units Crush Poverty Protests,” The Times, London, 20 June 2005. 8. P. V. Ramana, “Red Storm Rising,” Jane's Intelligence Review, 2008. 9. developed Why We're Losing Terror (Cambridge: Polity 177 10. James Davies, Susanna Sandstrom, Anthony Shorrocks, Edward N. Wolff, World Distribution Household Wealth,” WIDER Angle, no. 2 (2006), Institute Development Economics Research, Helsinki. 11. Dominique Baillard, Demand Grain won't Stop Growing,” Le Monde diplomatique, May 12. Discussed more detail Control: 21st Century 184 13. Edwin Brooks, Implications Ecological Limits Growth Terms Expectations Aspirations Developed Less Countries,” Human Ecology Development, edited Vann Rogers (London New York: Plenum 1974), 180 14. See, example, Seth G. C. Libicki, How Terrorist Groups End—Lessons Countering al Qa’ida (Santa Monica, CA: RAND Corporation, 250 | review | en | Victory|Terrorism|Homeland|Opposition (politics)|Spanish Civil War|Homeland security|Elite|Law|Political science|Sociology|Political economy|Economic history|History|Politics | https://doi.org/10.1080/10576100802555046 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2081230354', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/10576100802555046', 'mag': '2081230354'} | Iraq | C144024400|C203133693 | Sociology|Terrorism | Studies in Conflict & Terrorism |
“More than a Tree, Less than a Woman” Sex and Empire: the Italian Case | Daniela Baratieri (https://openalex.org/A5074689241) | 2,014 | This article will examine a fundamental drive that indirectly supported Italian expansionist lust in Eritrea, Ethiopia and Somalia between the late-nineteenth century Second World War. These colonies Africa provided men with sexual excess, place outside boundaries mores regulating sexuality metropolis. Native girls were considered to be “full grown” by age of eleven, bigamy was rampant, rape homosexuality tolerated, slavery overlooked. One ex-soldier remembered women “reeked booty”, others filled their memoirs accounts purchase women. The conquest did not offer State more than strategic position on Indian Ocean but well into 1960s it remained common imagination, as land inhabited “black female Vikings”, “most beautiful world”. paper also analyze changes regulation period consolidation Empire Fascist “Laws for Defence Race”, 11 November 1938, while documenting hard die practises fantasies colonial desire. tension desire asymmetrical power realise it, illustrate one-sided dream, ultimately nightmare. | article | en | Expansionism|Lust|Mores|Empire|Human sexuality|Colonialism|Memoir|History|Gender studies|State (computer science)|Ancient history|Antipathy|Politics|Ethnology|Law|Sociology|Political science|Art|Literature|Archaeology|Algorithm|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1111/ajph.12071 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2045633985', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/ajph.12071', 'mag': '2045633985'} | Somalia | C144024400 | Sociology | Australian Journal of Politics and History |
“Moroccan youngsters”: category politics in the Netherlands | Conny Roggeband (https://openalex.org/A5087534915)|Marleen van der Haar (https://openalex.org/A5031665216) | 2,017 | Abstract The article analyses the categorization of “Moroccan youngsters” as a problem group in Netherlands. Since 1990s Dutch‐Moroccan boys and young men are set apart problematic that presents social security threat an emblem failure multicultural society. We analyse intersectional “category politics” Dutch politicians to situate Moroccan‐Dutch youngsters outsiders. Our analysis makes clear how national origin, culture, class gender intersect constituting national‐cultural category, which is also defined terms disadvantaged socio‐economic position. This has important implications for policy arrangements proposed measures. Existing schooling training measures seen inadequate end incessant intergenerational patterns dependence poverty. Intervention sphere family parenting deemed necessary transform into “good citizens.” | article | en | Categorization|Disadvantaged|Politics|Emblem|Poverty|Multiculturalism|Sociology|Gender studies|Political science|Law|Geography|Pedagogy|Philosophy|Archaeology|Epistemology | https://doi.org/10.1111/imig.12419 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2776820802', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/imig.12419', 'mag': '2776820802'} | Morocco | C144024400|C189326681 | Poverty|Sociology | International Migration |
“Most Muslims are Like You and I, but ‘Real’ Muslims . . .” | Göran Larsson (https://openalex.org/A5055190271) | 2,016 | The aim of this article is to analyse the views a public critic Islam, namely Swedish Somali-born former Muslim Mona Walter (b. 1973). She has been selected because she very active in online media, social media and more ‘traditional’ forms such as print, radio broadcasting. In my analysis I will discuss whether her thoughts can be viewed Islamophobic, if so what extent. To decide on matter, have compared statements about Islam with how Runnymede Trust National Council for Crime Prevention ( brå ) define Islamophobia. empirical data consist an interview podcast rlm . This particular chosen program associated anti-Muslim renowned its strong criticism Sweden’s migration policies multicultural society. analysed help content analysis. | article | en | Islamophobia|Islam|Multiculturalism|Somali|Criticism|Media studies|Sociology|Social media|Terrorism|Violent extremism|Content analysis|Political science|Religious studies|Law|Social science|Theology|Philosophy|Linguistics | https://doi.org/10.1163/22117954-12341327 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2563091786', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1163/22117954-12341327', 'mag': '2563091786'} | Somalia | C144024400|C203133693|C2776438695 | Sociology|Terrorism|Violent extremism | Journal of Muslims in Europe |
“Most of the Teaching is in Arabic Anyway”, English as a Medium of Instruction in Saudi Arabia, Between De Facto and Official Language Policy | Ismael Louber (https://openalex.org/A5025678994)|Salah Troudi (https://openalex.org/A5043405880) | 2,019 | There has been much debate about the issue of English as a Medium Instruction (EMI) and place in context international education general Arabian/Persian Gulf region particular. This study explores use EMI an undergraduate engineering programme Kingdom Saudi Arabia (KSA). Using qualitative approach to data collection by means open-ended questionnaires semi-structured interviews, this views Arab expatriate teachers scientific subjects, students preparatory year EFL non-Arab on their institution. The sheds light certain gap terms actual classroom practices, between official language policy Arabic de facto medium instruction. Furthermore, findings suggest that implementation may pose several challenges both students. | article | en | Expatriate|Context (archaeology)|De facto|Arabic|Medium of instruction|Persian|Language policy|Political science|EMI|Pedagogy|Mathematics education|Sociology|Psychology|Engineering|History|Linguistics|Law|Philosophy|Telecommunications|Archaeology|Electromagnetic interference | https://doi.org/10.4018/ijbide.2019070105 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2948317544', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.4018/ijbide.2019070105', 'mag': '2948317544'} | Saudi Arabia | C144024400 | Sociology | International journal of bias, identity and diversities in education |
“Most of us are not feeling well”: exploring Iranian EAP practitioners’ emotions and identities | Ali Derakhshan (https://openalex.org/A5049495233)|Sedigheh Karimpour (https://openalex.org/A5058313549)|Mostafa Nazari (https://openalex.org/A5051865161) | 2,023 | Although theory and research on English for Academic Purposes (EAP) practitioners have grown recently, there is little documented their emotions identities. This study explored the emotion of 12 Iranian EAP role in identity construction. Adopting a narrative inquiry methodology, examined practitioners’ across Zembylas’s (2002) three-dimensional framework teacher Data analyses revealed that while consider recognition from students as contributive to positive identities, sociocultural-ideological discourses power relations negatively influence Such idiosyncrasies were viewed create huge dissonances between self-images professional sense-making at personal, interpersonal, macro-structural levels. The offers implications regarding identities situated within sociocultural localities instruction. | article | en | Sociocultural evolution|Feeling|Identity (music)|Psychology|Interpersonal communication|Narrative|Ideology|Situated|Social psychology|Sociology|Linguistics|Aesthetics|Computer science|Philosophy|Artificial intelligence|Politics|Anthropology|Political science|Law | https://doi.org/10.17398/2340-2784.45.317 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4379801932', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.17398/2340-2784.45.317'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | Iberica |
“Motherhood Starts in Prison”: The Experience of Motherhood Among Women in Prison | Michał Skrzypek (https://openalex.org/A5073803574)|Rinat-Billy Kochal (https://openalex.org/A5012636636) | 2,008 | This study aims to explore the way in which women prisoners Israel experience motherhood prison and construct their after being released. In‐depth interviews were conducted with 9 women, data analyzed according phenomenological approach. The qualitative methodology generated 5 main themes: (a) as a motive for survival; (b) sense of failure experienced by mothers prison; (c) coping versus avoidance mother‐child relationship during imprisonment; (d) change; (e) transition from questioning right be mother redeeming motherhood. themes organized into model that depicts process becoming move toward mending findings indicate side traumatic experiences are other aspects allow growth rehabilitation. discussion focuses on 2 issues evolved findings: reasons change occurs imprisonment enable this change. | article | en | Prison|Imprisonment|Psychology|Coping (psychology)|Construct (python library)|Qualitative research|Criminology|Social psychology|Developmental psychology|Sociology|Psychiatry|Social science|Computer science|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1545-5300.2008.00256.x | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2058721224', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1545-5300.2008.00256.x', 'mag': '2058721224', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18831310'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Family Process|PubMed |
“Motherhood is like a roller coaster… lots of ups, then downs, something chaotic… “; UK & Israeli women’s experiences of motherhood 6-12 months postpartum | Netalie Shloim (https://openalex.org/A5030436767)|Omer Lans (https://openalex.org/A5071266028)|Maeta Brown (https://openalex.org/A5083059012)|Sue McKelvie (https://openalex.org/A5058676824)|Shlomo I. Cohen (https://openalex.org/A5005540628)|Jane Cahill (https://openalex.org/A5079706184) | 2,019 | Background: The motherhood myth has been associated with perceptions of idealised which makes it difficult for women to express related struggles or distress. This is a second follow-up study focusing on the experiences mothers from United Kingdom (UK) and Israel.Methods: Forty-one were interviewed about their experience motherhood, body-image, feeding well-being. Interviews analysed thematically. Data driven by following questions: 1. how do Israeli UK 6–12 months postpartum? 2. Are these body satisfaction well-being? 3. Whether remained stable changed early (<6 months) 12 postpartum.Results: Three meta-themes derived data relating as ideal, good enough burdened. Such acceptance ideal mother was lack preoccupation image whereas aspired reclaim her mind old body. Our findings suggested that burdened mothers’ in often correlated negative image. perceived later postpartum continued relate postpartum.Conclusions: Perceptions varied between suggesting diversity positively culture country. Encouraging openly share could lead improvements maternal well-being more positive interactions newborn. | article | en | Ideal (ethics)|Gender studies|Distress|Perception|Diversity (politics)|Psychology|Developmental psychology|Medicine|Sociology|Clinical psychology|Political science|Neuroscience|Anthropology|Law | https://doi.org/10.1080/02646838.2019.1631448 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2963094402', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/02646838.2019.1631448', 'mag': '2963094402', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31331198'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology|White Rose Research Online (University of Leeds, The University of Sheffield, University of York) |
“Mother” in Sephardic, Turkish, and Italian Proverbs and Idioms: Case of Online Blogs | Fazıla Derya Agiş (https://openalex.org/A5084429343) | 2,022 | In this study, references to mothers in certain positive and negative circumstances some Sephardic, Turkish, Italian proverbs idioms that depict the concept of mother will be analyzed. Fear unhappiness as emotions, joy love emotions cultures observed within framework Cognitive Metaphor Theory Lakoff Johnson. Thus, study reveal is person who reconciles members a family, alienates all fears, loves unconditionally, builds up, directs, protects family Judeo-Spanish, idioms. The were formulated past. However, contemporary motherhood also analyzed blogs for by compared depicted idioms, products ancestors nations proving proverbs’ idioms’ uses modern revitalizing traditional beliefs. According Conceptual Theory, cognitive conceptualizations are brains people accordance with which they have been exposed. Briefly, sacredness three different languages (Judeo-Spanish, Italian) emphasized, done proverbs, online belonging cultural groups. | article | en | Turkish|Metaphor|Conceptual metaphor|Cognition|Psychology|Linguistics|Sociology|Philosophy|Neuroscience | https://doi.org/10.46250/kulturder.1063722 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4214549280', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.46250/kulturder.1063722'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Kültür araştırmaları dergisi|DergiPark (Istanbul University) |
“Mourners Are the Soundtrack of Life” | Re'ee Hagay (https://openalex.org/A5012094025) | 2,022 | Abstract This article describes the mourning interwoven into process of writing Ahuva ‘Ozeri's biography. The nonlinear temporality produced by child mourner from Tel Aviv's Yemenite Quarter is juxtaposed with national representations Yemeni Jews, constructed as an origin Jewish homogeneity rooted in past. Hagay focuses on cinematic performance against background south Aviv, revealing a twofold memory loss, both Mizrahi and Palestinian. ‘Ozeri emerges singer who drew multiple resources positioned across putative regional borders urban global Southern geographies. narrated not only but also last mourner, face progressive time. concludes asking what lost mourner's departure world, when one loses ability to recognize one's own loss through its reflection other's ruins. | article | en | Temporality|Tel aviv|Biography|History|Sociology|Art|Art history|Philosophy|Epistemology|Library science|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1215/1089201x-9698086 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4293245705', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1215/1089201x-9698086'} | Yemen | C144024400 | Sociology | Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and The Middle East |
“Movable feast of signs”: gender in <i>zar</i> in central sudan | Susan M. Kenyon (https://openalex.org/A5088901307) | 2,007 | Burei and tombura, two widespread forms of spirit possession found in Central Sudan, have many common characteristics are both based on a belief particular type spirit, known as zar. Popularly they distinguished primarily by gender: burei is female, tombura male. This distinction refers not only to the relatively greater involvement men history practice, but also public perceptions differences between groups. paper focuses interpretation gender specific ritual objects zar shows that practice markers neither fixed nor rigid. They may be variously interpreted or negotiated participants zar, while through trance rituals often reversed and/or transformed. | article | en | Possession (linguistics)|Trance|Interpretation (philosophy)|Perception|Aesthetics|Gender studies|Art|Psychology|Sociology|History|Anthropology|Philosophy|Epistemology|Linguistics | https://doi.org/10.2752/174322007780095672 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2058940709', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.2752/174322007780095672', 'mag': '2058940709'} | Sudan | C144024400 | Sociology | Material Religion |
“Moving from uncertainty toward acceptance”: a grounded theory study on exploring Iranian women's experiences of encountering menopause | Narjes Bahri (https://openalex.org/A5008558227)|Robab Latifnejad Roudsari (https://openalex.org/A5039108364) | 2,019 | Purpose: Menopause as a universal phenomenon is influenced by social norms so that women’s experiences during menopausal transition are related to the values and cultural symbols. This qualitative study was conducted discover Iranian of encountering menopause.Materials Methods: In this grounded theory 27 women living in Mashhad Gonabad, North East Iran, from May 2013 July, 2016 were selected using purposive theoretical sampling. Semi structured in-depth interviews for data collection until saturation achieved. Data analyzed Strauss Corbin’s (1998) recommended method through open, axial selective coding. MAXQDA 2007 software used organizing managing process analysis.Results: The analysis revealed core category “moving uncertainty toward acceptance”. interrelated categories subsumed under included challenging aging, observing symptoms menopause, responding symptoms, understanding need preparation, assessing right time prepare.Conclusion: Moving acceptance identified concept menopause. Modifying beliefs people about menopause aging well increasing their knowledge information can help experience with more ease. | article | en | Menopause|Grounded theory|Theoretical sampling|Nonprobability sampling|Axial coding|Qualitative research|Psychology|Social psychology|Gerontology|Medicine|Sociology|Social science|Population|Demography|Internal medicine | https://doi.org/10.1080/0167482x.2019.1678018 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2980823084', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/0167482x.2019.1678018', 'mag': '2980823084', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31623492'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Psychosomatic Obstetrics & Gynecology |
“Moving on” with gendered aspirations: Sudanese migrants navigating controlling welfare states, labour markets and migration regimes in the Netherlands and the UK | Ester Serra Mingot (https://openalex.org/A5037232557) | 2,021 | The ongoing political unrest and severe economic hardships in Sudan have led many Sudanese to arrive Europe as asylum seekers. Throughout the years, after obtaining refugee status becoming European citizens, settle host countries of which they are while others move onwards other EU labour migrants. As migrants’ legal statuses change during these different stages, so do their welfare labour-market entitlements, well aspirations possibilities achieve them. Drawing on 14 months ethnographic fieldwork with families across Netherlands, UK Sudan, this article explores strategies deployed by male female migrants navigate current states, migration regimes according life-course-related needs aspirations. evidences existing expectations contradictions towards mobile populations consequent social gender inequalities perpetuate. | article | en | Unrest|Welfare|Refugee|Ethnography|Inequality|Politics|Political science|Welfare state|Sociology|Development economics|Gender studies|Demographic economics|Economics|Law|Mathematical analysis|Mathematics|Anthropology | https://doi.org/10.1080/01419870.2021.1900585 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3177442552', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/01419870.2021.1900585', 'mag': '3177442552'} | Sudan | C100243477|C129603779|C144024400|C45555294|C47768531 | Development economics|Inequality|Sociology|Welfare|Welfare state | Ethnic and Racial Studies |
“Moving” Discourse: Egyptian Bumper Stickers as a Communicative Event | Ola Hafez (https://openalex.org/A5050290208) | 2,020 | Public discourse, including graffiti, billboards and bumper stickers, is innovative dynamic, reflecting often also challenging social values. While graffiti involves defacing public property, bumper-sticker (BS) discourse adds a human “touch” to metal object, expressing the driver’s identity, turns street into an arena for display communication. The few previous studies of BS explore this type as non-traditional means communication medium political agency in different societies, with emphasis on US Israel. Lammie Humphreys (2004) classify corpus American BSs nationalistic, ideological, commercial, religious, philosophical categories. Egyptian BSs, however, remain uninvestigated both linguistically sociologically. present paper, combining tools from content analysis, linguistics ethnomethodology, explores how function differently Egypt based 581 stickers private cars, taxis shuttle microbuses Cairo. In terms content, they are argued here revolve around affiliation (e.g. sport, school, profession), religion (as expression faith and/or invoking God’s protection), ideology photo Guevara) among other culture-specific conceptual domains. addition paper analyses engagement markers, speech acts intertextuality. concludes insights regarding dialogic interactional nature BSs. | article | en | Ideology|Dialogic|Sociology|Agency (philosophy)|Intertextuality|Appropriation|Expression (computer science)|Politics|Linguistics|Graffiti|Media studies|Content (measure theory)|Discourse analysis|Aesthetics|Political science|Social science|Visual arts|Art|Law|Philosophy|Pedagogy|Mathematical analysis|Mathematics|Computer science|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.32996/ijllt.2020.3.9.4 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3107115378', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.32996/ijllt.2020.3.9.4', 'mag': '3107115378'} | Egypt|Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | International journal of linguistics, literature and translation |
“Mr. Science”, May Fourth, and the Global History of Science | Fa‐ti Fan (https://openalex.org/A5033534274) | 2,022 | This paper argues that Mr. Science and the May 4th Movement was a significant chapter in global history of science. To contextualize story better, I will adopt three broad interpretive frames. First, shall place Fourth longer view than particular events 1910s–1920s. allow us to trace historical changes evolving institutions, discourses, practitioners science over few generations. Second, highlight most relevant conditions. Western imperialism course crucial setting, but there were more specific moments also deserve attention. Finally, comparisons connections; it is necessary examine transmutations ideas, knowledge, institutions across political cultural borders. In other words, we should study mode intellectual history. Other China, my main comparative cases are India Japan, though refer Ottoman Turkey. Taken together, these examples provide range central our inquiry into | article | en | History of science|China|TRACE (psycholinguistics)|World history|Epistemology|Mode (computer interface)|Sociology|Social science|History|Political science|Law|Philosophy|Computer science|Linguistics|Operating system | https://doi.org/10.1080/18752160.2022.2095099 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4297816492', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/18752160.2022.2095099'} | Turkey | C144024400|C85659524 | History of science|Sociology | East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal |
“Mr. Security” | 2,024 | Netanyahu’s worldview, his modus operandi, and the significant steps he has taken to keep generals at bay are explored in Chapter 2. It is argued that a pragmatic hardliner – lifelong right-wing ideologue opponent of Palestinian statehood who nevertheless displayed flexibility, enabling him remain coy about territorial vision for Israel. A master manipulator media, cultivated an image himself as “Mr. Security” sought, early on, exclude IDF from decision-making process, associating them with political left seeing potential rivals. The security community, its part, sees Netanyahu not but, rather, politician routinely places personal interests ahead national concerns. | chapter | en | Politics|Political science|Flexibility (engineering)|Ideology|Adversary|National security|Law|Public relations|Sociology|Political economy|Computer security|Management|Computer science|Economics | https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009425667.003 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4390720277', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009425667.003'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | ||
“Much More than just another Private Collection”: The Schocken Library and its Rescue from Nazi Germany in 1935 | Stefanie Mahrer-Fluss (https://openalex.org/A5053299636) | 2,015 | Abstract This article reconstructs for the first time rescue of Schocken Library, one largest privately owned book collections, from Nazi Germany. The library consisted over 60,000 volumes rare and precious Hebrew German books, manuscripts, incunabula. books were shipped Germany to Mandate Palestine in years 1934–1937 is few collections that completely survived National Socialist destruction looting. case can help us understand all many challenges involved successfully relocating a its size. Without network professionals, experience dealing with authorities unlimited funds, an operation like shipment would not have been possible. second part paper focuses on how, once was Jerusalem, way which it perceived changed. From contemporary perspective owner, merchant publisher Salman Schocken, users visitors, as place continuity exile rather than saved books. micro-historical only allows how historical subjects interpret world around them but also they try influence processes. | article | en | Nazism|Nazi Germany|German|Sociology|Mandate|Fanaticism|Hebrew|Looting|Perspective (graphical)|Law|Political science|Classics|Art|History|Visual arts|Archaeology|Politics | https://doi.org/10.1515/naha-2015-0003 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2936766172', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1515/naha-2015-0003', 'mag': '2936766172'} | Palestine | C144024400 | Sociology | Naharaim|BORIS (University Library Bern)|edoc (University of Basel) |
“Mummymania”:mummies,museums and popular culture | Jasmine Day (https://openalex.org/A5082104282) | 1,970 | This lecture presents the major findings of first anthropological study British and American “mummymania”, public fascination with ancient Egyptian mummies, its associated myth, mummy’s curse: a belief that those who interfere tombs will be punished. The incorporates museum-based field research, textual sources, film analysis material culture studies. Originally lay critiques archaeological ethics, curses were appropriated by mass media, which reduced sympathy for them associating evil living mummy characters. Fictional mummies? abject traits later came to symbolise old age, decay, pollution, death differencenegative concepts museum visitors now associate real mummies. Museum displays inadvertently remind stereotypes museums may exploit profit or employ staff elaborate curse myths. In my view, could do more counter stereotyping addressing visitors? predisposition regard mummies abhorrence derision. | article | en | Mythology|Curse|Sympathy|Art|History|Sociology|Anthropology|Literature|Psychology|Social psychology | https://doi.org/10.4081/jbr.2005.10226 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3210219625', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.4081/jbr.2005.10226', 'mag': '3210219625'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of biological research|DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals) |
“Munhu wese ihama yako (everyone is your relative)”: Ubuntu and the social inclusion of students with disabilities at South African universities | NULL AUTHOR_ID (https://openalex.org/A9999999999)|Desire Chiwandire (https://openalex.org/A5057375973) | 2,021 | Background: During apartheid, South African students with disabilities (SWDs) were educated in special schools and taught an inferior curriculum. Black learners discriminated against on grounds of both race disability. Following Africa’s first democratic election 1994, the National Congress (ANC) government put place arrange new laws to address educational other needs those disadvantaged under including persons (PWDs). The is a signatory 2006 United Nations Convention Rights Persons Disabilities (UNCRPD) which has resulted country assuming obligations promote inclusive education for ASWDs. However, research (see, instance, Chiwandire & Vincent 2019; Mutanga Majoko Phasha 2018; et al. 2017a; 2017; Israel 2017) shown that SWDs continue fare differently comparison their non-disabled peers terms participation likelihood success. Higher institutions (HEIs) have thus been urged create conducive environments academic inclusion particular attention being paid lecturers employing instructional strategies as well flexible curricula, if they are ensure equal opportunity success regular classroom setting. focus, date, inclusion, while important, meant issues relating social received minimal attention. Purpose: To there dearth studies investigated campuses. Although number given voice perspectives lecturers, respect experiences relation matters higher (HE), few focused Disability Unit Staff Members(DUSMs) who pivotal ensuring fair equitable policies practices HEIs. Studies (DS) field criticised dominated by voices from Global North, fail consider or effectively theorise disability contextually relevant way. thesis argues failure recognise value diversity treat valued welcomed participants HEIs partly stems policy, practice relationships informed Western individualist paradigm prizes individual achievement rather than cooperation mutuality. philosophy Ubuntu, stresses values communalism, hospitality human dignity offered here alternative starting point achieving genuinely Methods: In-depth face-to-face qualitative interviews conducted 40 participants, most whom were, at time interviewed, Heads Units DUSMs based 10 different universities four nine provinces. Data coded analysed using Braun Clarke’s (2006) method inductive deductive thematic analysis. Results: findings this study indicate campuses ableist spaces not prioritised. order become inclusive, ought seek inculcate members worldview contrast dominant orthodoxy. excluded denied sense belonging despite giving lip service embracing such education-oriented co-operative learning. Non-disabled steeped individualism, affirms solitary pursuit interdependence diversity, end up marginalising seen less capable. addressing through ableist/Western lens challenging unfair impairing SWDs, particularly physical forced “fit into” oppressive inaccessible built These may unwittingly re-inscribe assumptions normalise discrimination SWDs. Conclusions Recommendations: Ubuntu offer building mutual between peers. finds however was case traditional communities, embraced acts leadership required Ubuntu’s dignity, acceptance be fostered In range important ways, respected Africa. This includes, example, practical inaccessibility toilets wheelchair users lack appropriate signage blind students. Disrespectful attitudes about part university also result SWDs’ impaired. importance promoting relations group solidarity Both inclusion-oriented programmes promotion wide activities, involving students, can play role cultivating formation long-term fruitful respectful friendships An enabling environment alone enough holistically embrace will position “whole persons”. Amongst things, requires fully empowered make decisions regarding vital it necessitates management relinquish power, so work collaboratively all footing, HE funding allocation, policy planning prioritises | dissertation | en | Inclusion (mineral)|Disadvantaged|Curriculum|Government (linguistics)|Political science|Democracy|Pedagogy|Psychology|Public relations|Medical education|Public administration|Economic growth|Sociology|Gender studies|Politics|Medicine|Law|Linguistics|Philosophy|Economics | https://doi.org/10.21504/10962/170578 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4210649693', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.21504/10962/170578'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | |
“Murder in mykonos”: potentials and limitations of crime fiction literary tourism in Greece | Konstantinos Solakis (https://openalex.org/A5043007229)|Konstantinos Bellos (https://openalex.org/A5067318176) | 2,023 | ABSTRACTCrime fiction literature is enjoyed worldwide for its intriguing mysteries and cultural references depending on the author's nationality or where narrative takes place. The rising marketing trend of crime significantly impacts literary tourism. Famous writers their works are exploited by destination management organizations used as a tool; however, this not happening in Greece. This research explores sub-niche market tourism Greece focuses potential limitations. To best our knowledge, first to explore perspectives authors, publishers, agents subject tourism, conducting qualitative research. results indicate lack national policy general understanding concerning dynamics novels constituting Greece.KEYWORDS: Crime fictionLiterary tourismGreek tourismTourism policyDestination Disclosure statementNo conflict interest was reported author(s).Additional informationNotes contributorsKonstantinos SolakisKonstantinos Solakis, PhD Tourism Marketing Management, Research fellow at Marketing, Innovation, Sustainability (MITS) Group University Seville. Interest: Literary Tourism, Management Value Co-Creation.Konstantinos BellosKonstantinos Bellos, Substitute Social Studies Teacher (Secondary School), Adult educator (Legal/Social Studies), LL.M, M.A History. Diploma thesis: “Algerian War” (1954-1962) multiple memories through Maurice Attia, Didier Daeninckx, Jean Claude Izzo Gilles Vincent. | article | en | Tourism|Sociology|Dark tourism|Narrative|History|Literature|Political science|Law|Art | https://doi.org/10.1080/14766825.2023.2204064 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4366758500', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14766825.2023.2204064'} | Algeria | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Tourism and Cultural Change |
“Muscle”<i>Yekkes</i>? Multiple German-Jewish Masculinities in Palestine and Israel after 1933 | Patrick Farges (https://openalex.org/A5042441106) | 2,018 | Abstract In the 1930s and 1940s, nearly ninety thousand German-speaking Jews found refuge in British Mandate of Palestine. While scholars have stressed so-called Yekkes’ intellectual cultural contribution to making Jewish nation, their social gendered lifeworlds still need be explored. This article, which is centered on generation those born between 1910 1925, explores an ongoing interest German-Jewish multiple masculinities. It based personal narratives, including some 150 oral history interviews conducted early 1990s with men women Israel. By focusing gender masculinities, it sheds new light social, generational, racial issues Mandatory Palestine The article presents investigation lives, experiences, identities young emigrants from Nazi Europe who had partly been socialized Europe, were then forced adjust a different sociey culture after migration. involved adopting forms sociability, learning body postures gestures, as well incorporating habits—which, together, formed repertoire for how behave “New Hebrew.” | article | en | German|Judaism|Mandatory Palestine|Nazism|Gender studies|Palestine|Narrative|Mandate|Sociology|Political science|History|Law|Ancient history|Art|Literature|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1017/s0008938918000614 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2889938184', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/s0008938918000614', 'mag': '2889938184'} | Israel|Palestine | C144024400 | Sociology | Central European History |
“Muslim Women Seeking Power, Muslim Youth Seeking Justice”: An Edited Volume of Research Findings, Resources and Advocacy | Christopher Adam-Bagley (https://openalex.org/A5033531327) | 2,019 | This article gives an overview of a recently published book on the search Muslim women and youth for social justice equality, both in Mus-lim-majority cultures, Western countries diaspora. The theoretical research model critical realism is employed, which levels disadvantage oppression are identified using value-based approach. applied to Islamic ontology, “middle path” modesty, peace-making compromise within multicultural, plural societies, with focus feminism. In study management Western, Middle Eastern Asian barriers women’s employment identified. Empirical work “situation tests” comparing ethnically-identified CVs submitted applications showed significant discrimination against young people spheres England Netherlands. A citizenship education English schools that adolescents were particularly likely adopt positive values, despite pressures such as Islamophobia, could lead discrimination, alienation. Case studies Bangladesh Pakistan (Muslim-majority cultures) systems apply values ways proved disappointing. We numerous girls these cultures exploited oppressed, socially, economically sexually. final chapter explores why higher order have so little purchase some Muslim-majority (and other) cultures. case Gaza, surviving intermittent warfare, did offer peace-making, prospects rapprochement Muslim, Jewish, Christian Humanist moral positions seeking establish co-operative societies. | article | en | Economic Justice|Power (physics)|Criminology|Sociology|Political science|Social justice|Volume (thermodynamics)|Gender studies|Law|Physics|Quantum mechanics | https://doi.org/10.4236/oalib.1105634 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2967208897', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.4236/oalib.1105634', 'mag': '2967208897'} | Gaza | C139621336|C144024400|C2982832299 | Economic Justice|Social justice|Sociology | OAlib |
“Mussolini's Column”: Fascist Memorials and the Politics of Italian American Identity in Chicago | Fraser M. Ottanelli (https://openalex.org/A5067774743) | 2,022 | Eighty years after Benito Mussolini and his regime declared war on the United States, several Italian Fascist memorials still dot Chicago landscape. These are name of a major thoroughfare plaque at base Columbus statue in Grant Park honoring one il Duce's closest associates, Italo Balbo, along with an ancient Roman column. Donated by to July 1934 commemorate first anniversary arrival squadron twenty-four seaplanes that landed Lake Michigan, column was originally associated dictator only World War II came be known as “Balbo monument.” From their dedication early 1930s present, Balbo Drive, plaque, have been source controversy conflict within American broader communities. At issue meaning legacy Fascism, how best experience, pay tribute other ethnic racial groups helped build city made significant contributions its culture politics. This article will review history these commemorative spaces controversies surrounded them through close reading archival documentation scholarly literature. In conclusion, I offer suggestions for reframe historical memory multiethnic, multiracial US society.Sunday, 15, 1934, beautiful sunny day. As many hundred thousand Chicagoans took advantage weather visit Century Progress International Exposition. Officially inaugurated fourteen months earlier coincide Chicago's centennial, exposition held Burnham shore Michigan between 12th 39th Streets city's Near South Side. Large exhibitions like this were traditionally designed display most recent technological innovations. Not surprisingly, Hall Science served fair's cornerstone while over twenty corporate pavilions futuristic House Tomorrow exhibited latest products inventions. Additional buildings showcased nine foreign countries. Among pavilion end Avenue Flags corner 16th Street Leif Erickson Drive (Ganz 2008).The striking structure. The entrance shaped giant airplane wing. An eighty-foot metal tower glass inserts depicting stylized fascio (the symbol gave Fascism name) dominated Designed Adalberto Libera, Mario De Renzi, Antonio Valente—among recognized representatives rationalist architecture—the blended avant-garde aesthetics didactic displays inspire public, Americans particular, experience participate regime's self-representation progress, organizational capabilities, political stability. Dominated large profile Duce, interior contained 450 exhibits, maps, photographs, dioramas glorified accomplishments fields technology public works. brochure decorated image fascio, building described symbols Italy's “remarkable achievements engineering, physics, medicine, geography, astronomy, agriculture, shipping, aviation from time Caesars present day” (The Pavilion1933; Official Book Flight Gen. Balbo1933, 32).Many people who gathered afternoon had come celebrate Day. day chosen historic event happened same date year earlier. On 1933, mid-afternoon, formation silver SIAI-Marchetti S.55X double-hulled huge engines mounted above wings fasci displayed fuselages inside breakwater, before taxiing toward Navy Pier. Led General dubbed “Crociera aerea del Decennale” Decennial Air Cruise) (one late) tenth Fascists’ rise power, planes crews totaling men flying stages Italy North America.Mussolini seized aviation, future-oriented branch armed forces, enhance among Italians home abroad perception dynamism, accomplishments, military might. specific case design Exposition, air armada, relations plan modern, bold, energetic, well convey sense pride power prestige country origin (Segre 1987, chap. 11).The Cruise left lagoon Orbetello 1, 1933. traveled Alps Amsterdam Londonderry (Northern Ireland), then across Atlantic Reykjavik, Cartwright (Labrador, Canada), Shediac (New Brunswick, Montreal, and, finally, Chicago. Once Chicago, received what authorities later defined “almost royal honors” (Official 20). After brief fairgrounds, they taken caravan fifty cars Soldier Field stadium receive, front crowd estimated thousand, official welcome various officials, including Illinois governor Henry Horner mayor Edward J. Kelly. proclaimed occasion Day announced Seventh Street, running east State Shore would permanently renamed Drive. Governor hailed Christopher twentieth century, saying: “History repeats itself your flight. Just sail uncharted seas our shores, so you, courageous band piloted armada boats Europe America” 243–244; Tribune1933c; Ballowe 1993).During next three days, under heavy police protection out concern anticipated anti-Fascist protests, aviators feted series events, banquets, speeches guests Mass Holy Name Cathedral officiated Cardinal George Mundelein. evening 16, banquet hosted community Stevens Hotel, five attendees stood attention fervor giving salute chanting Eia, eia, eia! Alalà singing anthem “Giovinezza” comrades entered hall. day, following courtesy call Mayor Kelly's office, participated unveiling Park, which donated A Balbo's flight placed statue. climax aviators’ stay parade honor down attended tens thousands onlookers (Chicago Tribune1933b; 1933a). 19, flew New York City, where once again fellow thunderous marked another round celebrations, tickertape Broadway. addition, invited lunch President Franklin Delano Roosevelt White Washington, DC. Back final return Italy, capacity Madison Square Garden, urged “proud Italians” “Mussolini ended period humiliations; is now sign honor” 247).The warm enthusiastic reception extended pilots general did not Italy. Exposition celebrated one-year Windy City. Marquis Alberto Rossi Longhi, chargé d'affaires Embassy sent detailed account day's events. He Duce how, Kelly, lieutenant T. F. Donovan, dignitaries, he granted reviewing composed units Black Horse Troop National Guard bands. celebrations also included 150 societies, Italo-American Union, veteran organization, Società Operai Siciliani, young women different regions wearing costumes characteristic locality (Alberto Longhi Sua Eccellenza Ministro degli Affari Esteri 1934; “A Progress” 1934). high point commemoration place pavilion, festooned banners exalting King Victor Emanuel III, Mussolini, Balbo. 3:00 p.m., Il Progresso Italo-Americano played “Giovinezza,” unveiled English-language papers referred variously “La colonna romana,” “Il dono Duce,” di Mussolini,” even, parroting self-presentation model virility, “Mussolini's Shaft” (Il Italo-Americano1934, 1; Corriere d'America1934, L'Italia1934, Herald Examiner1934a, 6).The reached States ship 1934. Today, standing location just Field, monument last remaining relic structure travertine, stands slender thirteen-foot Corinthian green marble. Before it plundered shipped two-thousand-year-old eight formed rectangular square or portico overlooking sea near Porta Marina Ostia Antica, port Rome (Calza Nash 1959, 17). inscription base, framed four fasci, reads both English ItalianThe immediately followed speech delivered via short-wave radio link Rome, broadcast loudspeaker system aired nationally CBS NBC. speech, bridge youngest capitals world” “the greatest venture Italy” (Giuseppe Castruccio Ambassador Examiner1934b, 6). Commenting monument, Generoso Pope, editor committed apologist gushed, “We give fascist [(salutiamo romanamente)] . we express love gratitude Duce” (Pope 1). Kelly dispatched cablegram appreciation “gesture friendliness sending us great hero brave flyers” (Cablegram His Excellency 1934).Italo obvious choice lead armada. prominent Party leader associate decisive role power. 1921, joined quickly became Ferrara. transformed local thugs, squadristi, ragtag operation into disciplined, well-organized, efficient paramilitary force service landowners conservative interests. Blackshirts attacked labor unions intimidated opponents, sowing death destruction throughout Emilia Romagna, Veneto, Marches, Trentino, all way Istrian peninsula Adriatic coast Zara. words biographer, using violence spread agricultural Northern squadristi “played key transforming fascism amorphous movement force” 48.) scores killed Father Giovanni Minzoni. Don Minzoni, priest, hero, respected Catholic intellectual. 1920s, scout organizer Catholic-based around activities strongly opposed Blackshirts. August 23, 1923, two beat him outskirts city. Although guilt never proven, nevertheless bears responsibility climate intimidation led murder Minzoni 126–131). Despite, because of, record violent leader, rose ranks Party. successful leadership Ferrara nominate “quadrumvirs” charge organizing leading Marcia su Roma (March Rome) brought October 1922. With Fascists firmly control government, put force. promoted marshal. Subsequently, appointed colony Libya. June 1940, days against Britain France, when plane shot friendly fire Tobruk Libya.Italy's presence transatlantic flight, Mussolini's gift part strategy pursued boost influence States. During interwar years, viewed vital economic partner credit essential national Consequently, maintain support influential leaders ensure sympathetic opinion, orchestrated well-financed campaign foster respectable based appearance social element establish repress activism. directly supervised initiatives.Fascist policy can divided phases. first, approximately 1921 1930, attempt regiment forms reflected nature movement. believed emigrants eventually la patria. interim, remain legally bound act political, economic, interests; specifically, involved openly organizations States.Inspired surge established eighteen March (Ambasciatore Rolando Ricci Senatore Vigliani 1921). By mid-1923, boasted there thirty (Cannistraro 1999, 29–30). decade, nationwide membership somewhere six seven organized seventy branches. largest contingent City with, according fascisti regimented dozens boroughs (Diggins 1972, 91; Pretelli 2003, 115). Fasci active centers migration England mid-Atlantic states industrial Midwest West Coast. Organizations named figures regime, members family, “martyrs” fighting anti-Fascists (Consul Auxerio 1927). Consiglio Centrale Fascista (Fascist Central Council) coordinate America. Two later, organization League America (FLNA) (Salvemini 1977, 11–21; Ignazio Thaon Revel Martino 1926). Structurally ideologically, completely subservient Its leaders, whom salaries acted conveyer belt, passing directives communities Canada (Ambassador 1925).The efforts backers grow aroused fierce opposition militant vocal group Americans. Starting 1919, leftists denounced squadristi. radical Arturo Giovannitti issued invitation behalf Chamber Labor working-class unite common threat. letter clearly stated organization's objectives: help defeat reactionary forces challenge those “trying poison consciences weakest bands raze sacred institutions ground” (Giovannitti 3–5). One month rare show unity, Socialists, anarchists, Industrial Workers World, syndicalists, Communists, union representing workers convened founded Alleanza Antifascista Nord (AFANA). November 1925 new Italian-language daily newspaper, Nuovo Mondo, appeared voice AFANA. Following suppression press paper anywhere clear mission (“Il 1925–1928”). Mondo expression sentiment; waged predominantly pro-Fascist press. outnumbered outsold foes, provided spirited forceful alternative country. exposing repressive, brutal, expansionist sought achieve objectives. First, wanted eradicate tyranny Second, fought widespread sympathy circles Third, aspired rally struggle. Finally, underscoring universal ideology, pointed danger posed society world peace.Anti-Fascists conducted struggle supporters countless ways variety publications organizations. They rallies conferences distributed literature Boston, Detroit, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Tampa, smaller events featured spectrum broad composite anti-Fascism States.1Italian directed records describe passenger merchant-ship crew cause smuggled copies newspapers printed Communist Lavoratore anarchist Martello. undermine financially, called compatriots boycott business owned travel ships. launched energetic convince stop remittances back thus denying important currency (“Attività dei sovversivi” 1925–1926; “Movimento antifascista internazionale-Stati Uniti” 1926;“Movimento sovversivo all'estero” 1926; Stati 1928; “Stati Uniti d'America-propaganda antifascista” 1928–1929).Italian opponents challenged overtly regime. threat democracy assimilation immigrant workers. To effect, resolution Congress attacking interference internal affairs federal strip citizenship anyone who, virtue joining League, oath allegiance government 1927; Fama 1958–1959, 92). Anti-Fascists alignment Order Sons (OSIA), country's financially secure fraternal claiming endorsing undemocratic oppressive violated nonpartisan OSIA defied principles (Saudino 247–251; Cannistraro 19–20).The clash amounted more than words. diplomatic archives include reports physical confrontations, often turned violent, represented Americans, sides competed material symbolic: battled interpretations significance holidays, figures, monuments. such Natale (founding April, May, October, Armistice November, holidays Memorial Day, Fourth opportunity hundreds black shirts formation, wave flags, chant line “Eia, Alalà!” sing contrast, own centered May Day; annexation state September; tributes victims Socialist Giacomo Matteotti, liberal Amendola, Gastone Sozzi; heroes Giuseppe Garibaldi. spark bloody confrontations Little Italies country, leaving injured (“Viaggio negli dell'On. Bastianini” 1925; Grandi “Attività sovversivi, 1925–1926”; internazionale—Stati Estero: Uniti—movimento 1929–1934; Sormenti [1928?]).Neither side shied away explosives. Three bomb going use East Harlem detonated prematurely 49; Pernicone 2005, 171–172). For part, suspected having mailed package bombs editors Consulates Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Youngstown, Detroit (“Attentati terroristici” 1932). January potent explosion destroyed John Di Silvestro, Supreme Venerable killing wife injuring children 133–134; Luconi 2000, 71–72).By thanks pushback activists, inroads Constant unyielding checked attempts permanent community. Furthermore, grown seriously concerned continued acts violence, sight parading nation's cities shirts, look brawling foreigners rather respectable, law-abiding heightened mainstream opinion meddling affairs. 1929, abandoned disbanded America.The dissolution FLNA opened second phase 1930s, produced depoliticized characterization that, adopting language patriotism, cultural definition italianità (Italian identity) merged homeland portrayed embodiment strong newly reframed enthusiastically endorsed majority communities, so-called prominenti. assumed, correctly out, legitimacy relationship increase if stable united “Americanization.” Therefore, promoting relied Chambers Commerce, veterans organizations, Historical Dante Alighieri societies focused highlighting Fascism. Crociera Decennale examples (Luconi 62–142; 2012, 39–61; Diggins 77–143; Salvemini 91–164).The course diminish resolve. Significantly, actively campaigned exaltation backgrounds. Communists loudly welcoming “notorious gangster, thug professional murderer” whose hands dripped “with blood workers” (Daily Worker1933). Hotel Socialists “congratulatory” telegram signed “Don Minzoni,” clueless master ceremonies read publicly legitimate greetings. being unveiled, vigorous protests. Federation Rights Man leaflet central Loop area fairgrounds titled “Who Balbo?” “terrorist” “murderer.” Egidio Clemente, Chicago-based La Parola Popolo, went up small fairground dropping propaganda.Anti-Fascists unable derail project memorialization dominant interests backing combination authorities, blend Bodnar (1992) intersection vernacular expressions.” preserve “social continuity existing institutions, loyalty status quo.” “intent protecting values restating views reality derived firsthand | review | en | Politics|Identity (music)|Column (typography)|Political science|History|Sociology|Law|Art|Engineering|Aesthetics|Telecommunications|Frame (networking) | https://doi.org/10.5406/26902451.12.1.04 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4285284221', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.5406/26902451.12.1.04'} | Libya | C144024400 | Sociology | The Italian American review |
“My Body Is Broken Like My Country”: Identity, Nation, and Repatriation among Afghan Refugees in Iran | Diane Tober (https://openalex.org/A5087052420) | 2,007 | Iran has one of the world's largest refugee populations, comprised primarily Afghans and Iraqi Kurds. 1 As 2001, there were approximately 2.5 million Afghan refugees living in Iran. About 1.8 those documented rest undocumented. With aggressive repatriation efforts under supervision United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), population 2004 dropped to around another 500,000 undocumented migrant workers. 2 Based on ethnographic research among low-income Iranians urban rural Isfahan, this paper examines how who access Iran's health services interpret family planning education face increased social tension. Further, I investigate divergent views toward notions home, self, identity. Ultimately, addresses various borders—physical, national, ethnic, religious, gendered, urban/rural—and these borders can be redefined through experience, leaving hope future. | article | en | Repatriation|Afghan|Refugee|Ethnic group|Political science|Population|Economic growth|Gender studies|Sociology|Law|Demography|Economics | https://doi.org/10.1080/00210860701269584 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2012702220', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/00210860701269584', 'mag': '2012702220'} | Iran|Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | Iranian Studies |
“My Body, My Decision!” | Seda Saluk (https://openalex.org/A5012853403) | 2,023 | Abstract This article examines the discourses and strategies used by reproductive rights activists in Turkey to counter state’s antiabortion policies. Drawing on a critical genealogical analysis, first traces concept of “bodily autonomy” feminist mobilizations against sexual ethnoracial violence from 1980s decade 2000s. It then focuses slogan 2012 abortion mobilizations, “My body, my decision!,” which relies bodily autonomy as central trope claim making. The argues that is limited, not because it draws liberal, individualistic framework but represents white subject, assuming an ethnoracially unmarked, universal subject. In doing so, demonstrates how build obscure stratified policies, have historically promoted Turkish majority at expense non-Turkish lives. | article | en | Slogan|Autonomy|Trope (literature)|Turkish|Gender studies|Subject (documents)|Individualism|State (computer science)|Sociology|Reproductive rights|Political science|Law|Politics|Reproductive health|Art|Population|Linguistics|Philosophy|Demography|Literature|Algorithm|Library science|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1215/15525864-10815525 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4388100552', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1215/15525864-10815525'} | Turkey | C144024400|C2777749871 | Reproductive rights|Sociology | Journal of Middle East Women's Studies |
“My Breath Becomes a Crimson Horse”: Interviews with Nevhiz Tanyeli | Bülent Küçük (https://openalex.org/A5091079676)|Ceren Özselçuk (https://openalex.org/A5082403506)|Yahya M. Madra (https://openalex.org/A5018429018) | 2,023 | This extract from two interviews that took place in 2021 and 2023 with Nevhiz Tanyeli at her home Şişli, İstanbul centers on a dialogue over paintings, the possible interpretations of which interviewers had discussed beforehand, informed by Bülent Küçük’s research remembrances Turkey during events 1968. offered both tea counterinterpretations unique witty style, taken aback learning something new. Her stories’ poetic sensibilities weave violent historicity witnessed personal memories living dead. paintings constitute diary combines political, dreamlike factual, associative nightmarish repetitive real past. while they belong to certain dates, characters, places, thus remain open for others’ imaginations interpret. As participant witness ’68, creative will yet speaks us. | article | en | Witness|Historicity (philosophy)|Painting|Style (visual arts)|Aesthetics|Poetry|Sentience|History|Sociology|Politics|Visual arts|Art|Psychology|Literature|Art history|Law|Philosophy|Environmental ethics|Political science | https://doi.org/10.1080/08935696.2023.2215148 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4385237759', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/08935696.2023.2215148'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Rethinking Marxism |
“My God is Not Your God”: Applying Relationship Management Theory to Managing Ethnoreligious Crises in Sub-Saharan Africa | Cornelius B. Pratt (https://openalex.org/A5082023386)|Kate Azuka Omenugha (https://openalex.org/A5059004235) | 2,014 | Historically, the world’s geopolitical landscape has been replete with conflicts, from those of Ancient Mesopotamia to in today’s Middle East and Africa. As other world regions, parts sub-Saharan Africa have, for decades, trapped a vicious cycle conflicts violence—in ethnopolitical ethnoreligious contexts, even as foreign direct investment on continent increased 50% since 2005 gross national product significantly countries such Angola, Botswana, Kenya, Nigeria, Rwanda, all which are attracting international investors. This article examines nation-building role public relations by applying general theory relationship management, is based Grunig-Hunt two-way symmetrical model relations, Sudan Nigeria two-nation case study. It offers theory-informed guidelines that African states can use managing developing communication strategies engage stakeholders disparate theological leanings at individual level. The goal emphasize mutually respectful Muslim-Christian dialogue intractable, sensitive issues have morphed into bane economically burgeoning region, particularly. | article | en | Geopolitics|Mesopotamia|Conflict management|Middle East|Sociology|Political science|Political economy|Development economics|Public relations|Economic growth|Social science|Law|Economics|Geography|Archaeology|Politics | https://doi.org/10.1080/1553118x.2014.882338 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1991323835', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/1553118x.2014.882338', 'mag': '1991323835'} | Sudan | C144024400|C2779683958|C47768531 | Conflict management|Development economics|Sociology | International Journal of Strategic Communication |
“My Greatest Fear Is Becoming a Robot”: The Paradox of Transitioning to Nursing Practice in Lebanon | Michael Clinton (https://openalex.org/A5081055198)|Murielle Madi (https://openalex.org/A5039877788)|Myrna Doumit (https://openalex.org/A5015487296)|Sawsan Ezzeddine (https://openalex.org/A5049796272)|Ursula Rizk (https://openalex.org/A5023828483) | 2,018 | We investigated the challenges final-year nursing students (FYNSs) and first-year registered nurses (FYRNs) face as they transition to practice in Lebanon. Our purpose was understand of from perspective FYNS FYRNs. conducted focus group discussions with FYNSs FYRNs recruited four leading universities. Thematic analysis identified an unexpected paradox that has implications for quality care retention graduates. While humanoids are marketed communicate empathically patients, Lebanon struggle resist becoming robots. | article | en | Thematic analysis|Nursing|Perspective (graphical)|Focus group|Face (sociological concept)|Psychology|Transition (genetics)|Quality (philosophy)|Nursing practice|Qualitative research|Sociology|Medicine|Social science|Computer science|Epistemology|Biochemistry|Chemistry|Philosophy|Artificial intelligence|Anthropology|Gene | https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244018782565 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2808819111', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244018782565', 'mag': '2808819111'} | Lebanon | C144024400 | Sociology | SAGE Open |
“My Heart Feels Chained” | Bree Akesson (https://openalex.org/A5088887657)|Dena Badawi (https://openalex.org/A5017327724) | 2,020 | Lebanon currently hosts approximately 1.5 million refugees from neighboring Syria. Within this context, Syrian families face high rates of poverty, burdensome governmental policies and regulations, a lack affordable housing, food insecurity, family violence, survival practices. Exacerbated by displacement, these vulnerabilities have destabilizing effect on parents, who are struggling to meet their individual families’ needs in low-resource inhospitable environment. This chapter explores how parents experience daily economic challenges that can significantly affect ability adequately care for children. Data refugee revealed parents’ feelings parental adequacy were tied provide Parents’ inadequacy contributed an ongoing cycle poverty families. Increased stress members manifested negative mental physical health consequences or not being able work, thereby pushing further into precarity. | chapter | en | Poverty|Feeling|Precarity|Context (archaeology)|Refugee|Affect (linguistics)|Food insecurity|Psychology|Mental health|Political science|Economic growth|Social psychology|Sociology|Geography|Gender studies|Food security|Psychiatry|Economics|Archaeology|Communication|Law|Agriculture | https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190874551.003.0011 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4245583271', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190874551.003.0011'} | Lebanon|Syria | C134362201|C144024400|C189326681|C2778071103 | Mental health|Poverty|Precarity|Sociology | Oxford University Press eBooks |
“My Heart Is in the East and I Am in the West”: Enduring Questions of Israel Education in North America | Sivan Zakai (https://openalex.org/A5048509574) | 2,014 | By examining writing about Israel education since the founding of State, this paper highlights three questions that have surfaced repeatedly in Jewish educational discourse: What is purpose teaching American Jews Israel? Who best equipped to teach How can foster positive identification with without whitewashing over imperfections State? exploring how each question has manifested education, it examines why—for very different reasons—these endured time, and considers what might take arrive at lasting conclusions them. | article | en | Judaism|State (computer science)|Jewish state|Anti-Zionism|Religious education|Sociology|Gender studies|Jewish studies|Political science|History|Law|Religious studies|Pedagogy|Archaeology|Philosophy|Algorithm|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1080/15244113.2014.937192 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2081328998', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/15244113.2014.937192', 'mag': '2081328998'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Jewish Education |
“My Kurdistan Chapter”: Kurdish Repatriation | Jowan Mahmod (https://openalex.org/A5019331973) | 2,016 | The chapter presents the in-depth interviews, which were conducted with Kurdish repatriates in cities of Sulaymaniyah and Erbil Kurdistan (Iraq). Many children first-immigrant generations return to origin homeland for various reasons, but one particular reason is connect “fill a gap.” Their experiences are anything simple; they face many moments when feel like foreigners. While express belonging homeland, also critically aware differences that exist between local population themselves. Some back their homes Europe, or beyond, while others have found ways live within both homelands (settlement country country), order manage hybrid lives. | chapter | en | Homeland|Repatriation|Settlement (finance)|Immigration|Face (sociological concept)|Political science|Population|Order (exchange)|Geography|Ethnology|Genealogy|History|Sociology|Business|Law|Politics|Social science|Demography|Finance|Payment | https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-51347-2_7 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2520792336', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-51347-2_7', 'mag': '2520792336'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | Palgrave Macmillan US eBooks |
“My Language is Like My Mother”: Aspects of Language Attitudes in a Bilingual Farsi-Azerbaijani Context in Iran | Seyyed‐Abdolhamid Mirhosseini (https://openalex.org/A5044327730)|Parisa Abazari (https://openalex.org/A5050927201) | 2,016 | Abstract The consequence of globalization in many bilingual and multilingual communities appears to be the increased endangerment language varieties speeding erosion linguistic diversity. Understanding this concern its associated issues contact, conflict, maintenance may considerably enhanced by exploring attitudes towards they live with. In exploratory study we investigate a group Farsi-Azerbaijani speakers Iranian city Tabriz Azerbaijani language. Based on questionnaire data semistructured interviews, explores participants’ emotional as well their position regarding application some domains use. depicts positive emotions feelings local but at same time reveals hesitation reservations approving use use, education new media particular. On basis, argue that safe status even with magnitude Iran cannot taken for granted further comprehensive in-depth research needed regard. | article | en | Feeling|Context (archaeology)|Linguistics|Psychology|Globalization|Exploratory research|Sociology|Political science|Social psychology|Social science|Geography|Philosophy|Archaeology|Law | https://doi.org/10.1515/opli-2016-0018 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2539880966', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1515/opli-2016-0018', 'mag': '2539880966'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | Open Linguistics |
“My Life Has Become More Absurd Than My Play”: <i>Mi Minör</i> and the Crackdown on Artistic Freedom in Turkey | Burcu Yasemin Şeyben (https://openalex.org/A5027404914) | 2,019 | Mi Minör, written by Turkish author Meltem Arıkan and directed actor director Memet Ali Alabora, deals with rising authoritarianism in the age of social media. The play envisaged both fate its artists, who were persecuted for ostensibly rehearsing Gezi uprising through play, also future Turkey’s performing arts scene, currently struggling under an authoritarian regime. | article | en | Rehearsing|Authoritarianism|Turkish|The arts|Hatred|Art|Aesthetics|Political science|Sociology|Media studies|Politics|Visual arts|Law|Democracy|Philosophy|Linguistics | https://doi.org/10.1162/dram_a_00855 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2971004066', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1162/dram_a_00855', 'mag': '2971004066'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | TDR |
“My Life is More Important Than Family Honor:” Offline Protests, Counter‐Cyberactivism, and Article 308 | Sarah A. Tobin (https://openalex.org/A5068175303) | 2,014 | Abstract In summer 2012, protests erupted in Jordan light of several high-profile enactments Article 308 the Penal Code, or “Rape Law,” that allows rape charges to be dropped if perpetrator agrees marry victim, which were organized offline and aimed create a groundswell public support for changing gender inequities society rather than political legal structures. Users social media quick deride disparage protesters highly visible aggressive ways. This case demonstrates Internet can simultaneously act as vehicle resisting exclusion segregation through cyberactivism, while also serving mechanism reinforcing preexisting cultural norms through, what I call, “counter-cyberactivism.” Such displays amplify argument serves space online performance life, enables capacity both change durability simultaneously. conclude with implications this online, virtual umma. | article | en | Argument (complex analysis)|The Internet|Politics|Honor|Political science|Sociology|Code (set theory)|Social media|Media studies|Online and offline|Law|Criminology|Internet privacy|Law and economics|Gender studies|Computer science|World Wide Web|Biochemistry|Chemistry|Set (abstract data type)|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1002/j.cyo2.20140801.0006 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3132766790', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1002/j.cyo2.20140801.0006', 'mag': '3132766790'} | Jordan | C144024400 | Sociology | Cyber Orient |
“My Life? There Is Not Much to Tell”: On Voice, Silence and Agency in Interviews With First-Generation Mizrahi Jewish Women Immigrants to Israel | Sigal Nagar-Ron (https://openalex.org/A5054693253)|Pnina Motzafi‐Haller (https://openalex.org/A5048624764) | 2,011 | From early 1980s, a large body of feminist literature has been attempting to account for and explain the particular mix fragmented speech multiple silences characteristic interviews with subaltern subjects.The authors offer an epistemological challenge these orthodoxies on two levels. First, very premise that views accounts produced by marginalized research participants as failures need be overcome through methodological strategies, proposing instead understand silence fragmentation part process which they develop their sense self agency. Second, insist both micro interview setting macro, sociohistorical contexts must considered analyzed within same framework positions participant at center. The illustrate arguments case study multiply Jewish women who immigrated Israel in 1950s 1960s from North Africa Asia. | article | en | Silence|Agency (philosophy)|Sociology|Subaltern|Premise|Gender studies|Immigration|Ethnography|Judaism|Participant observation|Habitus|Epistemology|Aesthetics|History|Social science|Anthropology|Law|Political science|Politics|Philosophy|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1177/1077800411414007 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2136907038', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/1077800411414007', 'mag': '2136907038'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Qualitative Inquiry |
“My Lord's Native Land”: Mapping the Christian Holy Land | Julie Ann Smith (https://openalex.org/A5004140029) | 2,007 | In the fourth and early fifth centuries Christians laid claim to land of Palestine. The purpose this paper is analyze investment Palestine its places with Christian historical cultural meanings, trace remapping as “holy land.” This map was not a figurative representation geographical features; all maps, it an idea. land” also idea, one which did exist at beginning century, but which, by mid-fifth place constructed rich texture places, beliefs, actions, texts, based in notion that landscape provided evidence biblical truths. When Constantine became Christian, there no land”; however, over succeeding hundred thirty years marked identified many their holy map-makers transformation were emperors, bishops, monastics, women, pilgrims who claimed for Christianity, constructing topographically mediating view world through pilgrim paths, buildings, liturgies, texts. idea mapping used here aid understanding formation viewpoints validation ideas actions informed construction | article | en | Early Christianity|Christianity|Holy See|History|Islam|Bishops|Pure land|Viewpoints|Representation (politics)|Geography|Archaeology|Classics|Ancient history|Law|Philosophy|Theology|Art|Political science|Visual arts|Buddhism|Politics | https://doi.org/10.1017/s0009640700101398 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2164786962', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/s0009640700101398', 'mag': '2164786962'} | Palestine | C111936747 | Early Christianity | Church History |
“My Ninth Master was a European” | Terence Walz (https://openalex.org/A5002566030)|Kenneth M. Cuno (https://openalex.org/A5014983715) | 2,011 | Many enslaved Africans lived in households headed by Europeans Cairo and Alexandria during the nineteenth century. African slaves who were owned generally Christians culture, if not always frequent church attendance. They often diplomats, doctors, merchants, military officers, or employees of Egyptian government. As migrants to Egypt, European masters alike acculturated local views practices. The practice taking a slave wife has counterparts other cross-cultural colonial situations, similar domestic arrangements made men with women. working-class Saint-Simonian Voilquin high-society Saint Elme each elicited interesting, detailed, intimate information from their male female sources about lives households. | chapter | en | Ninth|Wife|SAINT|Colonialism|Attendance|Government (linguistics)|Ancient history|Gender studies|Political science|History|Sociology|Law|Art history|Physics|Acoustics|Linguistics|Philosophy | https://doi.org/10.5743/cairo/9789774163982.003.0005 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2481336648', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.5743/cairo/9789774163982.003.0005', 'mag': '2481336648'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | American University in Cairo Press eBooks |
“My Poetry Has Two Lives, Like Any Exile”: A Conversation with Dunya Mikhail | Sobia Khan (https://openalex.org/A5046092370) | 2,015 | 10 WLT SEPTEMBER / OCTOBER 2015 photo : cary loren D unya Mikhail is a native Iraqi, forced to leave her home in 1996 be able write poetry without censorship. Her sense of loss for homeland permeates writing. Published both Arabic and English, recent book, The Iraqi Nights (2014), reimagines what it means an exile. cadence subject builds on previous work Diary Wave Outside the Sea (2009) War Works Hard (2006). began publishing as student at University Baghdad, where writers that resisted governing regime through their lived constant state fear retaliation. She started rely heavily power metaphor convey politically charged thoughts reader. Mikhail’s chips away political social constructs reveal truth, within all she harbors hope—a prayer Iraq. Sobia Khan: Dunya, your centers experiences wars Iraq Can you speak little more about life capture writing? Dunya Mikhail: I can tell my story briefly: was born, poetry, will die. But each those three actions carries millions details. fact born Iraq, example, waking up every day sounds sirens explosions, Tigris River cafés with masgouf fish tea cardamom , coffee shops men only, playing soccer streets neighborhood kids, Baghdad skipping classes continue discussions art other artists using metaphors hide true meanings from censors, death father due lack medical treatment, exchanging our house one-way tickets . Q&A My Poetry Has Two Lives, Like Any Exile” A Conversation by Khan “ WORLDLITERATURETODAY.ORG 11 SK: As exile living United States, continues reflect anxieties Iraqi. How do use medium think anxieties, has writing changed nineteen years have States? DM: somehow returned being real things here. Did ruin poetry? Well, style didn’t change, but just don’t feel need extra layers meaning purposes than text itself art. usage English language made me sensitive toward Arabic. Trying translate own poem gives chance distance myself try understand outside. problem this, however, am free change original much want since it’s mine, often do. Some words phrases come first cultural connotation. two lives, like any intrigued how equate having lives. Is there never possibility single exile, can’t resist taking look back, Orpheus. one word dictionary: occupies space connotations. here occasion reminds us there. Your most Nights, uses historical literary archetypes reinvents them. say are trying accomplish Nights? poems multiple themes. For title comprised seven sections supposedly written walls. In Babylonian mythology, Inanna had pass gates find Tammuz so he could play magical flute. goddess love war... | article | en | Poetry|Literature|Homeland|Conversation|Metaphor|Lament|Politics|History|Art|Sociology|Philosophy|Law|Theology|Communication|Political science | https://doi.org/10.1353/wlt.2015.0168 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4300463273', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1353/wlt.2015.0168'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | World Literature Today |
“My Poetry Has Two Lives, Like Any Exile”: A Conversation with Dunya Mikhail | Sobia Khan (https://openalex.org/A5046092370) | 2,015 | 10 WLT SEPTEMBER / OCTOBER 2015 photo : cary loren D unya Mikhail is a native Iraqi, forced to leave her home in 1996 be able write poetry without censorship. Her sense of loss for homeland permeates writing. Published both Arabic and English, recent book, The Iraqi Nights (2014), reimagines what it means an exile. cadence subject builds on previous work Diary Wave Outside the Sea (2009) War Works Hard (2006). began publishing as student at University Baghdad, where writers that resisted governing regime through their lived constant state fear retaliation. She started rely heavily power metaphor convey politically charged thoughts reader. Mikhail’s chips away political social constructs reveal truth, within all she harbors hope—a prayer Iraq. Sobia Khan: Dunya, your centers experiences wars Iraq Can you speak little more about life capture writing? Dunya Mikhail: I can tell my story briefly: was born, poetry, will die. But each those three actions carries millions details. fact born Iraq, example, waking up every day sounds sirens explosions, Tigris River cafés with masgouf fish tea cardamom , coffee shops men only, playing soccer streets neighborhood kids, Baghdad skipping classes continue discussions art other artists using metaphors hide true meanings from censors, death father due lack medical treatment, exchanging our house one-way tickets . Q&A My Poetry Has Two Lives, Like Any Exile” A Conversation by Khan “ WORLDLITERATURETODAY.ORG 11 SK: As exile living United States, continues reflect anxieties Iraqi. How do use medium think anxieties, has writing changed nineteen years have States? DM: somehow returned being real things here. Did ruin poetry? Well, style didn’t change, but just don’t feel need extra layers meaning purposes than text itself art. usage English language made me sensitive toward Arabic. Trying translate own poem gives chance distance myself try understand outside. problem this, however, am free change original much want since it’s mine, often do. Some words phrases come first cultural connotation. two lives, like any intrigued how equate having lives. Is there never possibility single exile, can’t resist taking look back, Orpheus. one word dictionary: occupies space connotations. here occasion reminds us there. Your most Nights, uses historical literary archetypes reinvents them. say are trying accomplish Nights? poems multiple themes. For title comprised seven sections supposedly written walls. In Babylonian mythology, Inanna had pass gates find Tammuz so he could play magical flute. goddess love war... | article | en | Poetry|Literature|Homeland|Conversation|Metaphor|Lament|Politics|History|Art|Sociology|Philosophy|Law|Theology|Communication|Political science | https://doi.org/10.7588/worllitetoda.89.5.0010 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2320036562', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.7588/worllitetoda.89.5.0010', 'mag': '2320036562'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | World Literature Today |
“My Record Will Be There” (1950–1951) | Jerry Zolten (https://openalex.org/A5001362899) | 2,003 | The early 1950s were exciting times for gospel and African American musical performers of all kinds. Record sales healthy. Radio stations spreading the music beyond color lines. Artists like Nat Cole, Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald, Lionel Hampton, Jordan enjoying crossover appeal never before. At same time, Americans gaining power as consumers entertainment. In 1951, Columbia Records revived their Okeh imprint, a subsidiary that had been dormant number years. Picked to head new subsidiary, Danny Kessler, in charge Columbia's fledgling R&B department at would ultimately record well sides. Kessler's signings included R. S. B. Gospel Singers, Brother Rodney, Bailey Singers-and most important, Dixie Hummingbirds. | chapter | en | Gospel|Musical|Brother|Entertainment|Art|Appeal|Power (physics)|Art history|History|Performance art|Visual arts|Literature|Sociology|Anthropology|Law|Political science|Physics|Quantum mechanics | https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195152722.003.0006 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2483984041', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195152722.003.0006', 'mag': '2483984041'} | Jordan | C144024400 | Sociology | Oxford University Press eBooks |
“My Role Is Important, but Not Critical”: Why Intention Matters in the Creation of Victim Assistance Units in Israel | Nili Gesser (https://openalex.org/A5002389445) | 2,021 | Crime victims often need assistance navigating the unfamiliar legal system. Limited research exists, however, on those tasked with helping victims, victim units (VAUs), particularly outside US. Indeed, there have been calls in literature for more comparative this area. Responding to their call, exploratory study analyzes creation of VAUs within district attorney’s offices (DAO) Israel following specific victims’ rights legislation. Using qualitative interviews representatives from three quarters (N = 6), paper explores formation two models VAUs, examines location VAU DAOs, and various influences work VAU. I argue that limited resources, cultural organization professional ethos prevent fully addressing needs. In order best respond needs, should expand contact receive sufficient resources do so. The Israeli case demonstrates assist be created a “victim-centered” agenda. This advances our knowledge workers US, highlighting impact DAO’s affiliation its potential victims. | article | en | Ethos|Legislation|Public relations|Exploratory research|Order (exchange)|Criminology|Work (physics)|Safeguarding|Resource (disambiguation)|Qualitative research|Political science|Sociology|Law|Business|Medicine|Engineering|Social science|Mechanical engineering|Computer network|Nursing|Finance|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1080/15564886.2021.1912870 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3157044935', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/15564886.2021.1912870', 'mag': '3157044935'} | Israel | C144024400|C2776743756 | Safeguarding|Sociology | Victims & Offenders |
“My Sad Face”: An Interpersonal Metafunction Analysis of the Dialogue Between Nehemiah, Son of Hakaliah, and Artaxerxes, King of Persia, in Nehemiah 2,2-8 | Andrew W. Dyck (https://openalex.org/A5035119728) | 2,020 | In this paper, I define and apply M. Halliday’s interpersonal metafunction methodology, a socio-linguistic approach to language known as Systemic Functional Linguistics, an analysis of the dialogue between Nehemiah, son Hakaliah, Artaxerxes, King Persia, in Neh 2,2-8. My purpose is discover some truths concerning social dynamics that exist Nehemiah Artaxerxes inevitably uncover who, being governing discourse participant, responsible for and/or holds his control Judah’s restoration. To accomplish task, conduct both mirco- macro-level designated corpus. end, data reveals participant though dominates by saying more. However, taking greater co-text context into consideration, specifically Nehemiah’s prayer chapter 1, there potentially third unmentioned who could well be one result present dialogue. This invariably Yahweh. | article | en | Face (sociological concept)|Context (archaeology)|Interpersonal communication|Linguistics|Sociology|Discourse analysis|Systemic functional linguistics|Psychology|Philosophy|History|Communication|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1080/09018328.2020.1805203 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3087964307', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/09018328.2020.1805203', 'mag': '3087964307'} | Persia | C144024400 | Sociology | Scandinavian Journal of the Old Testament |
“My Son Is Reliable” | N. Guttman (https://openalex.org/A5010391157) | 2,012 | The high crash rates among teenage drivers are of great concern across nations. Parents’ involvement is known to help increase their young drivers’ driving safety. In particular, parents can place restrictions on son’s/daughter’s (e.g., restrict night time driving), which enable the driver gain experience in safer conditions. Yet little about what do think parental responsibility regarding driving. This study aimed address this question. It draws both quantitative and qualitative data obtained through a phone survey 906 Israeli that included open- closed-ended items 20 semistructured interviews with parents. main findings were tended be optimistic own child’s compared other relatively unconcerned speeding. Whereas most thought at or talking should placed drivers, believed many not enforce them. Most also feel they unable influence exception, however, was when tired. Two contrasting conceptions identified presented as model. Potential implications for road safety campaigns from social norms perspective discussed. | article | en | Psychology|Phone|SAFER|Human factors and ergonomics|Social psychology|Crash|Suicide prevention|Injury prevention|Poison control|Qualitative research|Perspective (graphical)|Developmental psychology|Young adult|Daughter|Computer security|Sociology|Political science|Medicine|Social science|Philosophy|Linguistics|Environmental health|Computer science|Law|Artificial intelligence|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1177/0743558411435853 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2023336422', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/0743558411435853', 'mag': '2023336422'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Adolescent Research |
“My Teacher Had an Accent Too” | Galina Putjata (https://openalex.org/A5040005960) | 2,017 | Transnational mobility across the world is opposed by a monocultural mind-set at school, which has led educational researchers to call for multilingual and multicultural turn. This article presents qualitative study that investigates immigrant teachers’ role in this transformation process. Framed specific historical context of Israel, where professional integration new teachers was politically supported, focuses on biographies Israelis, who had immigrated 20 years ago as children youths. Their perception counselors reconstructed based theory imagined community school linguistic marketplace. The findings allow deep insight into process identity construction imagining created institution its agents. | article | en | Stress (linguistics)|Immigration|Multiculturalism|Identity (music)|Context (archaeology)|Pedagogy|Institution|Sociology|Perception|Multicultural education|Set (abstract data type)|Qualitative research|Gender studies|Psychology|Political science|Linguistics|Social science|Aesthetics|Geography|Philosophy|Law|Archaeology|Neuroscience|Computer science|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1177/0022057418782341 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2884673026', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/0022057418782341', 'mag': '2884673026'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Education |
“My Veil Makes Me Beautiful” | Saba Abbas (https://openalex.org/A5068576300) | 2,015 | This article provides insight into the fashionable veiling trend in Amman, Jordan. Drawing on interviews I conducted 2011 and 2012, argue that women this study understand to be a means for enhancing, rather than containing, beauty of body. Through my analysis, closely examine borderline space between ideals beautification concealment how construct their it. By reading women’s deployment these against juristic connotations, underscore significance veiled Muslim femininity they construct. The also explores “regimes veiling” regulate practice Amman enable particular articulation veiling. found reasoning more about gendered cultural codes religious mandates. | article | en | Femininity|Construct (python library)|Beautification|Articulation (sociology)|Beauty|Aesthetics|Gender studies|Sociology|Space (punctuation)|Art|Political science|Politics|Computer science|Engineering|Law|Philosophy|Linguistics|Civil engineering|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1215/15525864-2886514 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1795634783', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1215/15525864-2886514', 'mag': '1795634783'} | Jordan | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Middle East Women's Studies |
“My Visa Application Was Denied, I Decided to Go Anyway” | Farida Souiah (https://openalex.org/A5055803612) | 2,019 | This article explores the ways people targeted by restrictive migration and mobility policies in Algeria experience, interpret, contest them. It focuses on perspective of harragas, literally “those who burn” borders. In Maghrebi dialects, this is notably how leaving without documentation are referred to. reflects fact that they do not respect mandatory steps for legal departure. Also, figuratively “burn” their papers to avoid deportation once Europe. Drawing qualitative fieldwork, outlines complex ambiguous attitudes toward regime those it aims exclude: compliance, deception, delegitimization, defiance. contributes debates about human experiences borders inequality regimes. helps deepen knowledge why fail often counterproductive, encouraging undocumented were meant deter. | article | en | CONTEST|Deportation|Documentation|Inequality|Political science|Perspective (graphical)|Deception|Irregular migration|Sociology|Criminology|Law and economics|Law|Public relations|Immigration|Mathematical analysis|Ethnology|Mathematics|Artificial intelligence|Computer science|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.3167/arms.2019.020107 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2952070224', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.3167/arms.2019.020107', 'mag': '2952070224'} | Algeria | C144024400|C45555294 | Inequality|Sociology | Migration and society|HAL (Le Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe)|HAL (Le Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe)|HAL (Le Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe)|HAL (Le Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe) |
“My World Is Upside Down”: Transnational Iraqi Youth and Parent Perspectives on Resettlement in the United States | Julia Meredith Hess (https://openalex.org/A5016633495)|Brian Isakson (https://openalex.org/A5055469542)|Matthew Nelson (https://openalex.org/A5026346012)|Jessica R. Goodkind (https://openalex.org/A5085751603) | 2,017 | The U.S. war with Iraq led to the displacement of millions Iraqis, many whom have resettled in United States as refugees. We explore challenges Iraqi families face after resettlement, a particular focus on agency refugees and challenges/opportunities familial social reproduction transnational context. conducted 181 qualitative interviews 38 Iraqis (11 youth, 27 adults) 5 service providers. Our findings highlight importance exploring refugee illuminate how interplay between structure contexts is useful framework for understanding transformations around roles. | article | en | Refugee|Agency (philosophy)|Context (archaeology)|Gender studies|Political science|Focus group|Face (sociological concept)|Qualitative research|Sociology|Immigration|Criminology|Social science|Law|Geography|Archaeology|Anthropology | https://doi.org/10.1080/15562948.2017.1338367 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2763604855', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/15562948.2017.1338367', 'mag': '2763604855', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30983922', 'pmcid': 'https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/6457466'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies|Europe PMC (PubMed Central)|PubMed Central|UNM’s Digital Repository (University of New Mexico) |
“My ancestor, my sister”: Ancient Heritage Imagery and Modern Egyptian Women Writers | Molly Youngkin (https://openalex.org/A5037158763) | 2,016 | The romanticization of Egyptian women is alive and well in the twenty-first century. At time her death August 2013, popular author Elizabeth Peters was working on a new Amelia Pea-body novel (Mertz, “Notes” n. pag.), part mystery series that features an Edwards-like Englishwoman who solves crimes while traveling Egypt. Though Peters’s focus independent woman detective may be compelling to readers invested women’s emancipation, descriptions women—“native swathed eyebrows dusky black” “wailing” at tomb Thutmose III (Peters, Crocodile 23; Peters, Serpent 32)—rely same imperialist attitudes toward color found Nightingale’s, Eliot’s, Field’s, Glyn’s writing. In addition stereotypes perpetuated by novels, representations Cleopatra contribute superficial understanding women. “Sexy Cleopatra” outfits are more than ever Halloween; fashion model Heidi Klum had especially elaborate one, complete with face crystals, constructed for 2012 Halloween party (Anonymous, “Heidi Klum” pag.). Also 2012, National Geographic promoted its exhibit about underwater discovery artifacts from Cleopatra’s sultry Cleopatra, slinks through gauzy white curtains seduce Julius Caesar Mark Antony opening video accompanied Los Angeles “Cleopatra” | chapter | en | Cleopatra|Face (sociological concept)|Art|History|Literature|Art history|Sociology|Social science | https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137566140_6 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2490071838', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137566140_6', 'mag': '2490071838'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | |
“My child has ADHD…am I ok?” The Psychological Burden of Caring for an ADHD child in Lebanon and its association to Caregivers’ Mental Health. | Melissa Matar (https://openalex.org/A5002269047)|Nada Zahreddine (https://openalex.org/A5049833408) | 2,019 | Objectives: Previous studies have indicated that caregivers of ADHD children consider this disorder to be a psychological burden on their lives in all its aspects: social, occupational, and financial. As result, these are marked with morbidities including stress, anxiety depression. While there been reports Lebanon, no Lebanon or the Middle East measure association mental health. Therefore, study aims inspect assess variation depression, among children. Methods: The involves 120 Lebanese caregivers, 48 which 72 those normally developing Caregivers presented three scales report: DASS-21, SDQ CAPPA-adapted survey. Results: After analyzing responses, we can infer worry, avoid outside activities child, child strain family, occupation, finances more than ORs= 15.8, 20.3, 3.5, 13, 3.7 respectively. Moreover, reported depression (58% vs 26%) (31% 14%) higher mean scores DASS-21 (mean= 14.98+/-6.2, p<0.001) for 15.67+/- 5.02, compared 4.7 In addition, health seems positively associated each severity child’s ADHD. And turn, caregivers’ is also severity. Finally, discriminant caregiver gender, where mothers show (64%), (75%) stress (68%) fathers Conclusion: This affirms caring impacts lives. strong grounds contemplate ways help such vulnerable group population. | article | en | Anxiety|Worry|Depression (economics)|Mental health|Clinical psychology|Psychiatry|Psychology|Caregiver burden|Association (psychology)|Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire|Medicine|Disease|Psychotherapist|Economics|Macroeconomics|Dementia|Pathology | https://doi.org/10.22453/lsj-020.3.468-494 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3135345631', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.22453/lsj-020.3.468-494', 'mag': '3135345631'} | Lebanon | C134362201 | Mental health | Lebanese Science Journal |
“My father knows the minister” | Mark Neal (https://openalex.org/A5060689360)|Jim L. Finlay (https://openalex.org/A5036579627)|Richard Tansey (https://openalex.org/A5044205271) | 2,005 | Purpose The purpose of this paper is to fill a gap in the literature on Arab women's conceptions leadership. By comparing leadership authority values three countries, aims refine existing gender‐neutral research “Arab world”. Design/methodology/approach study involved administering survey, which had been developed based Weber's work (1978) and contemporary discussions implicit theories (ILT). data ( n =320) were drawn from female subjects who enrolled upper‐division business major classes Oman, Lebanon UAE women thus constituted educated entrants their respective labor markets. subjected an analysis group means each questions, using Scheffe option available ANOVA. Findings found evidence common Gulf countries (Oman UAE). Lebanon, meanwhile, was distinguished by relatively low levels “traditional” authority, very high “charismatic” authority. findings demonstrate important regional similarities difference world.” Research limitations/implications limited number studied. It anticipated that future comparative will be extended include other (both non‐Arab), men. Practical implications Leadership training region must sensitized tailored address gender‐specific Originality/value challenges refines widespread meta‐notions analyses world” leadership.” | article | en | Originality|Charismatic authority|Value (mathematics)|Leadership|Leadership style|Charisma|Political science|Sociology|Public relations|Social science|Law|Qualitative research|Machine learning|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1108/09649420510624729 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1554559333', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1108/09649420510624729', 'mag': '1554559333'} | Lebanon|Oman | C144024400 | Sociology | Women in Management Review |
“My goal is to do the best that I can in this class”: Relevance of potential‐based achievement goals for intrinsic motivation and course performance | Martin Daumiller (https://openalex.org/A5061985643)|Nourollah Zarrinabadi (https://openalex.org/A5042200724) | 2,021 | Goals are a core aspect of motivation. Elliot et al. (2015) introduced potential‐based goals as type self‐based that conceptualised seeking to do well one possibly could (potential approach goals) or avoid doing worse than avoidance goals). We follow up on this construct by examining its factorial structure and investigating associations with intrinsic motivation performance. assessed 436 Iranian university students' at the beginning an English course, during semester end‐of‐course Results attested factional separability similar original work, supporting generalisability concerning more collectivistic contexts. Potential were positively associated performance, while potential negatively also after controlling for demographics. Overall, affirms relevance comprehensive understanding how motivate individuals. | article | en | Psychology|Relevance (law)|Intrinsic motivation|Goal orientation|Goal theory|Goal setting|Construct (python library)|Social psychology|Class (philosophy)|Collectivism|Need for achievement|Computer science|Individualism|Political science|Law|Programming language|Artificial intelligence | https://doi.org/10.1002/ijop.12792 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3176264529', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1002/ijop.12792', 'mag': '3176264529', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34195996'} | Iran | C96420161 | Collectivism | International Journal of Psychology|OPUS (Augsburg University) |
“My mother is not newsworthy”: Framing missingness in Israel | Ori Katz (https://openalex.org/A5067477187) | 2,022 | This research explores the processes of framing civilian (as opposed to military-related) missingness in Israel. The people who have been left behind, and particularly missing persons’ loved ones, seek frame stories such a way as make them newsworthy. However, lacks both cultural scripts an end stories. Thus, I argue, those behind must use meta-narratives assert newsworthiness these Based on narrative ethnography, explore two kinds framings that are used, reflecting acceptance life/death dichotomy. first (“the child us all”), is collective form, derives from with wide resonance cases soldiers. second (“it can happen anyone”), which highlights individualism, borrows common persons US, about young white women. Ultimately, generally fail achieve Together failure ontological solution, might then be constructed stable category. category has potential subversive one, creating new challenge well distinction between life death. | article | en | Framing (construction)|Narrative|Missing data|Ethnography|Sociology|Frame analysis|Social psychology|Gender studies|Psychology|History|Social science|Content analysis|Anthropology|Linguistics|Computer science|Philosophy|Archaeology|Machine learning | https://doi.org/10.1177/14648849211064081 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4220708150', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/14648849211064081'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journalism: Theory, Practice & Criticism |
“My second choice was Armenia”: motivations for diasporic return migration among Iranian Armenians to Armenia | Daniel Fittante (https://openalex.org/A5058451276)|James Barry (https://openalex.org/A5028659969) | 2,022 | This article examines the concept of ethnic return migration in permanent settlement Iranian Armenians Republic Armenia. Scholarship on (or diasporic “homecoming”) almost exclusively focuses mobility to or from affluent Western multicultural democracies North America, Europe and Oceania. therefore provides a new opportunity test generalizability existing models migration. fit within what scholarship refers as migrant – that is, migrations motivated, largely, by affective orientation ethnicity perceived home country. However, these are not primarily motivated national longing for an ancestral homeland, but rather variety economic political reasons sit behind migrants’ decisions choose Armenia instead moving country remaining Iran. | article | en | Scholarship|Homecoming|Ethnic group|Homeland|Settlement (finance)|Multiculturalism|Diaspora|Politics|Political science|Gender studies|Sociology|History|Law|World Wide Web|Computer science|Payment|Art history | https://doi.org/10.1080/01419870.2022.2105658 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4289948131', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/01419870.2022.2105658'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | Ethnic and Racial Studies |
“My teachers make me feel alive”: the contribution of student-teacher relationships to student well-being in accelerated education programmes in South Sudan and Uganda | Daniel Shephard (https://openalex.org/A5066540470)|Danielle Falk (https://openalex.org/A5051408267)|Mary Mendenhall (https://openalex.org/A5052836690) | 2,023 | Student-teacher relationships are a key element of schooling that affect students’ well-being. This is especially true in conflict-affected contexts. However, there little research on which dimensions the relationship most important for student well-being such contexts, and even fewer studies deploying cross-country methodology. study addresses gap by drawing from multi-site comparative case including interviews with 75 students multiple schools displacement settings South Sudan Uganda during four field visits 2019. We identify salient student-teacher associated both countries. The first dimension teachers’ fulfilment expectations related to their role as educators. second how teachers expressed enacted care learners. third learners respect each other. fourth comfortable felt seeking help teachers. | article | en | Dimension (graph theory)|Mathematics education|Pedagogy|Student teacher|Element (criminal law)|Psychology|Salient|Student teaching|Affect (linguistics)|Teacher education|Sociology|Political science|Mathematics|Communication|Pure mathematics|Law | https://doi.org/10.1080/03057925.2023.2170168 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4318477512', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/03057925.2023.2170168'} | Sudan | C144024400 | Sociology | Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education |
“NATIONALISM” AND KURDISH NOTABLES IN THE LATE OTTOMAN–EARLY REPUBLICAN ERA | Hakan Özoğlu (https://openalex.org/A5007468162) | 2,001 | The era culminating in World War I saw a transition from multinational empires to nation-states. Large such as the Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman searched for ways cope with decline of their political control, while peoples these shifted loyalties Empire offers favorable canvas studying new nationalisms that resulted many successful unsuccessful attempts form As an example attempts, Arab nationalism has received attention it deserves field Middle Eastern studies. 1 Students have engaged complex debates on different aspects nationalism, enjoying wealth hard data. Studies Kurdish however, are still infancy. Only very few scholars addressed issue scholarly manner. 2 We inadequate understanding nature early its consequences East general Turkish studies particular. Partly because subject's sensitivity, shy away it. However, consideration nation-state can contribute greatly study East. | article | en | Nationalism|Politics|Turkish|Middle East|State (computer science)|Political science|Political economy|Multinational corporation|History|Ancient history|Economic history|Gender studies|Sociology|Law|Philosophy|Linguistics|Algorithm|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1017/s0020743801003038 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2117552864', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/s0020743801003038', 'mag': '2117552864'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | International Journal of Middle East Studies |
“NATO 2030”: survival in a new era | Marco Cruz (https://openalex.org/A5043192244) | 2,021 | NATO is going through a time of high complexity, resulting largely from the deep internal divisions that limit its ability to deal with various strategic challenges. Based on recently published document “NATO 2030: United for new era”, which analyses environment and recommends set lines action organization over next ten years, this article argues most proposed measures strengthen Alliance’s political cohesion can only be successfully implemented if two essential are taken: rapprochement Turkey strengthening cooperation EU. The survival also dependent identification common threat, fundamental type community, condition currently does not exist, especially in relation identified systemic adversaries: Russia China. | article | en | Political science|History|Demography|Sociology | https://doi.org/10.26619/1647-7251.12.1.2 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3159296756', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.26619/1647-7251.12.1.2', 'mag': '3159296756'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Janus.net|Portuguese National Funding Agency for Science, Research and Technology (RCAAP Project by FCT) |
“Nahni wa xfendik” (We and the others): Negotiation of multiple identities in the maronite community of Cyprus | Maria Koumarianou (https://openalex.org/A5021943273) | 2,011 | In this study I will examine the negotiation of multiple identities in Maronite Community Cyprus which comprises four villages occupied territories (Kormakiti, Asomatos, Karpashia, Agia Marina) and a large number displaced population area Nicosia, Larnaca Limassol, especially extent to some are negotiable, while others not. analyze concept collective identity relation religious ethnic factors (Maronite, Arab origin vs Orthodox Cypriots Greek origin), differences within community language (use particular Arabic dialect only by inhabitants Kormakiti, other speak Greek-Cypriot dialect) deliberate identification with Lebanon through Catholicism similarities history. | article | en | Negotiation|Relation (database)|Ethnic group|Identity (music)|Arabic|Geography|Population|Identification (biology)|History|Genealogy|Ancient history|Ethnology|Sociology|Demography|Anthropology|Linguistics|Art|Social science|Aesthetics|Philosophy|Database|Computer science|Botany|Biology | https://doi.org/10.2298/gei1102063k | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2260509859', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.2298/gei1102063k', 'mag': '2260509859'} | Lebanon | C144024400 | Sociology | Glasnik Etnografskog instituta |
“National Homeland” | 2,018 | The Balfour Declaration committed the world's most powerful and wealthy nation to aid in imposition of a “homeland” formed from mass immigration diversely foreign people united by single religion, on an existing, utterly different culture. Chaim Weizmann shared Theodor Herzl's belief that Jewish could only be with strong support nation, need shape its future reality. Patrick Geddes himself believed he offered vision how national homeland create embody essence Passfield White Paper also published October 1930, updated British policy Palestine Churchill's 1922 paper. It emphasized dual obligation Mandate both Arab interests. Arieh Sharon was born Poland, as 20-year-old immigrated Palestine, working for several years kibbutz Gan Shmuel near Haifa, which designed helped build. | other | en | Homeland|Judaism|Declaration|Obligation|Mandate|Political science|Zionism|Immigration|Mandatory Palestine|Law|Palestine|Religious studies|Sociology|History|Ancient history|Philosophy|Theology|Politics | https://doi.org/10.1002/9781119182320.ch3 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4251198751', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1002/9781119182320.ch3'} | Palestine | C144024400 | Sociology | ||
“National Outlook Movement” in Turkey: A Study on the Rise and Development of Islamic Political Parties | Chen Yang (https://openalex.org/A5008412470)|Changgang Guo (https://openalex.org/A5029335646) | 2,015 | :The Turkish “National Outlook Movement”, defined as a continuous Islamic Political Parties’ movement since the 1970s was led by former Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan. Apart from factors of economy, society, psychology, culture and ideology, rise parties due to inclusion-coaptation strategy initiated state. As 40 years’ lasting movement, development, climax, crisis continuity Movement” will be great help in understanding relationship between modernization secularization, religion democracy, well complex reasons religious revival. | article | en | Islam|Secularization|Ideology|Politics|Turkish|Political science|Political economy|Modernization theory|Democracy|Prime minister|Movement (music)|State (computer science)|Reform movement|Sociology|Law|History|Archaeology|Aesthetics|Linguistics|Philosophy|Algorithm|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1080/19370679.2015.12023269 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2884429866', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/19370679.2015.12023269', 'mag': '2884429866'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Middle Eastern and Islamic studies in Asia |
“National security, and all that it implies …”: Communication and (post‐) Cold War culture | Bryan C. Taylor (https://openalex.org/A5055926922)|Stephen John Hartnett (https://openalex.org/A5010862286) | 2,000 | Virginia Carmichael, Framing History: The Rosenberg Story and the Cold War. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1993. xxv + 299 pp., $19.95. Jodi Dean, Aliens in America: Conspiracy Cultures from Outerspace to Cyberspace. Ithaca, NY: Cornell 1998. xii 242 $15.95. Don DeLillo, Underworld. New York: Scribner, 1997. 827 pp.: $16.00. James Der Derian, Antidiplomacy: Spies, Terror, Speed, Cambridge, MA: Blackwell, 1992. ix 215 $25.95. Paul N. Edwards, Closed World: Computers Politics Discourse War America. MIT xx 440 $17.50. Cynthia Enloe, Morning After: Sexual at End Berkeley: California 326 $16.95. Marjorie Garber Rebecca Walkowitz (Eds.), Secret Agents: Case, McCarthyism, Fifties Routledge, 1995. 309 $22.95. Michael Lynch David Bogen, Spectacle Speech, Text, Memory Iran‐Contra Hearings. Durham, N.C.: Duke 1996. 348 O.K. Werckmeister, Citadel Culture. Chicago: Chicago 1991 (German original 1989). 210 $24.95. | article | en | Politics|Religious studies|Framing (construction)|Cold war|Spectacle|Sociology|Media studies|Theology|History|Law|Political science|Philosophy|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1080/00335630009384311 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2058237615', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/00335630009384311', 'mag': '2058237615'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | Quarterly Journal of Speech |
“Nations Are in Conflict, Neighbours Are not”: The Case Study of the Iranian and the Israeli Communities of West Finchley | Shlomit Flint Ashery (https://openalex.org/A5062357974) | 2,023 | This chapter examines the effects of individual-level and household-level interactions between members potentially conflicting migrant groups—Iranians Israelis—on their residential choices observed distribution. The these groups create share same neighbourhoods communal spaces, compete for similar social economic opportunities, use routes integration into new society. case under review, typical suburb West Finchley, a neighbourhood in northwest London, offers an opportunity to examine non-economic processes integration. Finchley residents are close status preferences regarding way life, yet powerful mechanisms result “micro-integration” patterns. Taken together, this encouraging discrepancy political stereotypes reality provides insight other culturally mixed urban areas, where people various live proximity. | review | en | Neighbourhood (mathematics)|Distribution (mathematics)|Politics|Geography|Social integration|Economic geography|Sociology|Social group|Political science|Economic growth|Social science|Economics|Mathematical analysis|Mathematics|Anthropology|Law | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-35483-0_10 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4386567068', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-35483-0_10'} | Iran|Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Springer briefs in geography |
“Native Courts” and the Limits of the Law in Colonial Sudan: Ambiguity as Strategy | Jeffrey Sachs (https://openalex.org/A5001182542) | 2,013 | This article offers a way of thinking about colonial-era legal reform that departs from traditional narratives by highlighting the importance ambiguity in state building projects. Following establishment “Native Administration” Sudan early 1920s, British colonial government conferred expansive judicial and administrative powers on tribal sheikhs nazirs (chiefs), while at same time discouraging many attempts to formalize or standardize those powers, preferring instead they remain informal undefined. policy, which I term “strategic ambiguity,” emerged out belief leaders would be more effective if possessed maximum discretion flexibility, even though result was woefully ill-informed much its own system. These findings point governmental ignorance actually productive sovereignty, not an obstacle it. | article | en | Colonialism|Ambiguity|Sovereignty|Ignorance|Law|Political science|Government (linguistics)|State (computer science)|Discretion|Magistrate|Expansive|Flexibility (engineering)|Sociology|Economics|Politics|Management|Philosophy|Linguistics|Compressive strength|Materials science|Algorithm|Computer science|Composite material | https://doi.org/10.1111/lsi.12040 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1582146045', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/lsi.12040', 'mag': '1582146045'} | Sudan | C144024400 | Sociology | Law & Social Inquiry |
“Native,” “Jewish,” and “European” | Joshua Cole (https://openalex.org/A5015026578) | 2,019 | This chapter describes the changes that took place in Constantine following French conquest, and emergence of new laws determined civil status Algeria’s colonial subjects living under sovereignty. These on turn shaped development economy, transfer land, level political representation afforded different groups who made up polity Algeria. | chapter | en | Polity|Colonialism|CONQUEST|Sovereignty|Judaism|Politics|Representation (politics)|Spanish Civil War|Political science|Law|Ancient history|Ethnology|History|Geography|Political economy|Sociology|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501739415.003.0003 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4252619489', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501739415.003.0003'} | Algeria | C144024400 | Sociology | Cornell University Press eBooks |
“Negro Canaan”: Cotton, Tuskegee, and the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan | Christopher Tounsel (https://openalex.org/A5026728086) | 2,020 | Previous articleNext article No Access“Negro Canaan”: Cotton, Tuskegee, and the Anglo-Egyptian SudanChristopher TounselChristopher Tounsel Search for more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUSFull Text Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited The Journal of African American History Volume 105, Number 1Winter 2020 A journal Association Study Life Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1086/705432 Views: 225Total views on site © History. All rights reserved.PDF download Crossref reports no citing article. | article | en | African american|Download|History|Political science|Anthropology|Sociology|Ethnology|Computer science|Operating system | https://doi.org/10.1086/705432 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3006034886', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1086/705432', 'mag': '3006034886'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | |
“Neighborhood” Concept and the Analysis of Differentiating Sociological Structure with the Change of Dwelling Typology | Dicle Aydın (https://openalex.org/A5034164814)|Süheyla Büyükşahin Sıramkaya (https://openalex.org/A5055934311) | 2,014 | “Neighborhood” concept – which is seen in all cultures even different shapes and under definitions a sub-public area where the most concrete original form of neighborliness take place social cooperation organization are possible. The neighborhood fabric shaped decisiveness geographical structure culture every society exhibits respectful conservative with privacy fact Anatolia's traditional structure. relations this depend on ownership, belonging, tolerance respect. separation from its meaning began change physical forming neighborhood; effect belonging sense citizens became argumentative. sociological analysis having certain identity by means studio housing Konya (Turkey) subject study. preferences variations options started to show differences especially last 10 years (Turkey). Studio houses among be built succession areas close university settlements. Building aim investment making profit, detached given one or two floors within garden development plan make us read identity, increases user density square meter number morphologically contextually inconsistent examples fabric. spatial characteristics houses, their relationships neighbor parcels disrupt usual order negative rapidly increases. This changes resident profile diversifies it. lived/will lived new formation begins existing In study, will analyzed scenarios. While residents have individual life, house nuclear family wide exposed major difference tried focus | article | en | Typology|Sociology|Human settlement|Identity (music)|Studio|Aesthetics|Geography|Computer science|Archaeology|Anthropology|Philosophy|Telecommunications | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sbspro.2014.04.418 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1964773566', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sbspro.2014.04.418', 'mag': '1964773566'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences |
“Neither Eastern nor Western, Iranian”: How the Quest for Self-Sufficiency Helped Shape Iran’s Modern Nationalism | Rudi Matthee (https://openalex.org/A5076877946) | 2,020 | Abstract This essay identifies an historically-enduring Iranian insistence on self-sufficiency—which can be summed up, in a superordinate manner, as the idea that world needs Iran more than world. Economically, this is reflected (rhetorical) quest for self-reliance production; politically, it tends to articulated instinctive anti-(neo)colonial, often defiant stance vis-à-vis world; and culturally, expressed claim civilizational grandeur, indeed uniqueness. The origins of conceit have sought antecedents combining economic perceptions with cultural assumptions long precede Western imperialism modern nationalism. These, turn, are grounded patterns thought reflect specific pre-modern physical geopolitical conditions which go back pre-Islamic notions paradisiacal abundance much realities encapsulated by Aristotle’s idea(l) self-sufficient household. I also argue notion evolved over time even retained its moral core. What was dismissal outside dispensable, after 1800 became self-conscious against foreign encroachment, real or imagined. In course twentieth century, material autarky coupled exceptionalism integral part | article | en | Nationalism|Instinct|Aesthetics|Political economy|Sociology|Political science|Philosophy|Law|Politics|Evolutionary biology|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1163/18747167-bja10001 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3082229989', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1163/18747167-bja10001', 'mag': '3082229989'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Persianate Studies |
“Neither Victims nor Executioners” in Hubert Haddad’s Palestine | Nathalie Debrauwere-Miller (https://openalex.org/A5046274302) | 2,015 | “Neither Victims nor Executioners” in Hubert Haddad’s Palestine1 Nathalie Debrauwere-Miller (bio) One must understand what fear means: it implies and rejects. It rejects the same fact: a world where murder is legitimate, human life considering trifling. . All I ask that, midst of murderous world, we agree to reflect on make choice. After can distinguish those who accept consequence being murderers themselves or accomplices murderers, refuse do so with all their force being. Since this terrible dividing line does actually exist, will be gain if clearly marked. Albert Camus (Neither Executioners, 1946) Camus,2 himself born Algeria during period French colonization, has inspired Francophone Arab-Muslim Jewish writers from Maghreb such as Boualem Sansal, Yasmina Khadra, Colette Fellous, Abdelkader Djemaï, Maïssa Bey3 have found his work productive echo own meditations. Camus’s conception terrorism “inevitable” yet “unjustifiable,”4 which he elaborated texts dealing terrorist acts late 1940s then Algerian war independence (1954–1962), resonates 2007 novel Palestine more intensely than any other literary terrorism.5 This especially true notion “neither victims executioners,” title essay that synthesizes series eight articles published between 1946 1947.6 Neither Nor stresses nothing legitimate murder, cornerstone my comparison Haddad Camus. essay, provides theoretical framework fiction, crystallizes rejection false choice either justifiable murderer regrettable victimization well response by creates an unending cycle violence. criticizes ideological construction victimhood but emphasizes figure innocence central work; for him, “pure innocence” represented face child leads calls “fair balanced revolt” opposed “perverted embodied legitimization terror name ‘the ends justify means.’ “No cause justifies [End Page 67] death innocent” could postulate Middle East, Executioners maintained certain currency its appeal dialogue truce. A Tunisian writer origin, was father mother 1947. He left Tunis 1950 family settled educated Paris, had already been living many years. started prolific career poet, essayist novelist towards end sixties.7 The similarity migrational demographic situation (both established Paris before decolonization North Africa, education schools) makes familiarity almost inevitable. Palestine, won him Prix Renaudot 2009,8 explores Israeli-Palestinian conflict slaughter innocent represents thin martyrdom madness. casts ethnographic gaze cult martyr/hero seems define East terrorism. achievement interpreted plea deconstruction binary Arab Jew refusal assign guilt party. shows porousness victim/perpetrator dichotomy often shapes political contemporary using “memory” (and loss) means think through role myth history both populations. However, humanist desire symmetry would question very possibility discourses even thinkable at stake? Would impartiality possible without falling into agenda? Does Haddad’s... | article | en | Terrorism|Palestine|Psychoanalysis|Independence (probability theory)|World War II|Miller|Nazism|Philosophy|History|Law|Political science|Psychology|Ancient history|Politics|Ecology|Statistics|Mathematics|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1353/scr.2015.0011 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1479453185', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1353/scr.2015.0011', 'mag': '1479453185'} | Algeria|Israel|Palestine|Tunisia | C203133693 | Terrorism | South Central Review |
“Neither here nor there”: A Conversation with Laila Halaby | İshak Berrebbah (https://openalex.org/A5050461007)|Laila Halaby (https://openalex.org/A5085521627) | 2,021 | Arab American literature, especially the novel, according to literary critic Steven Salaita, has developed “as a formidable art form in community” (2011, 2). In Salaita’s view, literature “is undergoing something of qualitative and quantitative maturation” (2). However, Salaita also points out that it is difficult define because “diverse heterogeneous” (4). The definition complex identity its producers, such as novelists poets, even more per se. diversity backgrounds for Arab-American authors significant their ties both world USA hold political ambiguities characterizations. Such plays key role determining relationship between community other dominant minority groups. This relationship, Fadda-Conrey suggests, features “common experience struggle against marginalization discrimination, well continuous negotiation issues related politics, in-betweenness, multiple home fronts, uneasy belongings” (2014, 8). It is, therefore, necessary approach those who contributed creation canon understand how they reflect on writings. As such, I have conducted an interview with Laila Halaby – prominent novelist shine light some components much her own writer, American, citizen. posits critical questions regards two fascinating contemporary novels, West Jordan (2003), which won prestigious PEN Beyond Margins Award, Once Promised Land (2007). former tells story four female cousins Palestinian origin adolescent years: Soraya Khadija live USA; Hala lives USA, particularly Arizona; Mawal small traditional village known Nawara. They differing conditions encounter several bitter experiences due cultural, political, social, economic reasons. latter revolves around couple, Salwa Jassim, migrate from settle Arizona, search better opportunities lead successful lives. inhospitable climate repercussions ravages 9/11 events. find themselves at crossroads helplessly endeavour straddle different cultures. was born Lebanon mother Jordanian father. She spent most years when she growing up Arizona where formed understanding meeting point conflicting cultures hyphenated identity. comments: “My father always lived Jordan, my States, so I’ve never felt like I’m Arab-American. feel but hyphen lost me. Even though live, you know? It’s funny” (https://americanwritersmuseum.org/my-america-laila-halaby/2020). justifies this claim answer interview: “When navigating these labels, Arab-Americans seemed culture. things, merged category. With increased immigration, ‘Arab-American,’ me, general term than once.” currently working counsellor psychosocial oncology Cancer Centre, University Merck Foundation grant. | article | en | Identity (music)|Politics|Conversation|Diversity (politics)|American literature|Negotiation|Sociology|Gender studies|History|Literature|Aesthetics|Political science|Law|Social science|Anthropology|Art|Communication | https://doi.org/10.4000/ces.7740 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3184650645', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.4000/ces.7740', 'mag': '3184650645'} | Jordan|Lebanon | C144024400 | Sociology | Commonwealth essays and studies|Pure (Coventry University)|Pure (Coventry University) |
“Neither<i>Ākhūnd</i>nor<i>Fukulī</i>”:<i>Munāzirah</i>and the Discourse of Iranian Modernity | Hamid Rezaeiyazdi (https://openalex.org/A5052035232) | 2,016 | Iranian modernity has chiefly been examined in the context of a dialectical antagonism between “traditionalists” and “modernists”—the main categories comprised related sub-headings such as “Islamist” versus “secular,” “reactionary” “revolutionary,” “regressive” “progressive.” Following this binaristic approach, adaptations have often (de)historicized theatre national “awakening” resulting from toils secular intellectuals overcoming obstinate resistance traditional reactionaries, confrontation two purportedly well-defined mutually exclusive camps. Such reductionist dialectics generally overwritten dialogic narrative modernity, conflicted dialogue misrepresented conflicting dialectic. It also silenced an important feature modernity: universally acknowledged premise simultaneity commensurability tradition with modernity. The monāzereh (disputation or debate) is account interaction rival discourses that engaged opposing, informing, appropriating each other process adapting Narrativizing history conflict binaries overlooks its hyphenated, liminal identity—a adaptation rather than wholesale adoption, heterogeneity homogeneity, dialogics dialectics. modern histories. | article | en | Modernity|Dialectic|Narrative|Sociology|Ethos|Aesthetics|Philosophy|Epistemology|Gender studies|Linguistics | https://doi.org/10.1080/00210862.2016.1210293 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2548847308', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/00210862.2016.1210293', 'mag': '2548847308'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | Iranian Studies |
“Never Again War” | Kristopher Norris (https://openalex.org/A5012904145) | 2,014 | Abstract This essay addresses the complexities of R oman C atholic position on war by evaluating recent documentary evidence, attending to contemporary challenges terrorism and humanitarian interventions. It presents two arguments. First, traditional resources for assessing war, papal criticism military action, debates about a shift in just logic, this argues that teaching has undergone repositioning pacifist direction. Second, it contends critiques scholars such as G eorge W eigel J ames T urner ohnson, however, are wrong categorize “functional pacifism.” Though development from within theory reasoning, Church's new stance does not operate type pacifism, allowing too many possibilities justified armed conflict be labeled “functional” pacifism. The concludes examining theological commitments place limits any movement toward precluding even functionally position. | article | en | Just war theory|Criticism|Terrorism|Action (physics)|Position (finance)|Spanish Civil War|Law|Epistemology|Sociology|Political science|Philosophy|Physics|Quantum mechanics|Finance|Economics | https://doi.org/10.1111/jore.12046 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1833636113', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/jore.12046', 'mag': '1833636113'} | Oman | C144024400|C203133693 | Sociology|Terrorism | Journal of Religious Ethics |
“Never Waste a Good Crisis”: Critical University Studies during and after a Pandemic | Vineeta Singh (https://openalex.org/A5046183664) | 2,021 | “Never Waste a Good Crisis”: Critical University Studies during and after Pandemic Vineeta Singh (bio) A Third Is Possible. By la paperson. Minneapolis: of Minnesota Press, 2017. xxv + 72 pages. $10.00 (paper). $4.95 (e-book). Beyond Education: Radical Studying for Another World. Eli Meyerhoff. 2019. 272 $100.00 (cloth). $24.95 Making the World Global: U.S. Universities Production Global Imaginary. Isaac Kamola. Durham, NC: Duke xix 282 $104.95 $27.95 Teach Arabia: American Universities, Liberalism, Transnational Qatar. Neha Vora. Stanford, CA: Stanford xi 217 $85.00 $25.00 Higher education, you may have heard, is in crisis. Since early stages pandemic, academics written incisively about how emergency response functioning as pretext to speed up trends that were already remaking US higher education image (highly stratified) marketplace.1 We are watching pivot virtual teaching increase “datafication” while increasing administrative oversight, restricting faculty autonomy, loads, furthering casualization academic labor force.2 As long I (and my millennial cohorts) been alive, has on precipice some existential catastrophe. Breathless media coverage imminent demise we know it—whether due Culture Wars, globalization, MOOCS, or Great Recession—has constant companion through our educational trajectories.3 also seen other, less-heralded changes regimes production [End Page 181] shape labor.4 The effects compounding crises made most us overworked underpaid graduate students, adjuncts, contingent faculty. But these moves not gone uncontested. Our time academe marked by successive waves student student-worker organizing—antiwar organizing 2000s; Black student-led activism turn diversity rhetoric into material gains Studies, faculty; Palestinian Muslim BDS organizing; 2010 wave occupations protesting austerity measures; series worker unionization campaigns; campaigns divest from private prisons fossil fuels; COLA wildcat strikes still playing out across UC system. In sum, university site deep contestation. negotiating moments movements, repeatedly university, like other public institutions embedded racial capitalist settler state, hapless victim but actively co-produces networks, ideologies, decision-makers create conditions austerity. cannot help see current apocalypse result freestanding pandemic part larger power structures ensured this “natural disaster” artificially distributed. field critical studies (CUS) crystallized last 2008 grappling with nature labor, organizing, relation capital. This review essay examines four recent publications CUS question popular common senses what, how, why study academy. Bridging variety disciplinary orientations, methodologies, audiences, all share desire return imagined ivory tower to, Kamola’s terms, “a place-in-the-world” (16). At when called defend old normal, texts can terrain which normal was built gesturing alternative terms engagement reconstruction What follows brief introduction each book, discussion its contributions stretch studies, then, way conclusion, reflections scholars invested decolonizing abolitionist world-making might use pandemic. and... | review | en | Demise|Globalization|Higher education|Media studies|Autonomy|Economic history|Political science|Sociology|History|Law | https://doi.org/10.1353/aq.2021.0014 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3146971488', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1353/aq.2021.0014', 'mag': '3146971488'} | Qatar | C144024400 | Sociology | American Quarterly |
“New Diaspora Philanthropy”? The Philanthropy of the UJA-Federation of New York Toward Israel | Hanna Shaul Bar Nissim (https://openalex.org/A5007827651) | 2,019 | This article explores the ways in which new philanthropic practices and grant-making patterns changed Jewish diaspora philanthropy. Based on an in-depth exploration of philanthropy UJA-Federation New York toward Israel, posits development a outlines its characteristics expressions. Findings suggest missions, goals, activities, Israel point to shift extent donor engagement decision-making. The offers broader discussion meanings implications for integration institutional environments, form practices, organizational field philanthropy, while highlighting dilemmas generated process Federation recipient organizations. | article | en | Diaspora|Judaism|Sociology|Field (mathematics)|Political science|Public relations|Public administration|Gender studies|History|Mathematics|Archaeology|Pure mathematics | https://doi.org/10.1177/0899764019828048 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2913163371', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/0899764019828048', 'mag': '2913163371'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly |
“New Mediterranean Biodiversity Records” 2019 | Nir Stern (https://openalex.org/A5073377999)|Ali Badreddine (https://openalex.org/A5031184069)|Ghazi Bitar (https://openalex.org/A5018162662)|Fabio Crocetta (https://openalex.org/A5063018168)|Alan Deidun (https://openalex.org/A5082244480)|Branco Dragičević (https://openalex.org/A5020334933)|Jakov Dulčić (https://openalex.org/A5056060296)|Hani Durgham (https://openalex.org/A5018701091)|Bella S. Galil (https://openalex.org/A5073679637)|M. Galiya (https://openalex.org/A5002103107)|Samar Ikhtiyar (https://openalex.org/A5006812412)|Andreas Izquiredo-Muñoz (https://openalex.org/A5005865194)|Abderrahmane Kassar (https://openalex.org/A5084170280)|Andrea Lombardo (https://openalex.org/A5034455164)|Hadas Lubinevsky (https://openalex.org/A5022355959)|David Masalles (https://openalex.org/A5067512188)|RANIM MOHAMAD OTHMAN (https://openalex.org/A5072105021)|Mariam Oussellam (https://openalex.org/A5079335348)|Vladimir Pešić (https://openalex.org/A5035336774)|Carlo Pipitone (https://openalex.org/A5037757864)|Alfonso A. Ramos‐Esplá (https://openalex.org/A5039601597)|Gil Rilov (https://openalex.org/A5078979792)|Shevy Bat-Sheva Rothman (https://openalex.org/A5029684642)|Mohamed Selfati (https://openalex.org/A5027133593)|Francesco Tiralongo (https://openalex.org/A5003548954)|Ali Türker (https://openalex.org/A5029582924)|Pero Ugarković (https://openalex.org/A5063739256)|Sercan Yapıcı (https://openalex.org/A5016050253)|Bruno Zava (https://openalex.org/A5050084607) | 2,019 | This is the second collective paper issued in 2019, currently amalgamates new knowledge on Mediterranean geographic distributions of 17 species from five phyla (six aliens, three cosmopolitans, two east Atlantic records and six natives). The acknowledged were reported ten countries, mentioned here west to east: Spain: first report grouper Cephalopholis taeniops western an inclusion Pontarachna puntulum Litarachna communis pontarachnid fauna Spain; Morocco: record Solea senegalensis Moroccan coast; Algeria: a valid confirmation for presence Sardinella maderensis; Malta: Red Sea stomatopod Erugosquilla massavensis; Italy: rare observation crab Paragalene longicrura Siciliy further integration alien brown shrimp Penaeus aztecus commercial catch Sicily; Montenegro: Lessepsian bigfin reef squid Sepioteuthis lessoniana Adriatic Sea; Turkey: northernmost documentation flatworm Prostheceraeus giesbrechtii Aegean Israel: solid population establishment both rock Sicyonia lancifer angelfish, deepest crystalline goby Odondebuenia balearica; Lebanon: jellyfish Pelagia noctiluca; Syria: crown Nausithoe punctate smallscale codlet Bregmaceros nectabanus. | article | en | Fishery|Geography|Population|Mediterranean sea|Shrimp|Jellyfish|Mediterranean climate|Biology|Oceanography|Archaeology|Geology|Demography|Sociology | https://doi.org/10.12681/mms.20602 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2972404370', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.12681/mms.20602', 'mag': '2972404370'} | Algeria|Israel|Lebanon|Morocco|Syria|Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Mediterranean Marine Science|LA Referencia (Red Federada de Repositorios Institucionales de Publicaciones Científicas)|OAR@UM (University of Malta) |
“New Periphery Strategy” of Israel | Kostenko Y.I. (https://openalex.org/A5090034357) | 2,017 | Israel’s strategy of the “periphery Doctrine” served as a way to enhance security and economic ties reduce isolation. Following deterioration regional situation Israel had begun consolidate new relations with peripheral nations. The post-Arab Spring order has largely transformed Central Asia-Israel potential partnership. New jeopardized geostrategic balance, so that country is looking deepen alliances in Muslim world. Asian states can fill role. basis for this partnership understanding by involved parties they share certain interests provide benefits. relationships between countries are long-established cordial political, strategic realms, based on shared views world intense person-to-person relations. All governments cultivated their secular traditions stepped up anti-Islamic stance fear development domestic, Islamic-oriented opposition. Islam no specific legal status any five region, fight against alleged Islamic extremism become mainstay domestic foreign policies. This article surveys constellation bilateral formed Asia draws comparison previous Turkey Iran. Person-to-person probably Tel-Aviv’s leading means influence region. Israeli investments have strengthened political | article | en | Islam|Political science|Politics|Opposition (politics)|General partnership|Central asia|Political economy|Territorial integrity|Alliance|Economy|Development economics|Law|Sociology|Geography|Sovereignty|International trade|Economics|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.24833/2071-8160-2017-1-52-101-118 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2607346657', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.24833/2071-8160-2017-1-52-101-118', 'mag': '2607346657'} | Iran|Israel|Turkey | C144024400|C47768531 | Development economics|Sociology | Vestnik MGIMO-universiteta |
“New Realities on the Ground” | Elliott Abrams (https://openalex.org/A5012580766) | 2,013 | If Ariel Sharon had been vague in his Herzliya speech of December 2003, he did not wait long to spell out intentions Israelis and the world. On February 2, 2004, told an interviewer from Israeli newspaper Haaretz that would remove all 17 settlements every (there were roughly 7,500) Gaza. “It is my intention carry evacuation – sorry, a relocation cause us problems places we will hold onto anyway final settlement, like Gaza settlements,” said, though gave no timetable. “I am working on assumption future there be Jews Gaza.” | chapter | en | Relocation|Settlement (finance)|Human settlement|Spell|Newspaper|Interview|History|Political science|Law|Sociology|Archaeology|Business|Computer science|Finance|Anthropology|Payment|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1017/cbo9781139381321.005 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2497488257', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/cbo9781139381321.005', 'mag': '2497488257'} | Gaza|Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Cambridge University Press eBooks |
“New Wars” and Classic Imperialism: The Siege on Gaza and the Occupation of the West Bank | Ron J. Smith (https://openalex.org/A5000152404) | 2,011 | Proponents of the New Wars thesis contend that warfare is evolving into a new era, one has by necessity placed among civilians. Much this era-based analysis designed to condition reader acceptance an overt targeting civilian papers, justified through claim war on terror will be fought in spaces. A more critical reading notion wars rejects can divided neat chronological categories, and voluntary have always been against population, particularly colonialism. Wars, rather than being innovation strategies war, are simply evolution rhetoric deeply bound with process neoliberal colonialism, essentially nothing new. Following warnings Naomi Klein's Shock Doctrine (Klein 2007), it stands reason inseparable from anti-state strategies, civilians infrastructure institutions they rely upon. This paper examine “New Wars” context current Israeli occupation Gaza understand significance real-world context. Gazan for relies participant observation interviews undertaken author summer 2009 Gaza, corroborated press reports. The article these sources due dearth geographical academic writing edited volume help address. | article | en | Context (archaeology)|Doctrine|Colonialism|Rhetoric|State (computer science)|Siege|Political economy|Law|Nothing|Political science|Sociology|History|Ancient history|Epistemology|Linguistics|Philosophy|Archaeology|Algorithm|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1177/194277861100400106 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2477194842', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/194277861100400106', 'mag': '2477194842'} | Gaza|Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Human Geography |
“New speakers” and Koiné – Results of a survey | Sandra Ziagos (https://openalex.org/A5003368275) | 2,012 | Abstract The aim of this article, based on the results a survey conducted in Morocco, is to show that “new speakers”, caught conflict between tolerance variation and use preferred forms, are also gatekeepers further language development towards Moroccan Koiné. | article | en | Variation (astronomy)|Linguistics|Geography|Sociology|History|Astronomy|Philosophy|Physics | https://doi.org/10.1524/stuf.2012.0022 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2563390956', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1524/stuf.2012.0022', 'mag': '2563390956'} | Morocco | C144024400 | Sociology | Language Typology and Universals |
“New” State Actors and Conflict-Affected States: Confronting Violence, Shifting Ambitions, and Adjusting Principles | Agnieszka Paczyńska (https://openalex.org/A5041556755) | 2,021 | Over the past couple of decades, “new” state actors, such as Brazil, China, Russia, India, Turkey, and countries Arab Gulf, have been playing an increasingly prominent role in assistance provision to conflict-affected states. Skeptical liberal peace-building model, they emphasized supporting economic development avoided promoting political reforms, viewing them too interventionist domestic affairs Rather, solidarity, cooperation, mutual support, respect for sovereignty; are committed non-intervention norms. However, foreign policies actors far from static. This article argues that these norms mask more complex relationships between Historically, tended adhere less their immediate neighborhood. Now, become deeply engaged with emerging out violent conflict, come aspire global roles, competition among has risen, adherence principles non-interference is under strain regarding issues peace security shifting. | article | en | Sovereignty|Solidarity|Political science|State (computer science)|Political economy|Intervention (counseling)|China|Territorial integrity|Politics|Skepticism|International relations|Development economics|Sociology|Law|Psychology|Economics|Philosophy|Epistemology|Algorithm|Psychiatry|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.3389/fpos.2021.663432 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3158183214', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.3389/fpos.2021.663432', 'mag': '3158183214'} | Turkey | C144024400|C47768531 | Development economics|Sociology | Frontiers in political science |
“Ni repentance ni excuses”: France’s symbolic acts of monumentalizing the memory of the Algerian War of Independence | Maria Vendetti (https://openalex.org/A5088547200) | 2,023 | AbstractIn January 2021, the historian Benjamin Stora filed a report commissioned by French president Emmanuel Macron. The report, “Les questions mémorielles portant sur la colonisation et guerre d’Algérie,” contains Stora’s conclusions and recommendations on contested memorial history between Algeria France pursues mission of bringing regard lucide to past, fostering spirit reconciliation that will lead increased education for younger generations both countries. In response Élysée quickly stated while it planned carry out symbolic acts in neither repentance nor formal apologies would be extended Algeria.As an act rather than reparation, encourages establishment physical monuments gestures events reify disputes around Franco-Algerian war. Official monumentalization make memory material public spaces limit conversations about reparations repentance. This article argues political approach silences debate, perpetuates long tradition stifling discourse Algerian War its aftermaths. By imagining current potential future lieux de mémoire as sufficient calls government refuses recognize possibility decolonizing collective Independence sphere.RésuméEn janvier l’historien déposé un rapport sollicité par le Président Macron qui se nomme d’Algérie.” Le comprend les recommandations au sujet l’histoire mémorielle contestée entre l’Algérie cherche à poser “regard lucide” passé promouvoir esprit réconciliation afin mieux informer jeunes générations des deux pays. L’Élysée dit aussitôt qu’alors qu’elle envisageait actes symboliques suite rapport, gouvernement français n’offrira ni excuses l’Algérie.Comme acte plutôt que réparation, favorise fondation physiques gestes mémoriels concrétisent débats francoalgérienne. Les officiels monumentalisation rendent concrète dans l’espace limitent réparations L’article présent avance processus part du silence débat perpétue longue d’étouffer discours autour d’indépendance ses suites. En imaginant actuels potentiels comme une réponse suffisante aux appels pour réparations, refuse possibilité décoloniser d’Algérie. | article | fr | Repentance|Independence (probability theory)|Politics|Spanish Civil War|Collective memory|Government (linguistics)|Law|History|Humanities|Political science|Sociology|Art|Theology|Philosophy|Statistics|Linguistics|Mathematics | https://doi.org/10.3828/cfc.2023.3 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4365447555', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.3828/cfc.2023.3'} | Algeria | C144024400 | Sociology | Contemporary French civilization |
“Nibtidi mnin il-hikaya [Where are we to start the tale?]”: violence, intimacy, and recollection | Stefania Pandolfo (https://openalex.org/A5049316482) | 2,006 | Based on an ethnographic fragment from the author’s anthropological research at a Moroccan psychiatric hospital, this article is reflection “border zones” of theory and experience, increasingly stuff everyday life, which are crucial for understanding life in indeterminacy normal pathological, subjectivity depersonalization, remembrance forgetting, emancipation subjugation. The follows trace Freud’s insight enigmatic bond mimesis alterity, creation destruction that he called “affective tie”, understood here as intimate heterogeneity, “imprint” another world, both self other born, process becoming other. It addresses these questions through discussion “traumatic writing” Palestinian author Ilyas Khouri story woman patient whose existence shared “cohabitation” with jinn, boundary demonological possession biomedical reasoning. | article | en | Subjectivity|Alterity|Forgetting|Psychoanalysis|Possession (linguistics)|Sociology|Ambivalence|Psychology|Epistemology|Philosophy|Cognitive psychology|Linguistics | https://doi.org/10.1177/0539018406066527 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2142958636', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/0539018406066527', 'mag': '2142958636'} | Morocco | C144024400 | Sociology | Social Science Information |
“Night Hawks” Watching Over the City: Redeployment of Night Watchmen and the Politics of Public Space in Turkey | Bülent Batuman (https://openalex.org/A5047845268)|Feyzan Erkíp (https://openalex.org/A5049829809) | 2,019 | Technological advances have enormously increased surveillance techniques in the last three decades. In this article, we scrutinize re-instatement of bekçi, traditional night watchmen patrolling residential neighborhoods Turkey, which was obsolete for We analyze re-emergence bekçi relation to dynamics urbanization, and with a perspective power surveillance. Our discussion bridges Foucauldian notion “visibility,” equating it being subject surveillance, Arendtian emphasis on “appearance” as precondition claim public space (hence, citizenship) order uncover role visibility within mechanisms space. argue that although seems outmoded, especially context ever-increasing advancement technologies; its recent deployment spaces Turkish metropolises brings about new modes politics parallel changing modality urban environment. | article | en | Politics|Visibility|Context (archaeology)|Public space|Power (physics)|Patrolling|Turkish|Sociology|Political science|Geography|Law|Engineering|Architectural engineering|Linguistics|Philosophy|Physics|Archaeology|Quantum mechanics|Meteorology | https://doi.org/10.1177/1206331219886254 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2983436256', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/1206331219886254', 'mag': '2983436256'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Space and Culture|Bilkent University Institutional Repository (Bilkent University) |
“Night Milk”: Energy Development and Conflict in Kenya’s Turkana County | Immo Eulenberger (https://openalex.org/A5013045919) | 2,022 | What happens when precious resources are being tapped in a region flooded with guns over decades of civil war; where climate and poverty extreme, mismanagement corruption pervasive, influence national decision-making marginal; conflicts regularly fought by hundreds heavily armed men; boundary disputes mix long-standing inter-ethnic violence? While such conditions led to almost half century war South Sudan, the dreaded resource curse cannot be said have struck similar brutality Kenya’s Turkana region, just across border. Or should we say, “Not yet”? is there no thing as anyway? In this chapter, I will discuss these questions, related theorems, implications for development consciously structured transformation, energy economies, priority hierarchies that guide—or guide—decision makers, practice research. contend ‘resource curse’ dynamics real but not inevitable, how they play out different sectors depends on players involved—from politicians, companies, donors NGOs, associations non-elite locals—use their power maintain, negotiate or change terms cooperation. The contrast between Kenya Sudan suggests “pre-existing conditions,” i.e. critical sociopolitical structures developments, shape both opportunity landscapes strategies which use exploit them. argue: elements determine much outcome, including economic, social ecological health; strong democratic mechanisms cultures compromise key containing damage conflict; international actors an important stake; also, stability alone isn’t enough prevent disaster. | chapter | en | Elite|Negotiation|Curse|Resource curse|Democracy|Political science|Language change|Poverty|Development economics|Geography|Political economy|Compromise|Natural resource|Economic growth|Sociology|Economics|Politics|Law|Art|Literature|Anthropology | https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004530065_005 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4320063211', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004530065_005'} | Sudan | C144024400|C189326681|C47768531 | Development economics|Poverty|Sociology | |BRILL eBooks |
“Nightingales in Baghdad” – 1920s-1950s Iraqi music, archives and live performance | Coline Houssais (https://openalex.org/A5056573145) | 2,020 | “Once upon a night, I stumbled blurry black and white Youtube video of Salima Murad, the greatest Iraqi singer 20th century. While most musical memories from pre-revolutionary Iraq have been destroyed during past decades, some preserved as family archives. Today, they uploaded on Internet digitally recreate that no longer exists, yet is gaining unprecedented exposure both within diaspora beyond”. Hence starts live creation produced about golden age music. It puts question forgotten – not to say erased at heart its narrative while heavily relying video, sound image archives painstakingly sourced, curated edited into performance mixing music, storytelling VJ (video-dj). In this paper unveil making show, focusing challenges locate obtain high definition also explain how addressed these obstacles played lack and/or lesser quality pieces bring back life faithful vibrant an bygone Baghdad was possible. Shown Institut du monde arabe (2017), des Cultures d’Islam (2018) musée d’Art et d’Histoire judaïsme (2020), “Nightingales in Baghdad” echoes power arts, enduring imbalance ownership between former colonies colonial powers well pros cons amateur archive digitalization. | article | en | Amateur|Storytelling|Diaspora|Art|Visual arts|Musical|Narrative|Power (physics)|History|Colonialism|The arts|Art history|Media studies|Literature|Sociology|Political science|Law|Physics|Archaeology|Quantum mechanics | https://doi.org/10.4000/ema.13196 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3111251242', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.4000/ema.13196', 'mag': '3111251242'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | Egypte/Monde Arabe|Industrias Culturais (Universidade de Coimbra) |
“Nign 3” from Beregovskii’s Jewish Folk Tunes Without Words: An Intro- duction to the Study of Hassidic Music in its Ukrainian Context | Michael Lukin (https://openalex.org/A5006241567)|Edwin Seroussi (https://openalex.org/A5003347484) | 2,020 | The article is a collaboration of two research projects: first one the new an- notated edition Moisei Beregovskii’s collection Hassidic tunes (1946) in prepa- ration by Yaakov Mazor framework Jewish Music Research Centre Hebrew University Jerusalem. second project collaborative Israeli- Ukrainian titled “The Nign Right Bank Ukraine and East Galicia: Between Autochthonous External Soundscapes” lead three additional au- thors present article. dedicated to study music Hasidism, main representative kind which nign – religious song, performed mainly without words, men, solo or collectively, monophonic texture, fulfilling various functions mystical background. has apparently started crystallize from mid-eighteenth century onwards on territories Podillya Volyn, with consolidation movement those areas (then Po- land later Russian Empire). Noticed many scholars, affinity that have mu- sic both their co-territorial non-Jewish societies led key question this study, is: What insights can gain compara- tive analysis melodies fuller picture soundscape. methodology its historical, regional conceptual contexts based comparative (the itself attributed founder Chernobyl dynasty, Rabbi Mordechai Cher- nobyl, tune transcribed M. Beregovskii memory 1920 republished times), another version Joseph Achron, four compositions anthology folk Z. Lysko. preliminary results these musical texts terms form, modality, melodic contour, rhythm performance practice, stage show more differences than similarities between contexts. | article | en | Ukrainian|Judaism|Context (archaeology)|Soundscape|Active listening|Jewish music|Melody|History|Mysticism|Folk music|Literature|Sociology|Classics|Musical|Art|Jewish studies|Linguistics|Communication|Sound (geography)|Haskalah|Philosophy|Archaeology|Geomorphology|Geology | https://doi.org/10.33398/2523-4846-2020-16-1-141-157 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3128861052', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.33398/2523-4846-2020-16-1-141-157', 'mag': '3128861052'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Етномузика |
“No Home Away From Home”: The Discourse of Home in Ads for Third-Age Housing | Sharon Ramer-biel (https://openalex.org/A5006391631)|Anat First (https://openalex.org/A5046997066) | 2,011 | The study examines shifts in the concept of “home” by analyzing discourse ads for third-age housing. These offer an opportunity to examine ways which alternative perceptions “sense place” are presented. were mapped and categorized according their position on axis representing changes attitude elderly population Israel home, with two poles defined as “building a home” “dismantling home.” Analysis focused specific aspect moving away from home. This contains interconnected levels, private home national interact four dimensions: (1) Physical—reference dwelling itself; (2) Social—reference role family, friends, social activities offered; (3) Cultural—reference leisure (4) Economic—reference residence property. | article | en | Residence|Sociology|Perception|Position (finance)|Population|Advertising|Social psychology|Gender studies|Psychology|Business|Demography|Finance|Neuroscience | https://doi.org/10.1080/15405702.2011.584459 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1978846688', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/15405702.2011.584459', 'mag': '1978846688'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Popular Communication |
“No One to Drive the Car” | Joel Bettridge (https://openalex.org/A5083773971) | 2,009 | Talk of poetry is embarrassing, I think, in the way talk God is. Poets and critics who fess up to their literary activities interests leave strangers on planes, distant relatives, even a good many academics with very little say. Qualifying confessions words like “avant-garde” “innovative” can make these same poets feel Wittgenstein’s lion who, if it speaks, nobody understands. The kind awkwardness they produce familiar people admit believe Yahweh led his out Egypt or Muhammad ascended heaven creature named Buraq. believers share sense discomfort, struggle for response, which comes from not being able explain lives parlance. Simply spoken, vocabularies service innovative put enormous pressure what are doing as language—they mark themselves systems value, reveal demands listeners, those listeners might resent understand. If only appear less dogmatic, religious begin about mean why do often find that explanations matters worse, commitment itself embarrassing. It makes everyone vulnerable; expands gulfbetween leaves them without anything hide behind. | chapter | en | Heaven|nobody|Poetry|Value (mathematics)|Aesthetics|Literature|Sociology|Media studies|Art|Computer science|Machine learning|Operating system | https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230101265_1 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2506539524', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230101265_1', 'mag': '2506539524'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | Palgrave Macmillan US eBooks |
“No Palestinian House Is Without Tears” | Matthew D. Zimmerman (https://openalex.org/A5045963219) | 2,021 | Abstract This article argues that as American Jewish support for Israel wanes Jews need a new ethical framework in which to understand the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. It extends discourse beyond narrative and examines values of empathy responsibility toward Palestinians, well importance recognizing historical injustices perpetrated by Israel. draws on work scholars discusses their ideas conjunction with author's experiences congregational rabbi. evaluates dual-narrative approach then focuses Bashir Amos Goldberg explore how narratives such me-shoah le-tekumah, from destruction Holocaust rebirth Israel, can lead view Palestinian experience entirely separate own. | article | en | The Holocaust|Judaism|Narrative|Empathy|Sociology|Political science|Gender studies|History|Law|Psychology|Social psychology|Literature|Art|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.5325/jjewiethi.6.2.0184 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3162665693', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.5325/jjewiethi.6.2.0184', 'mag': '3162665693'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | The journal of Jewish ethics |
“No Palestinian House Is Without Tears”: Disrupting American Jewish Narratives of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict | Laurie Zimmerman (https://openalex.org/A5007812348) | 2,021 | Abstract This article argues that as American Jewish support for Israel wanes Jews need a new ethical framework in which to understand the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. It extends discourse beyond narrative and examines values of empathy responsibility toward Palestinians, well importance recognizing historical injustices perpetrated by Israel. draws on work scholars discusses their ideas conjunction with author's experiences congregational rabbi. evaluates dual-narrative approach then focuses Bashir Amos Goldberg explore how narratives such me-shoah le-tekumah, from destruction Holocaust rebirth Israel, can lead view Palestinian experience entirely separate own. | article | en | Judaism|The Holocaust|Narrative|Empathy|Sociology|Gender studies|Political science|History|Religious studies|Law|Psychology|Social psychology|Literature|Art|Philosophy|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.5325/jjewiethi.6.2.184 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4290658651', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.5325/jjewiethi.6.2.184'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Hiperboreea |
“No TERFs On Our TURF:” Building Alliances Through Fractions on Social Media in İstanbul | Lara Özlen (https://openalex.org/A5005111757) | 2,020 | I draw on public articulations of trans subjectivities in contemporary Turkey, İstanbul, order to identify key points contestations between myriad gender and sexuality-related activisms, notably the cis-feminism/trans-feminism dichotomy. question claim “western import” upheld by transphobic trans-exclusionary discourses Turkey. argue that questions related inclusivity and/or transphobia Turkey are reflective unresolved tensions LGBTI+ activists cis-feminists can be traced back as early 1990s. By doing so, hope provide a better understanding continuity debate rather than its presumed emergence. Ultimately, aim my analysis is recommendations while focusing building alliances through many fractions involved trans, queer, feminist activisms | article | en | Feminism|Transphobia|Queer|Gender studies|Human sexuality|Sociology|Public sphere|Transgender|Political science|Politics|Law | https://doi.org/10.36583/2020060316 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3150009507', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.36583/2020060316', 'mag': '3150009507'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | |
“No bearer of burdens will bear the burden of another” (Q 53: 38) | Uriel Simonsohn (https://openalex.org/A5083596630) | 2,023 | Abstract Chapter 4 turns to examine the significance of women’s liminal position in context religiously mixed kinship settings. It shows that intrinsic qualities afforded women a mediating agency between different social, spatial, and normative arenas rendered their place particularly meaningful relation cross-religious exchanges. As mothers wives, were unique introduce ideas practices originated one religious tradition home was dominated by another. The chapter reveals, however, concerns, or emphases, on part leaderships regarding presence families. While Syrian ecclesiastical authorities appear have been concerned with contribution an ongoing state communal fragmentation, rabbinic legal discourse reflects preoccupation its practical implications, Islamic principles potential threats integrity Muslim believers. extent which these differences allow for generalizations, remains open question. | chapter | en | Liminality|Normative|Kinship|Agency (philosophy)|Islam|Sociology|Context (archaeology)|Position (finance)|Gender studies|Social psychology|Political science|Law|Geography|Psychology|Social science|Anthropology|Business|Archaeology|Finance | https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192871251.003.0005 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4360617851', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192871251.003.0005'} | Syria | C144024400 | Sociology | Oxford University Press eBooks |
“No boots on the ground”: the effectiveness of US drones against Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula | Thomas Bolland (https://openalex.org/A5072517893)|Jan André Lee Ludvigsen (https://openalex.org/A5036074488) | 2,018 | The number of US drone strikes against Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) Yemen has increased significantly since 2010, but received limited academic attention. This article examines effectiveness this campaign using an existing theoretical framework. Crucially, we contribute to framework by adding a fourth intervening variable, namely target correspondence. Through single case study, it is found that drones have only enjoyed success degrading AQAP's hierarchical structure, qualified human resources and access key material resources, some cases – owing our correspondence analysis come at price. It temporarily disrupted AQAP successfully eliminating senior leaders involved coordinating overseeing external operations. Overall, ability hit Western targets remains significant. | article | en | Drone|Peninsula|Al qaeda|Political science|Key (lock)|Operations research|Geography|Engineering|Computer security|Computer science|Law|Terrorism|Archaeology|Biology|Genetics | https://doi.org/10.1080/14751798.2018.1478184 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2808922677', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14751798.2018.1478184', 'mag': '2808922677'} | Yemen | C203133693 | Terrorism | Defense & Security Analysis |
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