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“The Words Disappeared When Faced with Real Life Situations”: Communication Difficulties of Non-Native Speakers of Arabic in the Sultanate of Oman | Fatma Al-Busaidi (https://openalex.org/A5081696906) | 2,019 | The learning of Arabic as a foreign language (AFL) is increasing around the world. Even so, non-native speakers learners face an array communication difficulties. present study intended to explore some possible difficulties encountered by adult in Sultanate Oman. An interpretive approach was adopted for study, using in-depth interviewing and participants’ diaries. findings revealed that four distinct when they attempt communicate Arabic. These are categorized as: putting thoughts into words, maintaining continuous speaking, pronunciation-related issues applying grammar their speech. call improved teaching programs, bridging gap between classroom activities authentic life situations placing parallel emphasis on both standard (written) vernacular spoken its different contextual communities. It recommended more studies investigating dichotomy colloquial varieties should be undertaken. | article | en | Pronunciation|Arabic|Linguistics|Grammar|Interview|Face (sociological concept)|Psychology|Vernacular|Modern Standard Arabic|Sociology|Philosophy|Anthropology | https://doi.org/10.5296/ije.v11i2.14616 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2966420947', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.5296/ije.v11i2.14616', 'mag': '2966420947'} | Oman | C144024400 | Sociology | International Journal of Education |
“The World Forgot Us and Europe Doesn’t Want Us” | Thomas Schmidinger (https://openalex.org/A5068941099) | 2,020 | When the so-called “Islamic State” (IS) attacked Iraq’s Nineveh Governorate, region’s religious minorities became victims of genocide and displacement. This chapter focuses on region Sinjar (Kurdish: Şingal) displacement Yazidi Êzîdî) along with other living there. The these groups directly resulted from their vulnerability as minorities. IS targeted them minorities, current problems internally displaced persons (IDPs) also status relatively small communities without a historically strong political lobby or military force. analyzes conditions framework in which IDPs refugees must survive presents personal perspectives inside outside Iraq. Interviews were centered following questions: What prevent Yazidi, Christians, returning to Sinjar? are building future region? would they need order return rebuild homes? And how do adherents different interpret 2014 within longer history perceived genocidal acts against area? | chapter | en | Genocide|Internally displaced person|Refugee|Islam|Politics|Political science|Vulnerability (computing)|Displacement (psychology)|Criminology|Gender studies|Political economy|Sociology|Development economics|Geography|Law|Psychology|Archaeology|Computer security|Computer science|Economics|Psychotherapist | https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197531365.003.0010 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3124761617', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197531365.003.0010', 'mag': '3124761617'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | |
“The World Forgot Us and Europe Doesn’t Want Us” | Thomas Schmidinger (https://openalex.org/A5068941099) | 2,020 | When the so-called “Islamic State” (IS) attacked Iraq’s Nineveh Governorate, region’s religious minorities became victims of genocide and displacement. This chapter focuses on region Sinjar (Kurdish: Şingal) displacement Yazidi Êzîdî) along with other living there. The these groups directly resulted from their vulnerability as minorities. IS targeted them minorities, current problems internally displaced persons (IDPs) also status relatively small communities without a historically strong political lobby or military force. analyzes conditions framework in which IDPs refugees must survive presents personal perspectives inside outside Iraq. Interviews were centered following questions: What prevent Yazidi, Christians, returning to Sinjar? are building future region? would they need order return rebuild homes? And how do adherents different interpret 2014 within longer history perceived genocidal acts against area? | chapter | en | Genocide|Internally displaced person|Refugee|Politics|Islam|Political science|Vulnerability (computing)|Displacement (psychology)|Displaced person|Criminology|Gender studies|Political economy|Geography|Development economics|Sociology|Law|Psychology|Archaeology|Computer security|Computer science|Economics|Psychotherapist | https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197531365.003.0010 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3124761617', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197531365.003.0010', 'mag': '3124761617'} | Iraq | C47768531 | Development economics | Oxford University Press eBooks |
“The World is Bigger than Five”. Turkey’s Emergence as a Global Actor in World Politics: Prospects and Challenges for Russia | Aleksandr A. Irkhin (https://openalex.org/A5073449463)|Olga A. Moskalenko (https://openalex.org/A5085803498) | 2,021 | The foreign policy realized by Turkeys president clearly evidences the fact that Erdogan does not accept todays world order as a model for near future. This has led to proposition of World Is Bigger than Five formula since 2013. At least in several key regions, Ankara attempts change through more emotional declarations; it uses both hard and soft power Eastern Mediterranean, Middle East, Black Sea region, Caucasus, Central Asia. main indicators Turkish (military, economic, technological factors, attractiveness mass culture) are examined identify possibilities Turkey balance regions on global scale. From 2007, vision an influential actor globally been propagated elite Justice Development Party (AKP). Geopolitical, civilizational, systematic approaches used. research process is carried out within paradigm classical critical geopolitics. During AKPs time power, moderate Islamists gave new impetus - return its civilizational roots. One must note states development economy, military-industrial complex, national position patron every Muslim. Modern can be considered great regional with sectoral leadership military attainment, due development. invests heavily success based ideology, which represents synthesis neo-Ottoman, neo-Pan-Turkic pan-Islamic ideas. revival desire become will inevitably increase space contradictions Russian-Turkish relations, reducing sphere cooperation between two countries. | article | en | Soft power|Geopolitics|Turkish|Middle East|Ideology|Power (physics)|Political science|Elite|Politics|Foreign policy|Political economy|Economy|Sociology|Development economics|Economics|Law|Philosophy|Linguistics|Physics|Quantum mechanics | https://doi.org/10.22363/2313-0660-2021-21-1-91-107 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3169455249', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.22363/2313-0660-2021-21-1-91-107', 'mag': '3169455249'} | Turkey | C144024400|C47768531 | Development economics|Sociology | Вестник Российского университета дружбы народов|DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals) |
“The World is So Much Bigger” | Tina Marie Keller (https://openalex.org/A5017452660) | 2,016 | Opportunities to experience diverse religious traditions while traveling abroad can create invitations explore the role of religion in identity. This becomes important as teacher educators prepare preservice teachers for classrooms increasing diversity. study examined impact a two-week Israel three before, immediately after, and one year after trip. The data suggests that purposeful inclusions experiences, sites, more importantly personal encounters with individuals variety faiths occasions reflect upon this study, each possessing unique perspectives, spoke their teaching classroom. chapter concludes suggested recommendations on how incorporate planning trip teachers. | chapter | en | Identity (music)|Diversity (politics)|Variety (cybernetics)|Religious diversity|Pedagogy|Inclusion (mineral)|Religious identity|Sociology|Psychology|Mathematics education|Gender studies|Social science|Aesthetics|Anthropology|Art|Negotiation|Artificial intelligence|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-1057-4.ch016 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2549891936', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-1057-4.ch016', 'mag': '2549891936'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Advances in higher education and professional development book series |
“The World is So Much Bigger” | Tina Marie Keller (https://openalex.org/A5017452660) | 2,021 | Opportunities to experience diverse religious traditions while traveling abroad can create invitations explore the role of religion in identity. This becomes important as teacher educators prepare preservice teachers for classrooms increasing diversity. study examined impact a two-week Israel three before, immediately after, and one year after trip. The data suggests that purposeful inclusions experiences, sites, more importantly personal encounters with individuals variety faiths occasions reflect upon this study, each possessing unique perspectives, spoke their teaching classroom. chapter concludes suggested recommendations on how incorporate planning trip teachers. | chapter | en | Identity (music)|Diversity (politics)|Variety (cybernetics)|Religious diversity|Pedagogy|Inclusion (mineral)|Sociology|Psychology|Mathematics education|Gender studies|Aesthetics|Anthropology|Art|Computer science|Artificial intelligence | https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-3435-9.ch010 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4251048351', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-3435-9.ch010'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | IGI Global eBooks |
“The Worms Are Weak” | Marcia C. Inhorn (https://openalex.org/A5000581258) | 2,003 | Male infertility is a major global reproductive health problem, contributing to more than half of all cases worldwide. Yet women typically bear the social burden childlessness when their husbands are infertile. This article explores four patriarchal paradoxes surrounding male in Muslim Middle Eastern country Egypt. There, childless marriages experience procreative blame, even (glossed as “weak worms”) socially acknowledged. In addition, Egyptian married infertile men diminished gender identity and threats male-initiated divorce. Ironically, introduction new technologies overcome has only served increase this divorce potential. Although also presents crisis masculinity for men, often redounds multiple ways on lives women, who ultimately pay price under conditions patriarchy. | article | en | Childlessness|Infertility|Masculinity|Blame|Patriarchy|Male infertility|Gender studies|Fertility|Gynecology|Demography|Medicine|Psychology|Sociology|Population|Social psychology|Pregnancy|Biology|Genetics | https://doi.org/10.1177/1097184x02238525 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2170093948', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/1097184x02238525', 'mag': '2170093948'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | Men and Masculinities |
“The army and the people are one hand!” Fraternization and the 25th January Egyptian Revolution | Neil Ketchley (https://openalex.org/A5012604830) | 2,013 | Abstract On 28 January 2011 the Egyptian army was deployed onto Cairo's streets following three days of escalating protests. Upon entering Midan al-Tahrir, a column newly arriving tanks and APCs attacked by protestors. Throwing stones dousing vehicles in petrol before setting them alight, protestors pulled soldiers out their beat them. Seizing ammunition supplies, even commandeered tank. Minutes later those same were chanting pro-army slogans, posing for photographs with sharing food. How respond to deployment security forces assumed loyal regime determined end protest is often summed-up dyad “fight or flight.” In this paper, I consider third option: fraternization. Through social interactionist lens, explore prevalence chants, graffiti, mounting military vehicles, physical embraces, sleeping tank tracks around al-Tahrir during 25th Revolution. draw on contentious politics literature, as well micro-sociologies violence ritual, suggest that fraternizing developed repertoire contention made immediate, emotional claims loyalty troops. From initial techniques micro-conflict avoidance, micro-interactions forged precarious “internal frontier” bifurcated governance from sovereignty through performance people one hand opposition Mubarak regime. | article | en | Opposition (politics)|Contentious politics|Law|Politics|Sociology|Sovereignty|Media studies|Political science|Social movement | https://doi.org/10.1017/s0010417513000650 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1992346868', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/s0010417513000650', 'mag': '1992346868'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | Comparative Studies in Society and History |
“The best period of my life”: The academy as a Safe Haven for Israeli trans students | Maya Tsfati (https://openalex.org/A5046127648)|Yochay Nadan (https://openalex.org/A5081652701) | 2,019 | This article examines the experiences of Israeli trans students, revealing meanings they ascribe to their social interactions in academic environment and outside it. Based on an analysis 20 semi-structured interviews with students studying several institutions, we show that reflect movement between two realms: one risk safety. These realms are inter-related because each helps define other. The participants’ victimization various non-academic arenas endow academy comforting foster feelings safety among participants contribute self-agency. | article | en | Feeling|Period (music)|Agency (philosophy)|Haven|Safe haven|Psychology|Social psychology|Sociology|Social science|Aesthetics|International economics|Mathematics|Combinatorics|Economics|Philosophy | https://doi.org/10.1080/09589236.2019.1689108 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2987848168', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/09589236.2019.1689108', 'mag': '2987848168'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Gender Studies |
“The biggest disappointment”: women’s expectations from sex are ignored, from the perspective of infertile women | Sevda Karakaş (https://openalex.org/A5079656312)|Rükiye Höbek Akarsu (https://openalex.org/A5003346093)|Özden TANDOĞAN> (https://openalex.org/A5081691323)|Özlem ŞAHAN> (https://openalex.org/A5088098432) | 2,023 | ABSTRACTObjective The aim of this study is to determine the attitudes, behaviours and experiences infertile women towards sexuality.Methods This was carried out in infertility outpatient clinic a state hospital Istanbul Turkey. Fifteen who had been receiving primary treatment for at least two years were actively continuing included study. Data collected by means an detailed information form semi-structured interview. Content analysis applied data obtained from interviews. Consistency percentage calculation made between codes themes determined 4 researchers are experts their fields.Results Results based on interviews with participants, 2 main themes, 6 sub-themes 27 related as ‘Factors Affecting Sexual Life’ ‘Overview Health Sexuality’. ‘Disappointment’ most commonly defined code theme sub-themes.Conclusion It that majority base sexual lives reproductive functions, experience serious health problems, feel worthless, describe life great disappointment.KEYWORDS: Infertilitydisappointmentsexualitysexual problemswoman AcknowledgmentsWe indebted took time share experiences.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict interest reported author(s).Data availability statementThe support findings available corresponding author upon reasonable request. | article | en | Disappointment|Human sexuality|Infertility|Reproductive health|Psychology|Perspective (graphical)|Consistency (knowledge bases)|Medicine|Outpatient clinic|Family medicine|Clinical psychology|Social psychology|Gender studies|Sociology|Pregnancy|Biology|Computer science|Genetics|Population|Environmental health|Artificial intelligence|Internal medicine|Geometry|Mathematics | https://doi.org/10.1080/02646838.2023.2243296 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4385752065', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/02646838.2023.2243296', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37565411'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology|PubMed |
“The birds we do not shoot”: Lebanon’s absent state and sport hunters’ code of practice | Robert W. B. Greeley (https://openalex.org/A5005693789) | 2,023 | Some research on sport hunting addresses how hunters oppose or negotiate state regulations. Yet little is known about self-imposed regulations among where the ineffective. In following article, I fill in this gap by looking at Lebanon failed to enforce its own moratorium, and continued their practice. found that since end of civil war (1990), absence regulation, have developed a code conduct. This conduct centered forbidding from taking Lebanon’s nonmigratory birds. Hunters described these birds with specific attributes: having homeland in…, ours/from us, resident, threatened extinction. code, which pushed migratory away birds, signaled hunters’ ethical practice care for environment bestows legitimacy. | article | en | State (computer science)|Negotiation|Legitimacy|Homeland|Threatened species|Geography|Code of conduct|Code (set theory)|Political science|Law|Environmental protection|Ethnology|Sociology|Ecology|Politics|Biology|Habitat|Set (abstract data type)|Algorithm|Computer science|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1080/10871209.2023.2177907 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4320495030', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/10871209.2023.2177907'} | Lebanon | C144024400 | Sociology | Human Dimensions of Wildlife |
“The blessings of freedom”: Britain, America, and “the East” in the Fiction of Robert Bage | James Watt (https://openalex.org/A5067298463) | 2,009 | Even as Britain's failure to retain its authority in the Western hemisphere provides point of departure for Robert Bage's Mount Henneth (1782) and The Fair Syrian (1787), these novels take characters on Eastern adventures, making them encounter effects despotic power condition women. By invoking such a generalized idea Oriental despotism by reframing “British” liberty relatively uncontroversial terms, address ideological repercussions conflict with colonists. Hermsprong (1796) briefly revisits seraglio, paralleling Turkey Britain while also identifying hero's freedom expression “native” English much an American instinct. | article | en | HERO|Cognitive reframing|Ideology|Adventure|Power (physics)|Instinct|Mount|History|Sociology|Law|Political science|Literature|Art|Art history|Politics|Psychology|Engineering|Mechanical engineering|Social psychology|Physics|Quantum mechanics|Evolutionary biology|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1353/ecf.0.0108 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2076666141', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1353/ecf.0.0108', 'mag': '2076666141'} | Syria|Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Eighteenth-century fiction |
“The blessings of freedom”: Britain, America, and “the East” in the Fiction of Robert Bage | James Watt (https://openalex.org/A5067298463) | 2,009 | Even as Britain's failure to retain its authority in the Western hemisphere provides point of departure for Robert Bage's Mount Henneth (1782) and The Fair Syrian (1787), these novels take characters on Eastern adventures, making them encounter effects despotic power condition women. By invoking such a generalized idea Oriental despotism by reframing “British” liberty relatively uncontroversial terms, address ideological repercussions conflict with colonists. Hermsprong (1796) briefly revisits seraglio, paralleling Turkey Britain while also identifying hero's freedom expression “native” English much an American instinct. | article | en | HERO|Cognitive reframing|Ideology|Adventure|Power (physics)|Mount|Instinct|History|Sociology|Law|Literature|Political science|Art|Art history|Politics|Psychology|Social psychology|Physics|Quantum mechanics|Evolutionary biology|Biology|Computer science|Operating system | https://doi.org/10.3138/ecf.22.1.49 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4256347121', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.3138/ecf.22.1.49'} | Syria|Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Eighteenth-century fiction |
“The cultural politics of food in selected Egyptian films” | Pervine Elrefaei (https://openalex.org/A5058848002) | 2,021 | This article focuses on the role of food as a cultural/political marker in selected Egyptian films. The study argues that is intertwined with power relations and socio-economic political transformations; hence, studies can constitute cultural, historical document unravels personal collective, history. paper examines discourse post-2011 period depicted two award-winning films represented Egypt number international film festivals, mainly, 2013 documentary “OM Amira” by Nagi Ismail (1983-) , 2016 feature “Nawara” Hala Khalil (1967-) . As for thought, depict plight working class women representative whole downtrodden social class. Utilizing an interdisciplinary approach, raises questions to which it attempts provide answers. What films? How do both represent relation between classes? scenes characterization? far are similar or different their representation predicament? history country flux, exposing its structures contradictions one hand, struggles, aspirations frustrations lower classes, other? | article | en | Politics|Power (physics)|Relation (database)|Food culture|Representation (politics)|Food studies|Political science|Social science|Sociology|Aesthetics|Art|Law|Physics|Tourism|Quantum mechanics|Database|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1080/21674736.2021.1936838 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3178596235', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/21674736.2021.1936838', 'mag': '3178596235'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of the African Literature Association |
“The deal of the century”: the possible scenarios of the future political regime of a Palestinian state | Пеньков Владимир Федорович (https://openalex.org/A5091739444)|Понкин Игорь Владиславович (https://openalex.org/A5049393988) | 2,020 | The subject of research is “the deal the century” or Middle East Peace Plan initiated by U.S. “The U.S.’s attempt to model a hard approach Israeli-Palestinian conflict settlement. American model, being externally inserted, in fact, validates domination Israel and mothballs set territorial, military, political economic “problem fields” which carry potential escalate between Arab world near term. leading method case study based on authors prognosticate possible scenarios development situation. scientific novelty consists fact that variants progression events Palestine from logical realistic viewpoints. consider three scenarios. first two suggest would reject proposed settlement plan. third scenario if certain groups persons influence accept Donald Trump’s peace plan.    | article | en | Palestine|Settlement (finance)|Politics|Viewpoints|Novelty|State (computer science)|Political science|Middle East|Subject (documents)|Plan (archaeology)|Political economy|Environmental ethics|Operations research|Law|Sociology|History|Psychology|Ancient history|Computer science|Engineering|Social psychology|Philosophy|Archaeology|Art|Visual arts|Algorithm|World Wide Web|Library science|Payment | https://doi.org/10.25136/2409-8671.2020.1.32417 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3024610365', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.25136/2409-8671.2020.1.32417', 'mag': '3024610365'} | Israel|Palestine | C144024400 | Sociology | Mirovaâ politika |
“The fact is, that Turks can’t live without coffee…” the introduction of Nescafé into Turkey (1952-1987) | Yavuz Bülent Köse (https://openalex.org/A5034426406) | 2,019 | Purpose This paper aims to investigate the introduction of Nescafé, a brand Swiss multinational company Nestlé, into Turkish market and examines formative period (1952-1987) before it succeeded become most popular leading coffee in Turkey. By that draw attention Turkey as an interesting case point for study history marketing practices non-Western context. Design/methodology/approach deploys variety largely unexplored material ranging from archival sources newspaper reports advertisements. In first part, provided by Nestlé archives (AHN) will be analyzed present company’s strategy. As amount on advertisements between 1952 1984 remained modest, second part is devoted analysis media discuss Nescafé’s public perception. Findings The demonstrates during under consideration instable political economic environment was pivotal marketing. early years used similar strategies West advertising Nescafé premium product upper middle-class. Due import restrictions, scarce high-priced product. highly esteemed sought-after because stood Western modernity prosperity. argues not primarily Nestlé’s resulted considerable recognition but its “visibility” through reporting. Research limitations/implications preliminary attempt instant market. mainly focused still important Further, this brings spotlight country with distinct sociopolitical cultural particularities which distinguish countries allow scrutinize how practice thought may develop setting. Further research needed Turkey's specific far being thoroughly investigated. Originality/value focusing Turkey, provides insight ways marketed, consumed perceived allows consider companies responded adapted culturally, politically economically challenging environment. | article | en | Rebranding|Advertising|Newspaper|Context (archaeology)|Prosperity|Marketing|Multinational corporation|Product (mathematics)|Turkish|Politics|Sociology|Business|Political science|History|Law|Linguistics|Philosophy|Geometry|Mathematics|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1108/jhrm-03-2018-0012 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2959489550', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1108/jhrm-03-2018-0012', 'mag': '2959489550'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Historical Research in Marketing |
“The festering finger?” Reimagining Minority Sexuality in Tendai Huchu's<i>The Hairdresser of Harare</i>and Abdellah Taïa's<i>Une Mélancolie Arabe</i> | Gibson Ncube (https://openalex.org/A5037818743) | 2,013 | Tendai Huchu's The Hairdresser of Harare and Une Mélancolie Arabe by Moroccan Abdellah Taïa explore minority sexuality against overtly homophobic backdrops in contemporary African contexts. This article initially problematises Africa before considering the stylistic narratological techniques employed both writers to depict quest their gay protagonists assuming homosexuality. By centring on characters, novels contrast subvert actual social marginalisation faced these characters. Using Maria Pia Lara's formulations, this reads overt depiction “marginal” as possessing an “illocutionary force” which exerts pressure monolithic conceptions sexual identity potentially incites readers perceive differently a subject that has hitherto remained taboo many parts Africa. | article | en | Human sexuality|Depiction|Taboo|Gender studies|Homosexuality|Sociology|Art|Subject (documents)|Literature|Anthropology|Library science|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1080/1013929x.2013.795758 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2169096535', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/1013929x.2013.795758', 'mag': '2169096535'} | Morocco | C144024400 | Sociology | |
“The great sin of today is the ‘politicization’ of our Judaism, the great need, the ‘Judaization’ of our politics”: Leon Roth and the possibilities of a Jewish critique of Zionist politics | Yaacov Yadgar (https://openalex.org/A5072748757) | 2,022 | This article explores the possibilities and limitations of a Jewish critique Zionist politics State Israel, via an engagement with writings Leon Roth (1896–1963). Specifically, focuses on three main themes: (a) relation between Judaism Jews, questioning “ethnicist” foundation ideology; (b) religion as two are constructed in modern European discourse, nationalist premise supremacy nation-statist over religion; (c) meaning secularism, claim to “non-religious” identity. I argue that Roth’s moral failures Zionism offers illuminating explication “the state”, while ultimately failing form coherent political voice because its commitment concept modern, sovereignty. | article | en | Zionism|Politics|Judaism|Sociology|Sovereignty|Secularism|Nationalism|Religious studies|Ideology|Jewish state|Relation (database)|State (computer science)|Law|Philosophy|Theology|Political science|Algorithm|Database|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1080/14725886.2022.2064735 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4225419666', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14725886.2022.2064735'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Modern Jewish Studies |
“The king will be corrupt too!” Teaching thinking in bible studies | Ehud Tsemach (https://openalex.org/A5030407856)|Anat Zohar (https://openalex.org/A5044619317) | 2,023 | Bible studies are one of the foundations Israeli education. Nevertheless, this content area has been neglected for many years and it is now bordering on crisis. Passive learning style classroom discussions that lead to predetermined conclusions prevalent in classes both elementary high schools. In article, we present Teaching Thinking Studies Initiative seeks facilitate active where students construct meaning text autonomously. The initiative also encourages use core thinking strategies when reading Bible. Our model proposes a lesson directed at well-defined goals unfold throughout lesson, includes explicit processes strategies. first section article explores theories research, identifying characteristics principles teaching thinking, reviews previous about second, initiative's pedagogical structure thinking-based lesson. third section, provide two examples lessons focused argumentation asking questions. Finally, discussion, examine how our corresponds adds other initiatives literature. | review | en | Argumentation theory|Critical thinking|Meaning (existential)|Reading (process)|Teaching method|Pedagogy|Sociology|Epistemology|Style (visual arts)|Historical thinking|Mathematics education|Psychology|Literature|Philosophy|Linguistics|Art | https://doi.org/10.1080/00220272.2023.2171741 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4319736891', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/00220272.2023.2171741'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Curriculum Studies |
“The knife needs the intention of the heart” The construction of ethnic and moral boundaries in Israeli slaughterhouses | Anat Ben-Yonatan (https://openalex.org/A5038051294) | 2,022 | This study examines aspects of ethnic, religious, and moral boundary work among Jewish-Israeli kosher slaughterers based, on 35 in-depth interviews, four ethnographic observations, informal conversations, other secondary sources such as video footage the slaughter sites gathered between 2014 2019. In Israel, self-proclaimed sovereign homeland Jewish people, being means part political, religious hegemony. While stigmatized for doing dirty work, slaughterers’ workplace setting groups them with menial laborers from a minority ethnic group, both physically organizationally. The stigma associated animal killing in Israel encourages to distinguish themselves workers by engaging work. Within setting, this occurs around various intersecting identities: racio-ethnic, national, professional. Furthermore, is fueled organizational mechanisms site’s spatial architecture, differential wage structure, use tools technologies. these conditions are determined employers, they constantly restructured reinforced assert their superiority vis-a-vis workers. exploring mechanisms, I conceptualize knife boundary-maintaining object. claim that leverage material, symbolic, discursive resources morally segregate two workers’ tainted slaughter, violence cruelty, ‘Arab’ others. Meanwhile, prevailing Jew–Arab tensions popular symbolic representation Arabs ensures behaviors treated an inherent racio-ethnic trait, thereby reinforcing boundaries. | article | en | Sociology|Homeland|Judaism|Ethnic group|Gender studies|Boundary-work|Politics|Morality|Law|Political science|Social science|Archaeology|Anthropology|History | https://doi.org/10.1177/14687968221093715 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4224295493', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/14687968221093715'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Ethnicities |
“The liberation of LGBTQ+ will also liberate heterosexuals”: Heterosexual feminist women's participation in solidarity‐based collective action for LGBTQ+ rights | Mete Sefa Uysal (https://openalex.org/A5054344443)|Özden Melis Uluğ (https://openalex.org/A5082712302)|Betül Kanık (https://openalex.org/A5046969950)|Aslı Aydemir (https://openalex.org/A5042242313) | 2,022 | Abstract The current studies aim to examine the underlying predictors of heterosexual feminist women's willingness participate in solidarity‐based collective action for LGBTQ+ rights. We hypothesized that identification, perceived discrimination against LGBTQ+, and strategic intra‐minority alliance between feminists would predict their action. Study 1 ( N = 141) showed higher identification more endorsement predicted among women Turkey. 2 644) replicated extended findings with a larger sample by showing awareness sexual orientation privilege predicts By following an intersectional multi‐identity approach 3 280), we action, whereas less willingness. | article | en | Collective action|Solidarity|Sexual orientation|Social psychology|Lesbian|Gender studies|Transgender|Psychology|Action (physics)|Feminism|Sociology|Political science|Politics|Law|Physics|Quantum mechanics | https://doi.org/10.1002/ejsp.2799 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3189839459', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1002/ejsp.2799', 'mag': '3189839459'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | European Journal of Social Psychology|INDIGO (University of Illinois at Chicago) |
“The machine does it!”: Using convenience technologies to analyze care, reproductive labor, gender, and class in urban Morocco | M. Ruth Dike (https://openalex.org/A5032424264) | 2,021 | Convenience technologies have the ability to change way people do reproductive labor, or labor associated with caregiving and domestic roles, in their households. Reproductive is disproportionately performed by women across globe underpins capitalism creating cheap labor. This article investigates how convenience technology challenges reinforces gender roles socioeconomic class for urban Moroccans. Although experiences of “convenience” are highly variable, influence technologies. help Moroccan opening up men children but, simultaneously, hurt devaluing relation men's reinforce supporting a household's reputation validating Moroccans' perceptions themselves as citizens developed nation‐state. Besides expressing class, can contribute restructuring women's position within household. The analyzes data collected during seventeen months ethnographic fieldwork Rabat‐Salé, Morocco, from 2018 2019. I conducted fifty‐three semistructured interviews married middle‐ lower‐class Moroccans Arabic, well extensive informal participant observation. analyze gendered classed politics | article | en | Socioeconomic status|Participant observation|Sociology|Economic growth|Gender studies|Political science|Economics|Population|Demography|Social science | https://doi.org/10.1002/sea2.12214 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3163905540', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1002/sea2.12214', 'mag': '3163905540'} | Morocco | C144024400 | Sociology | Economic Anthropology |
“The menifestations of post–colonial discourse in the contemporary Omani novel: A reading in the novel Dafater Al–Tufan by Samiha Khreis as a model. | ziba bahari nooran (https://openalex.org/A5019804299)|Abdollah Hosseini (https://openalex.org/A5077334826)|Sedghi Hamed (https://openalex.org/A5077254415) | 2,021 | “The menifestations of post–colonial discourse in the contemporary Jordanian novel: A reading novel Dafater Al–Tufan by Samiha Khreis as a model. | article | en | Colonialism|Reading (process)|Linguistics|Sociology|Literature|History|Aesthetics|Art|Philosophy|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.52547/san.2.1.74 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3173223963', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.52547/san.2.1.74', 'mag': '3173223963'} | Jordan | C144024400 | Sociology | دراسات فی السردانیه العربیه |
“The message to the people of South Africa” in contemporary context | Mark Braverman (https://openalex.org/A5034611222) | 2,020 | In September 2018 John de Gruchy presented a paper at the Volmoed Colloquium entitled “Revisiting Message to people of South Africa,” in which he asks, “what is significance document for our time?” this expanded version author’s response Gruchy, two further questions are pursued: First: how can churches today meet challenge today’s global system economically and politically-driven inequality driven by constellation individuals, corporations, governments? Second: his review church history, focused on issue theology described 1985 Kairos Africa document, use words that purport support justice but actually serve shore up status quo discrimination, racism. How does manifest contemporary context, what remedy? The author proposes ecumenism as mobilizing organizing model action, active engagement Palestine an entry point renewal necessary fruitful exploration critical issues ecclesiology. | review | en | Ecclesiology|Kairos|Context (archaeology)|Status quo|Sociology|Economic Justice|Ecumenism|Inequality|Political science|Environmental ethics|Media studies|Law|History|Epistemology|Philosophy|Mathematical analysis|Mathematics|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.17570/stj.2019.v5n3.a01 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3004547166', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.17570/stj.2019.v5n3.a01', 'mag': '3004547166'} | Palestine | C139621336|C144024400|C45555294 | Economic Justice|Inequality|Sociology | STJ | Stellenbosch Theological Journal |
“The modesty guard” reflected in online comments in mainstream news sites | Shirley Druker Shitrit (https://openalex.org/A5092920107)|Smadar Ben-Asher (https://openalex.org/A5006712048)|Ella Ben-Atar (https://openalex.org/A5061426244) | 2,024 | Purpose At times, a traditional minority group that opposes change in the patriarchal structure is violent toward women who wish to adopt modern lifestyles. This study aims examine online comments regarding shooting at café an Arab-Bedouin city Israel, where were employed as servers. The event was framed Israeli media act of backlash by young men, call themselves “The Modesty Guard.” Design/methodology/approach In this qualitative study, authors collected 916 published on five main news sites. A thematic and rhetorical analysis conducted. Findings findings uncovered themes: expression support for Bedouin women; ideas dealing with Guard; blaming tradition shooting; comparison behavior parallel phenomenon among Charedim; criticism lack treatment security forces. responses reflected supportive stance women, open progress. Conflict discourse, however, expressed alienation increased social-national schism between Jewish majority groups Israel. Originality/value sheds light Negev society. Moreover, it exposes significant actions understanding deep processes unfolding | article | en | Mainstream|Schism|Originality|Phenomenon|Alienation|Judaism|Criticism|Sociology|Rhetorical question|Gender studies|Social media|Social psychology|Media studies|Qualitative research|Political science|Law|Psychology|History|Social science|Politics|Linguistics|Philosophy|Physics|Archaeology|Quantum mechanics | https://doi.org/10.1108/jices-08-2023-0108 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4391027983', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1108/jices-08-2023-0108'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society |
“The mosquitoes that destroy your face”. Social impact of Cutaneous Leishmaniasis in South-eastern Morocco, A qualitative study | Issam Bennis (https://openalex.org/A5059045546)|Loubna Belaid (https://openalex.org/A5055013563)|Vincent De Brouwere (https://openalex.org/A5074635267)|Hind Filali (https://openalex.org/A5082952680)|Hamid Sahibi (https://openalex.org/A5057771693)|Marleen Boelaert (https://openalex.org/A5027677067) | 2,017 | Objective To document the psychosocial burden of Cutaneous Leishmaniasis (CL) in rural communities Southeastern Morocco. Method Between March and April 2015, we conducted qualitative research exposed to Leishmania major or L. tropica Errachidia Tinghir provinces. Twenty-eight focus groups discussions (FGDs) were realized, with a stratification by gender tradition medicine (users folk versus professional medicine). Data analyzed using content analysis. Results This population most CL Morocco lacks access health care general clearly points out there are other public issues that need be resolved. Nonetheless, respondents consider impact lesions scars as important similar burn scar tissue. Young women face stigmatized will often rejected for marriage these communities. People usually try long list remedies on active lesions, but none was felt adequate. There clear demand better treatment well scars. Conclusions The psycho-social due L.major L.tropica is substantial, especially young single facial These generate social self-stigma diminish their prospects. known, not considered priority poor South-eastern where discrimination still an issue basic neglected CL. Early diagnosis new options skin outcomes urgently needed. | article | en | Scars|Psychosocial|Cutaneous leishmaniasis|Focus group|Qualitative research|Medicine|Public health|Stigma (botany)|Population|Rural area|Social stigma|Health care|Family medicine|Leishmaniasis|Socioeconomics|Environmental health|Psychiatry|Economic growth|Surgery|Sociology|Pathology|Social science|Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)|Anthropology|Economics | https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0189906 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2777174589', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0189906', 'mag': '2777174589', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29261762', 'pmcid': 'https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/5738074'} | Morocco | C138816342|C160735492 | Health care|Public health | PLOS ONE|DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals)|Europe PMC (PubMed Central)|Institutional Repository University of Antwerp (University of Antwerp)|PubMed Central|PubMed |
“The mosquitoes that destroy your face”. Social impact of Cutaneous Leishmaniasis in South-eastern Morocco, A qualitative study | Issam Bennis (https://openalex.org/A5059045546)|Loubna Belaid (https://openalex.org/A5055013563)|Vincent De Brouwere (https://openalex.org/A5074635267)|Hind Filali (https://openalex.org/A5082952680)|Hamid Sahibi (https://openalex.org/A5057771693)|Marleen Boelaert (https://openalex.org/A5027677067) | 2,017 | To document the psychosocial burden of Cutaneous Leishmaniasis (CL) in rural communities Southeastern Morocco.Between March and April 2015, we conducted qualitative research exposed to Leishmania major or L. tropica Errachidia Tinghir provinces. Twenty-eight focus groups discussions (FGDs) were realized, with a stratification by gender tradition medicine (users folk versus professional medicine). Data analyzed using content analysis.This population most CL Morocco lacks access health care general clearly points out there are other public issues that need be resolved. Nonetheless, respondents consider impact lesions scars as important similar burn scar tissue. Young women face stigmatized will often rejected for marriage these communities. People usually try long list remedies on active lesions, but none was felt adequate. There clear demand better treatment well scars.The psycho-social due L.major L.tropica is substantial, especially young single facial scars. These generate social self-stigma diminish their prospects. known, not considered priority poor South-eastern where discrimination still an issue basic neglected CL. Early diagnosis new options skin outcomes urgently needed. | article | en | Scars|Psychosocial|Cutaneous leishmaniasis|Focus group|Qualitative research|Medicine|Public health|Population|Stigma (botany)|Rural area|Social stigma|Health care|Psychological intervention|Family medicine|Leishmaniasis|Socioeconomics|Environmental health|Psychiatry|Economic growth|Surgery|Pathology|Sociology|Social science|Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)|Anthropology|Economics | https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0189906 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2777174589', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0189906', 'mag': '2777174589', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29261762', 'pmcid': 'https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/5738074'} | Morocco | C144024400 | Sociology | PLOS ONE|DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals)|Europe PMC (PubMed Central)|Institutional Repository University of Antwerp (University of Antwerp)|PubMed Central|PubMed |
“The most eastern of the West, the most western of the East”: Energy-transport infrastructures and regional politics of the periphery in Turkey | Bilge Fırat (https://openalex.org/A5056581205) | 2,016 | The construction of railroads, highways, pipelines, tunnels, and bridges is a result an imagined regions in return helps solidify such imaginations. Critics the role technological advancement fostering social, economic, political, cultural integration between centers peripheries argue that many projects remain as political dreamscapes instead serving successful examples transregional integration. Nevertheless, new give way to client networks from European peripheries, solidified by real material energy transport. Currently promoting itself bridge hub Europe Asia, Turkey champions infrastructural developmentalism. This article examines how some energy‐transport infrastructures, which are connect Eurasia via Turkey, relate their actual construction. At time when hopes for Turkey's with its surrounding have waned, I critically interrogate whether economic means infrastructures transport can substitute forms | article | en | Politics|Developmentalism|Bridge (graph theory)|Economic system|Political science|Regional integration|Economy|Political economy|Economic geography|Sociology|Economics|Law|Medicine|Internal medicine | https://doi.org/10.1002/sea2.12046 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2563580048', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1002/sea2.12046', 'mag': '2563580048'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Economic Anthropology|OAKTRUST (Texas A&M University) |
“The most shocking thing was that I didn't respond to the abuse”: The peritraumatic responses and transitions as conveyed by survivors of continuous child sexual abuse | Afnan Attrash-Najjar (https://openalex.org/A5031898336)|Dafna Tener (https://openalex.org/A5069799837)|Carmit Katz (https://openalex.org/A5054150010) | 2,022 | Child sexual abuse (CSA) is a worldwide phenomenon with ongoing and far-reaching consequences for millions of children worldwide. It consensus among researchers that continuous CSA represents unique challenge.The current study aimed to explore the peritraumatic responses survivors as described in their written narratives abuse. The transitions between will also be examined, highlighting context CSA.Written were recruited via an advertisement media inviting share stories on anonymous online platform. data collection was carried out under Israeli Independent Public Inquiry CSA.A qualitative thematic analysis applied 32 richly accounts abuse.Three identified: adaptive response, hinting, attempts fight flight. Transitions these by addressed heavy load abuse, realization fear central role survivor's environment.The provides platform exploration CSA. Alongside identification three survivors, initial glance into responses. This insight strengthens developing notion are top-down process, often shaped various contexts multidimensional dynamics children's lives. | article | en | Context (archaeology)|Thematic analysis|Poison control|Psychology|Suicide prevention|Sexual abuse|Narrative|Human factors and ergonomics|Child sexual abuse|Medicine|Qualitative research|Developmental psychology|Clinical psychology|Medical emergency|Social science|Linguistics|Philosophy|Sociology|Biology|Paleontology | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chiabu.2022.105818 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4289277572', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chiabu.2022.105818', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35926248'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Child Abuse & Neglect|PubMed |
“The mothers have eaten unripe grapes and the children's teeth are set on edge”: the potential inter-generational effects of the Holocaust on chronic morbidity in Holocaust survivors’ offspring | Lital Keinan‐Boker (https://openalex.org/A5059240912) | 2,014 | Modern epidemiology has evolved in the last decades from simplified “cause-effect” paradigm to a multi-factorial framework of causality. The concept “Fetal Origin Adult Diseases” (FOAD) is good example: it suggests that preconception circumstances and fetal exposures as well infancy early childhood experiences may eventually change an individual’s susceptibility adult morbidity through programming epigenetic changes. FOAD was supported, between others, by well-designed cohort studies carried out on non-Jewish World War II (WWII) survivors, exposed hunger during years. However, data late physical Jewish WWII survivors are still scarce. current paper presents some cohorts addressing hypothesis relation long-term impact their main results. It stresses need for establishing similar Israel, order study effects Holocaust health child “second” “third” generations. A such Israel also proposed. Establishing this character should be national priority policy. First, taking special care somewhat neglected obligation. Second, if population offspring indeed high risk group chronic morbidity, higher awareness lead better primary prevention tailored secondary programs. Third, at stack unique its contribution consolidation theory translational applications foremost importance, global sense. | article | en | The Holocaust|Population|Public health|Medicine|Cohort|Epidemiology|Demography|Gerontology|Environmental health|Sociology|Law|Political science|Pathology | https://doi.org/10.1186/2045-4015-3-11 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2106308104', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1186/2045-4015-3-11', 'mag': '2106308104', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24661388', 'pmcid': 'https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/3987829'} | Israel | C107130276|C138816342 | Epidemiology|Public health | Israel Journal of Health Policy Research|Europe PMC (PubMed Central)|PubMed Central|PubMed |
“The mothers have eaten unripe grapes and the children's teeth are set on edge”: the potential inter-generational effects of the Holocaust on chronic morbidity in Holocaust survivors’ offspring | Lital Keinan–Boker (https://openalex.org/A5059240912) | 2,014 | Modern epidemiology has evolved in the last decades from simplified “cause-effect” paradigm to a multi-factorial framework of causality. The concept “Fetal Origin Adult Diseases” (FOAD) is good example: it suggests that preconception circumstances and fetal exposures as well infancy early childhood experiences may eventually change an individual’s susceptibility adult morbidity through programming epigenetic changes. FOAD was supported, between others, by well-designed cohort studies carried out on non-Jewish World War II (WWII) survivors, exposed hunger during years. However, data late physical Jewish WWII survivors are still scarce. current paper presents some cohorts addressing hypothesis relation long-term impact their main results. It stresses need for establishing similar Israel, order study effects Holocaust health child “second” “third” generations. A such Israel also proposed. Establishing this character should be national priority policy. First, taking special care somewhat neglected obligation. Second, if population offspring indeed high risk group chronic morbidity, higher awareness lead better primary prevention tailored secondary programs. Third, at stack unique its contribution consolidation theory translational applications foremost importance, global sense. | article | en | The Holocaust|Population|Public health|Medicine|Cohort|Epidemiology|Demography|Gerontology|Environmental health|Sociology|Law|Political science|Pathology | https://doi.org/10.1186/2045-4015-3-11 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2106308104', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1186/2045-4015-3-11', 'mag': '2106308104', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24661388', 'pmcid': 'https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/3987829'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Israel Journal of Health Policy Research|Europe PMC (PubMed Central)|PubMed Central|PubMed |
“The needs have clearly evolved as time has gone on.”: A qualitative study to explore stakeholders’ perspectives on the health needs of Syrian refugees in Greece following the 2016 European Union-Turkey agreement | Rebecca Hémono (https://openalex.org/A5052352412)|Bridget Relyea (https://openalex.org/A5025915897)|Jennifer Scott (https://openalex.org/A5015521194)|Sinan Khaddaj (https://openalex.org/A5047120131)|Angeliki Douka (https://openalex.org/A5042987602)|Alison Wringe (https://openalex.org/A5023934998) | 2,018 | By 2017, more than 500,000 Syrian refugees had passed through Greece seeking safety and asylum. Understanding how their health needs evolved over the refugee crisis in relation to changing migration policy, exploring challenges involved delivering healthcare is timely as non-governmental organizations (NGOs) transition service provision Greek authorities. We conducted a qualitative study explore stakeholders’ perspectives on services course of humanitarian response from 2015 2017. Twenty-five in-depth interviews were face-to-face or by Skype with providers, NGO staff, organizational government representatives coordinating managing for population Greece. Following informed consent, audio-recorded detailed summaries manually recorded. Data coded inductively identify emerging themes. implementation European Union-Turkey agreement 2016, providers camps reported shift acute physical issues mental disorders, heightened risks gender-based violence among refugees. Key delivery included narrow model insufficient referral mechanisms social support services. Language gender differences between lack privacy space clinics impeded quality care. Stakeholders observed deterioration refugees’ longer periods spent camps. Many also emphasized that should be prioritized. This provides changes With protracted encampment resulting addressing disorders prioritized, including psychosocial training strengthening specialized The findings emphasize importance providing human-centered care concordant incorporating female interpreters into medical teams. Strategic communication coordination needed NGOs authorities facilitate system improve access | article | en | Refugee|Health care|Medicine|Mental health|European union|Qualitative research|Population|Public health|Health policy|Asylum seeker|Health services research|Nursing|Government (linguistics)|Public relations|Political science|Environmental health|Sociology|Psychiatry|Business|Law|Social science|Linguistics|Philosophy|Economic policy | https://doi.org/10.1186/s13031-018-0158-9 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2805758243', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1186/s13031-018-0158-9', 'mag': '2805758243', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29977331', 'pmcid': 'https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/5992764'} | Syria|Turkey | C134362201|C138816342|C144024400|C160735492|C2780877353|C47344431 | Health care|Health policy|Health services research|Mental health|Public health|Sociology | Conflict and Health|Europe PMC (PubMed Central)|PubMed Central|LSHTM Research Online
(London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine)|PubMed |
“The nightingale is a graceful dancer”: Bulbul Chowdhury, dance heritage, and the new nation-state of Pakistan | Priyanka Basu (https://openalex.org/A5022438853) | 2,022 | This article focusses on the cultural work of dancer Bulbul Chowdhury who performed extensively in East and West Pakistan (1950) toured Europe with his troupe (1953). Chowdhury’s approach towards dance newly formed coincided larger political events WWII, Bengal Famine, Partition as well Language Movement. His methodology encompassed a vision “inter-Asia” which he excavated Muslim pasts to create vocabulary “national dance” for Pakistan. During early years decolonisation Cold War, performances Shah Iran Sylhet or Jawaharlal Nehru following Nehru-Liaquat Pact signified how such high-level state were crucial travel abroad thus gained currency/endorsement troupe. Drawing upon Kuan-Hsing Chen’s “Asia Method” (2010), this concentrates role connected geographies identify structural limitations alternative possibilities knowledge production dance. | article | en | Dance|History|Politics|Sociology|Gender studies|Political science|Visual arts|Law|Art | https://doi.org/10.1080/14649373.2022.2131100 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4312944314', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14649373.2022.2131100'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | |
“The noble pirate”: The Voice of Peace offshore radio station | Oren Soffer (https://openalex.org/A5060857534) | 2,010 | This article analyzes the case of Abie Nathan's “Voice Peace” – an offshore pirate radio station that began broadcasting in 1973 off coast Tel Aviv. Although reflected diffusion this type media transmission into Middle East from Europe, particularly its identification with pop music, Voice Peace was distinct political and ideological aims positive reception. I argue public enthusiasm for not merely yearning music but search a “normal” life within turmoil Israel. By “tuning in” to Peace, listeners found escapist heterotopia alternative Israel's hegemonic national characteristics. | article | en | Ideology|Radio broadcasting|Hegemony|Politics|Broadcasting (networking)|Commercial broadcasting|Media studies|History|Political science|Law|Sociology|Telecommunications|Public broadcasting|Engineering|Computer security|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1080/13531042.2010.508941 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2074873736', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/13531042.2010.508941', 'mag': '2074873736'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Israeli History |
“The pandemic made us stop and think about who we are and what we want:” Using intersectionality to understand migrant and refugee women’s experiences of gender-based violence during COVID-19 | Alli Gillespie (https://openalex.org/A5056232877)|Ilana Seff (https://openalex.org/A5040014625)|Camilla Caron (https://openalex.org/A5061313233)|Maria Margherita Maglietti (https://openalex.org/A5008862664)|Dorcas Erskine (https://openalex.org/A5032653846)|Catherine Poulton (https://openalex.org/A5049000303)|Lindsay Stark (https://openalex.org/A5032434063) | 2,022 | Migrant and refugee women have faced a myriad of challenges during COVID-19, which are often exacerbated by the interaction between this population's diverse identities established systems in local context. This qualitative study uses lens intersectionality to understand migrant women's experiences gender-based violence access quality support services Italy first year COVID-19.Data were gathered from 51 key informant interviews eight focus group discussions 31 participants. Key informants included service providers across sectors, including anti-violence organizations, government law, health, psychology, social work, anti-trafficking administration. Focus participants aged 18-65 following countries origin: Bangladesh, Cameroon, Colombia, El Salvador, Gambia, Ghana, Honduras, Libya, Nigeria, Pakistan, Peru, Senegal, Syria. Interviews audio-recorded, transcribed coded using collaborative process with partners UNICEF. Transcripts then evaluated for arising themes three methods analysis.Data analysis revealed how COVID-19 converged sexism, racism, xenophobia Italy, leading increased public domestic against women. Another prominent theme was vulnerability precarious socioeconomic situations, prompted many recognize address gaps offerings coordination around basic needs. However, due resource constraints bias, did not systematically incorporate inclusive language cultural mediation into remote online services, creating heightened barrier non-Italian despite their complex As such, highlighted community-based solidarity as protective factors lockdown periods.Findings emphasize overlapping dominant sociocultural impacted some unprepared respond needs diverse, newcomer populations. We discuss policymakers practitioners might consider preparedness response planning health emergencies moving forward. | article | en | Refugee|Intersectionality|Focus group|Structural violence|Population|Medicine|Gender studies|Sociology|Political science|Politics|Environmental health|Anthropology|Law | https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-022-13866-7 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4289317510', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-022-13866-7', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35915413'} | Libya|Syria | C144024400|C2776857772 | Sociology|Structural violence | BMC Public Health|DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals)|PubMed Central|PubMed |
“The people’s wisdom” and the 2011 Egyptian Revolution: folklore, colloquial poetry, and subalternity in Shaima’ al-Sabbagh’s praxis | Hala Halim (https://openalex.org/A5017817814) | 2,021 | This virtually inaugural scholarly study of the activist Shaima’ al-Sabbagh (1983–2015) documents and analyzes three areas her production in relation to 2011 Egyptian Revolution. The argument is made that colloquial poetry, folklore research support subalternity worked synergy together. Foregrounding folk imaginaries revolution drew on, identified a fundamental gap event between bourgeois intellectuals/activists subalterns. Seminal pedagogies she was process devising close creative projects empower labor actors are analyzed Antonio Gramsci’s views on his “philosophy praxis.” These benefited from al-Sabbagh’s apprenticeship popular, at both grassroots academic levels, including involvement aragoz (hand-held puppet theater). Al-Sabbagh’s texts, among them manuscripts, as well video audio recordings her, cited; additionally, interviews about have been conducted. | article | en | Folklore|Praxis|Foregrounding|Grassroots|Poetry|Sociology|Apprenticeship|Craft|Literature|Bourgeoisie|Aesthetics|Relation (database)|Visual arts|Art|History|Gender studies|Politics|Law|Political science|Archaeology|Database|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1080/21674736.2021.1886719 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3186982602', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/21674736.2021.1886719', 'mag': '3186982602'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of the African Literature Association |
“The personal is political!”: exploring the limits of Canada's feminist international assistance policy under occupation and blockade | Emma Swan (https://openalex.org/A5070576051) | 2,021 | “The personal is political!” This now infamous second-wave feminist slogan highlighted the connections between everyday experiences to larger social and political structures. As Enloe ([1990]. Bananas, beaches bases: Making sense of international politics. University California Press) reminds us, political, but also and, personal. To this end, in 2015, Justin Trudeau took Canadian politics by storm with a platform promising change commitment make assistance explicitly “feminist”. Feminist scholars have long argued that understanding gender inequality requires more than targeted projects, programs, interventions; it fundamental shift way we understand systems power shaping our complex (Tiessen, [2007]. Everywhere/nowhere: Gender mainstreaming development agencies. Kumarian Press). Despite this, which has been applied Government another question altogether. Using Ferguson’s ([1994]. The anti-politics machine. Minnesota) concepts “anti-politics machine”, article explores Canada’s FIAP using case study Gaza. It concludes despite having an policy predicated on values, humanitarian initiatives Gaza are scrubbed dimensions therefore utterly detached from reality occupation blockade subsequent impact lives women girls. | chapter | en | Politics|Political science|Blockade|Gender studies|Sociology|Public administration|Law|Medicine|Receptor|Internal medicine | https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003257523-8 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4200535174', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003257523-8'} | Gaza | C144024400 | Sociology | Routledge eBooks |
“The personal is political!”: exploring the limits of Canada’s feminist international assistance policy under occupation and blockade | Emma Swan (https://openalex.org/A5070576051) | 2,020 | “The personal is political!” This now infamous second-wave feminist slogan highlighted the connections between everyday experiences to larger social and political structures. As Enloe ([1990]. Bananas, beaches bases: Making sense of international politics. University California Press) reminds us, political, but also and, personal. To this end, in 2015, Justin Trudeau took Canadian politics by storm with a platform promising change commitment make assistance explicitly “feminist”. Feminist scholars have long argued that understanding gender inequality requires more than targeted projects, programs, interventions; it fundamental shift way we understand systems power shaping our complex (Tiessen, [2007]. Everywhere/nowhere: Gender mainstreaming development agencies. Kumarian Press). Despite this, which has been applied Government another question altogether. Using Ferguson’s ([1994]. The anti-politics machine. Minnesota) concepts “anti-politics machine”, article explores Canada’s FIAP using case study Gaza. It concludes despite having an policy predicated on values, humanitarian initiatives Gaza are scrubbed dimensions therefore utterly detached from reality occupation blockade subsequent impact lives women girls. | article | en | Politics|Slogan|Political science|Global politics|Gender studies|Power (physics)|Sociology|International relations|Government (linguistics)|Public administration|Law|Linguistics|Philosophy|Physics|Quantum mechanics | https://doi.org/10.1080/11926422.2020.1805340 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3083945837', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/11926422.2020.1805340', 'mag': '3083945837'} | Gaza | C144024400 | Sociology | Canadian Foreign Policy Journal |
“The problem is that a kibbutz is standing in front of you and you have no name or face for it”: Child sexual abuse risk factors and disclosure in the collective kibbutz community | Michal Michael (https://openalex.org/A5000147896)|Dafna Tener (https://openalex.org/A5069799837) | 2,023 | The socio-cultural context is a significant factor in understanding the phenomenon of child sexual abuse (CSA). kibbutz unique form community Israel, which was previously closed with high cohesion and close personal connections between its members, who shared common beliefs values. This study aimed to examine experiences perspectives adults had been sexually abused as children kibbutz. Fifteen (14 women one man) 1960s 1990s were interviewed for study. Semi-structured in-depth interviews conducted analyzed according thematic analysis approach. findings indicated that participants perceived an independent distinct entity CSA experience. Furthermore, due image community, wish protect reputation, trust familiarity among denied silenced. discussed kibbutz’s responsibility hardship acknowledging happened at Kibbutz. contributes significantly testimony giving voice survivors whose voices have not heard. Despite changes taken place over years, well increased awareness protection against abuse, there still room acknowledge validate past apologize survivors, risks are prevalent today. | article | en | Psychology|Thematic analysis|Blame|Context (archaeology)|Sexual abuse|Face (sociological concept)|Child sexual abuse|Social psychology|Developmental psychology|Suicide prevention|Poison control|Medicine|Qualitative research|Sociology|Social science|Paleontology|Environmental health|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.childyouth.2023.106918 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4323654835', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.childyouth.2023.106918'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Children and Youth Services Review |
“The relationship changed because I had changed”: Experiences and perceptions of friendships between women treated for substance use disorder in women-only residential programs | Jenia Kelner (https://openalex.org/A5092144237)|Belle Gavriel‐Fried (https://openalex.org/A5050960898) | 2,023 | Historically, the notion of friendships between women has been replete with negative myths and perceptions. However, studies show that contribute to their wellbeing as a source support empowerment. Social is known be key factor during recovery from substance use disorder (SUD). Previous have examined variety relationships, but less attention paid SUD. This qualitative study perceptions experiences friendship 14 who recovered SUD were treated in women-only residential treatment programs (RTP) Israel. Content analysis revealed four categories paralleled linear life-course childhood adulthood: social rejection longing for connection acceptance, interest-based versus non-interest-based friendships, being distant becoming close, “normative” “clean addicts.” Each category situated on conceptual axis representing tension trust mistrust, unifying theme. These findings are best understood within framework relational cultural theory (RCT), which emphasizes importance relationships people's lives. Therapists should consider positive impact women, theme therapy process. | article | en | Friendship|Psychology|Normative|Empowerment|Developmental psychology|Perception|Social psychology|Qualitative research|Sociology|Social science|Philosophy|Epistemology|Neuroscience|Political science|Law | https://doi.org/10.1177/09593535231176349 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4380324019', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/09593535231176349'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Feminism & Psychology |
“The right to narrate”: Gazans contest popular geopolitics with film | Hania A.M. Nashef (https://openalex.org/A5089887704) | 2,021 | Since the Intifada of 2000, living conditions in Gaza Strip have progressively deteriorated, and when Hamas came to power 2006–07, a complete blockade was enforced on inhabitants by Egypt Israel. In addition, five full-scale wars been waged Strip. Despite these conditions, Gazans remain resilient, as evidenced several recent cultural productions. This article analyses number films that endeavour show human face Gaza; way which, amidst ruins, construct semblance normal life. Films directed Hany Abu-Assad, Rashid Masharawi, Arab/Tarzan Nasser, Susan Youssef illustrate hardships endure, but also navigate complexity their situation, allowing individual communal stories emerge. Abject reality violence become secondary, protagonists are reconstituted challenges confinement politics territory. | article | en | CONTEST|Geopolitics|Face (sociological concept)|Power (physics)|Construct (python library)|Politics|Aesthetics|Movie theater|Gender studies|Sociology|Art|Political science|Law|Art history|Social science|Physics|Quantum mechanics|Computer science|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1080/17449855.2021.1963311 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3201453974', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/17449855.2021.1963311', 'mag': '3201453974'} | Egypt|Gaza|Gaza Strip|Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Postcolonial Writing|Humanities Commons CORE (Modern Language Association / Columbia University) |
“The roots of lawlessness”: The coverage of the Jewish underground in the Israeli press | Gerald Cromer (https://openalex.org/A5023098004) | 1,988 | Abstract Previous studies have pointed out the different ways in which mass media tend to denude terrorism of any ideological significance and relegate it periphery society. However, an analysis press coverage Jewish underground found exactly opposite kind response. Emphasis was placed on motivation those concerned their actions were inevitable conclusion political currents at center Israeli An attempt thereby made delegitimize not only terrorists themselves but also ideology that allegedly nurtured them. | article | en | Ideology|Lawlessness|Judaism|Politics|Terrorism|Law|Political science|Sociology|Philosophy|Theology | https://doi.org/10.1080/10576108808435698 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2053799840', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/10576108808435698', 'mag': '2053799840'} | Israel | C144024400|C203133693 | Sociology|Terrorism | Terrorism |
“The royal award goes to…”: Legitimacy processes for female-led family ventures | Sumaya Hashim (https://openalex.org/A5047362773)|Lucia Naldi (https://openalex.org/A5081973944)|Magdalena Markowska (https://openalex.org/A5039778462) | 2,021 | A notable phenomenon in the Gulf States, and Bahrain particular, is increasing number of female-led family ventures. This surprising because women are reported to face many legitimacy challenges when establishing a business an Arab society, which social economic decisions male-dominated. Thus, we explore how ventures gain society. We employ multiple case-study approach investigate three longitudinal cases. develop process model formation for The consists main phases: individual legitimacy, market validity royal validity. Our suggests that meritocracy carves out informs most activities throughout phases formation. Additionally, identify four different interconnecting forces (family/business spillover, large voices, bargaining power influence on norms) that, if present, accelerate analysis also there interactions reciprocal relationships among founders people with whom they interact can both be influenced by | article | en | Legitimacy|Meritocracy|Phenomenon|Reciprocal|New Ventures|Power (physics)|Political science|Political economy|Bargaining power|Spillover effect|Process (computing)|Positive economics|Sociology|Politics|Economics|Law|Entrepreneurship|Epistemology|Microeconomics|Philosophy|Linguistics|Physics|Quantum mechanics|Computer science|Operating system | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfbs.2020.100358 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3041862904', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfbs.2020.100358', 'mag': '3041862904'} | Bahrain | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Family Business Strategy |
“The rules” in Morocco? | Matthew Carey (https://openalex.org/A5017608006) | 2,012 | This article explores the social contexts and strategies of flirtation, seduction, relationship-building in Southern Morocco. It examines epistemological constraints different movements within drama focuses on ways which people actively seek to unsettle or opacify such interactions so as further their ends. Uncertainty, it suggests, is not merely a obstacle, but also tool. uses this investigation seduction an opportunity explore some methodological shortcomings wider pragmatic project adumbrate potential remedy. | article | en | Obstacle|Drama|Epistemology|Sociology|Political science|Philosophy|Law|Literature|Art | https://doi.org/10.14318/hau2.2.011 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1974628168', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.14318/hau2.2.011', 'mag': '1974628168'} | Morocco | C144024400 | Sociology | Hau: The Journal of Ethnographic Theory |
“The self-making of the scientific circumciser (fenni sünnetçi):” the medicalization of male circumcision in Turkey | Oyman Başaran (https://openalex.org/A5030854617) | 2,020 | This article analyzes the medicalization of male circumcision in Turkey. In 1960s, Turkish state launched its largest network healthcare services history. As part network, health officers began to perform circumcisions and introduced medical expertise into circumcision. They advertised new surgical techniques via mass media aimed persuade families their benefits replace itinerant circumcisers stigmatized modern, national imaginary. To do so, this argues, turned themselves “fenni sünnetçi (scientific circumciser).” By operationalizing concept ambivalence, investigates how sünnetçi” came epitomize a hybrid identity that enabled differentiate from maintain professional status while resonating with accustomed circumcisers. The enriches our understanding by paying attention changing subjectivities professionals who initiate process. | article | en | Medicalization|Ambivalence|The Imaginary|Sociology|Operationalization|Gender studies|Identity (music)|Medicine|Psychology|Psychiatry|Psychoanalysis|Aesthetics|Philosophy|Epistemology | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2020.113367 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3086206952', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2020.113367', 'mag': '3086206952', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33039731'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Social Science & Medicine |
“The spectators ask, is it a boy or a girl? What is it?”: Cultural cisgenderism and trans men's sporting experiences in Iran | Mohammad Sadegh Afroozeh (https://openalex.org/A5000740564)|Catherine Phipps (https://openalex.org/A5068097307)|Ali Afrouzeh (https://openalex.org/A5041385404)|Ameneh Mehri (https://openalex.org/A5010817209)|Zahra Alipour Asiri (https://openalex.org/A5018390748) | 2,023 | In this article, we draw on cultural cisgenderism to analyse the sporting experiences of trans men in Iran. Utilising semi-structured interviews with twelve different stages transition, consider their women's sport environments, extent which cisnormativity is embedded into culture, and whether gender identities are accepted. We found that essentialist understandings sex evident presentation policed by others, expectations should align ascribed biological sex. While some interviewees’ masculine expressions were valued, others considered ‘too masculine’ be eligible participate spaces; led restrictions around appearance clothing, alongside instances compulsory hormone testing. Finally, for those who ‘out’ about identity, often hostility from including coaches, teammates, spectators. Overall, paper provides a critical understanding inclusion spaces However, findings may useful anyone working make more accessible, regardless geographical location. | article | en | Essentialism|Girl|Identity (music)|Inclusion (mineral)|Gender studies|Hostility|Clothing|Gender identity|Psychology|Presentation (obstetrics)|Masculinity|Social psychology|Sociology|Developmental psychology|Aesthetics|Medicine|Geography|Philosophy|Archaeology|Radiology | https://doi.org/10.1177/10126902231162270 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4323666540', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/10126902231162270'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | International Review for the Sociology of Sport|Solent University Research Portal (Solent University)|Solent University Research Portal (Solent University) |
“The system here isn’t on patients’ side”- perspectives of women and men on the barriers to accessing and utilizing maternal healthcare services in South Sudan | Ngatho Samuel Mugo (https://openalex.org/A5032583044)|Michael J. Dibley (https://openalex.org/A5011938851)|Eliaba Yona Damundu (https://openalex.org/A5060739227)|Ashraful Alam (https://openalex.org/A5012405556) | 2,018 | In fragile and war-affected setting such as South Sudan, a combination of physical environmental, socioeconomic factors healthcare’s characteristic contributes to higher rates home delivery attended by unskilled attendants. This study aims understand the community members’ experience, perceptions barriers in relation accessing utilizing maternal healthcare services Sudan. We conducted in-depth one-on-one interview with 30 women 15 men investigate their perspectives on access child health related services. purposively selected partners this study. Our revealed that inadequate quality antenatal care lack essential medicine, supplies tools was linked individual’s mothers dissatisfaction they received. addition, sudden onset labor safety security were important reasons for Furthermore, transport result long distance facility associated costs either restricted or delayed reaching facilities. highlighted an urgent need government Sudan implement measures order improved service at night. Incorporating private transports provide affordable reliable pregnant post-partum is also important. Increasing budget allocation medicine improving management supply chain logistics are essential. | article | en | Medicine|Health administration|Government (linguistics)|Health care|Health informatics|Nursing research|Public health|Health facility|Service delivery framework|Environmental health|Nursing|Service (business)|Business|Economic growth|Health services|Population|Marketing|Linguistics|Philosophy|Economics | https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-017-2788-9 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2783103087', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-017-2788-9', 'mag': '2783103087', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29316933', 'pmcid': 'https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/5759875'} | Sudan | C138816342|C160735492|C2986740045 | Health care|Health services|Public health | BMC Health Services Research|DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals)|Europe PMC (PubMed Central)|PubMed Central|PubMed |
“The unity of language, thought and action”: the contribution of Isma‘il Gasprinsky to the development of education of the Muslim peoples | L. R. Murtazina (https://openalex.org/A5085942889) | 2,022 | The article discusses the activities of scientist and educator Isma‘il Gasprinsky in field education Muslim peoples at turn 19 th -20 centuries. is author sound method teaching (Phonics). He established elementary schools on basis this method. Such appeared not only central regions Russia, but also Turkestan, as well Turkey India. describes conditions, prerequisites some new schools, dwells issue opening a Jadid school city Bombay. makes an attempt to determine essence methodological appearance This was introduced by into educational practice schools. Gasprinsky's based experience European, Turkish Russian works prominent scientists teachers. created his own methodology European pedagogical traditions Islamic values. | article | en | Turkish|Islam|Pedagogy|Mathematics education|Phonics|Action (physics)|Sociology|Social science|Primary education|History|Psychology|Linguistics|Philosophy|Physics|Archaeology|Quantum mechanics | https://doi.org/10.31162/2618-9569-2022-15-3-635-652 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4303413571', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.31162/2618-9569-2022-15-3-635-652'} | Turkey | C10050518|C144024400 | Primary education|Sociology | Minbar. Islamskie issledovaniâ |
“The utmost strength I can bear”: Strategies and psychological costs of mothering within political violence | Cindy Sousa (https://openalex.org/A5062297479)|Mona El-Zuhairi (https://openalex.org/A5042960831)|M. Farooq Siddiqi (https://openalex.org/A5058418267) | 2,020 | Though certainly not women's only site of identity or set responsibilities in conflict settings, motherhood represents a distinct challenge within political violence. Yet, given the paucity research on topic, we still are operating without clear understanding how violence jeopardizes maternal well-being and care-taking practices. Drawing feminist perspectives mothering, analyses presented here, authors use content analysis to explore mothering from five focus groups with women Palestine. Results demonstrate considerable suffering mothers children endure war; work do promote children’s this context; these efforts exhaust psychological resources mothers. Findings enhance relatively small body knowledge about lived experiences point importance tending strategies needs who navigate for their children. | article | en | Politics|Context (archaeology)|Political violence|Identity (music)|Set (abstract data type)|Psychology|Social psychology|Poison control|Gender studies|Sociology|Developmental psychology|Political science|Medicine|Law|Paleontology|Physics|Acoustics|Computer science|Biology|Programming language|Environmental health | https://doi.org/10.1177/0959353520912971 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3013989856', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/0959353520912971', 'mag': '3013989856'} | Palestine | C144024400|C2777162435 | Political violence|Sociology | Feminism & Psychology|Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College (Bryn Mawr College) |
“The walls will not be silent” | Judy Barsalou (https://openalex.org/A5032246451) | 2,017 | In Chapter 10, Judy Barsalou discusses the trajectory of efforts at transitional justice in Egypt. She argues that while protesters demanded reform, and united around need to remove Mubarak, their further political demands, including those related accountability, were less clear some- times divergent. They had, particular, a range demands regarding what should do: whether it promote democracy, focus on socio-economic justice, or address other goals. observes, building her own interviews, surveys, poll by Pew Charitable Trust, there was strong support amongst ordinary Egyptians for institutional particularly security sector judiciary, presumably because so many had been victims abuses these. | book | en | Accountability|Democracy|Politics|Economic Justice|Political science|Transitional justice|Public administration|Political economy|Sociology|Law | https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190628567.003.0010 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4235134701', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190628567.003.0010'} | Egypt | C139621336|C144024400|C2779621654 | Economic Justice|Sociology|Transitional justice | Oxford University Press eBooks |
“The wound is still open”: the Nakba experience among internally displaced Palestinians in Israel | Sfaa Ghnadre-Naser (https://openalex.org/A5070575968)|Eli Somer (https://openalex.org/A5087747324) | 2,016 | Purpose While the 1948 Nakba represents most significant crisis in history of Palestinian people, its psychological effects on survivors Israel have yet to be explored. The purpose this paper is examine subjective experience and implications ordeals ensuing uprooting among internally displaced Palestinians living Israel. Design/methodology/approach Qualitative semi-structured in-depth interviews were conducted with ten who experienced as youngsters. interview transcripts analyzed thematically line accepted practice phenomenological research psychology. Findings Participants had a wide range traumatic events intertwined protracted daily struggles accumulated losses. These experiences resulted pronounced distress immense inner pain that was perpetuated throughout their lives, rendering an unresolved experience. Research limitations/implications This describes outcome small sample elderly survivors. Further urgent needed collect valuable untapped information from aging dwindling community. Originality/value Although more than six decades elapsed since tragic events, current constitutes pioneering effort document Nakba. findings counterbalance 60 years public academic disregard period. | article | en | Lived experience|Originality|Qualitative research|Distress|Psychology|Psychological distress|Social psychology|Mental health|Sociology|Clinical psychology|Psychotherapist|Social science | https://doi.org/10.1108/ijmhsc-07-2015-0024 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2553708496', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1108/ijmhsc-07-2015-0024', 'mag': '2553708496'} | Israel | C134362201|C144024400 | Mental health|Sociology | International Journal of Migration, Health and Social Care |
“The wounded healer” challenging the stigma attached to mental health conditions in medical students and doctors | Ahmed Hankir (https://openalex.org/A5075701630)|Rashid Zaman (https://openalex.org/A5076646790) | 2,016 | Despite the perception that medical students and doctors should be invincible, mental illness is over-represented in this group. Fear of exposure to stigma a major barrier accessing health services many people with continue suffer silence despite availability effective treatment. In 2014, we conceived contact-based, anti-stigma intervention, Wounded Healer (TWH) which has been described as an innovative method pedagogy blends science art. The main aims TWH are engage, enthuse, enthral educate order challenge stigma, debunk myths encourage help-seeking. Hitherto, delivered more than 10,000 people 15 medical schools throughout UK worldwide USA, Canada, Colombia, Portugal, Italy, Slovenia Lebanon. integrated into curricula several filmmakers from London College Communication have successfully secured funding commission production film. written feedback received audiences (which published peer-review journals book chapters) inspirational best performance they ever experienced. Moreover, was 2015 iMed 7.0 Congress Lisbon, Portugal (the largest student congress Europe, n =1000) alongside Noble Laureate report it inspired them consider career psychiatry. AH only early-career psychiatrist shortlisted for 2015 RCPsych Communicator Year Award recognition TWH. | review | en | Stigma (botany)|Mental health|Mental illness|Psychology|Silence|Commission|Intervention (counseling)|Psychiatry|Medical education|Medicine|Political science|Art|Law|Aesthetics | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2016.01.1922 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2609720382', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2016.01.1922', 'mag': '2609720382'} | Lebanon | C134362201 | Mental health | European Psychiatry |
“Their Beastly Manner”: Discourses of Non-Binary Gender and Sexuality in Shi’ite Safavid Persia | Ladan Rahbari (https://openalex.org/A5064295463) | 2,018 | Abstract The Safavid dynasty ruled Persia between sixteenth and eighteenth centuries is known as a turning period in the political, social religious trajectories of Persian history. ethnographic literature about culture written by Western travelers an indication forming relations West Orient. travelogues indicate that discourses sexuality were different from their counterparts West. These non-binary not based only on gender sexual orientation, but also factors such age, class status. Relations these to forms “masculinities/femininities” focal for gendered categorization. Nonbinary sexual/gendered identities expressions explicit, continuum was prevalent. fundamental differentiation masculinity femininity valid, relationships confined heterosexuality. This study uses historical sources explore during era. Drawing criticisms Orientalism, implications narratives our understandings era are discussed. | article | en | Human sexuality|Gender studies|Masculinity|Femininity|Heterosexuality|Sociology|Narrative|Orientalism|Politics|History|Literature|Art|Political science|Law | https://doi.org/10.1515/culture-2018-0068 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2915062144', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1515/culture-2018-0068', 'mag': '2915062144'} | Persia | C144024400 | Sociology | Open Cultural Studies|DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals)|Ghent University Academic Bibliography (Ghent University)|Ghent University Academic Bibliography (Ghent University) |
“Their Deeds are the Deeds of Zimri; but They Expect a Reward Like Phineas”: Neoliberal and Multicultural Discourses in the Development of Israeli DTT Policy | Roei Davidson (https://openalex.org/A5045001513)|Amit M. Schejter (https://openalex.org/A5068648476) | 2,011 | We examine how neoliberal and multicultural discourses were employed in the development of digital terrestrial television (DTT) policy Israel as a case study deployment media technology society that is characterized by deep social cleavages rapid neoliberalization. conduct detailed analysis official documents published over 6 years, including preparatory work, draft bills, parliamentary committee minutes, plenary discussions, wording law enacted February 2008. This highlights multiculturalism operates rhetoric champions cultural economic rights minorities, while masking stances negate these rights. demonstrate this linked to composition channels eventually included on DTT platform.
« Leurs actions sont celles de Zimri, mais ils s’attendent la recompense Pinhas « : discours et multiculturel dans le developpement d’une politique numerique terrestre en Israel
Nous examinons l’emploi des (TNT) Israel, titre d’etude cas du deploiement technologies mediatiques une societe caracterisee par profonds clivages sociaux rapide neoliberalisation. Nous menons analyse detaillee officiels publies sur periode plus six ans, dont travaux preparatoires, avant-projets loi, proces-verbaux comites parlementaires, discussions plenieres parlementaires libelle loi promulguee fevrier Cette etude souligne comment multiculturalisme agit tant que rhetorique qui promeut les droits culturels economiques minorites tout dissimulant positions politiques nient ces droits. demontrons ce phenomene est liea canaux finalement inclus plateforme TNT.
,,Ihre Taten sind die der Simri, aber sie erwarten eine Belohnung wie Phineas“: Neoliberale und multikulturelle Diskurse im Kontext Entwicklung von Richtlinien fur das digitale terrestrische Fernsehen Israel
Roei Davidson
Wir beschaftigen uns mit Frage, neoliberale bei Fernsehens verwendet wurden diskutieren damit Fallstudie den Einsatz einer Medientechnologie Gesellschaft, tiefen sozialen Graben rasanter Neoliberalisierung gekennzeichnet ist. Wir fuhrten dazu detaillierte Analyse offiziellen Dokumente uber einen Zeitraum sechs Jahren durch. Diese umfassen Dokumentation vorbereitenden Arbeiten genauso Gesetzesentwurfe, Sitzungsberichte parlamentarischen Komitees, parlamentarische Plenardiskussionen Wortlaut Gesetzes, Februar 2008 Kraft trat. Die Studie stellt heraus, neoliberaler Multikulturalismus als Rhetorik funktioniert, sich kulturellen okonomischen Rechte Minoritaten einsetzt gleichzeitig politische Haltungen verdeckt, diese negieren. zeigen auf, dieser Prozess Zusammenstellung Kanale Rolle spielt, letztlich auf Plattform digitalen terrestrischen ausgestrahlt werden.
‘‘Sus Leyes son las Zimri; pero Ellos esperan una Recompensa como
Phineas’’: Los Discursos Neoliberales y Multiculturales del
Desarrollo Politica Israeli
Roei Davidson
Department Communication, University Haifa, Mount Carmel, Haifa 31905, Israel
Resumen
Examinamos como los discursos neoliberales multiculturales empleados el desarrollo Television Digital Terrestre un estudio caso del despliegue tecnologia medios sociedad esta caracterizada por profundos escotes sociales rapida neoliberalizacion. Conducimos analisis detallado documentos oficiales publicados periodo anos, incluyendo trabajos preparatorios, borradores leyes, resumenes reuniones comite parlamentario, discusiones parlamentarias plenarias, redaccion ley hecha Febrero Este subraya neoliberalismo opera retorica dominante aboga derecho economico minorias, mientras enmascara posiciones politicas niegan estos derechos. Demostramos esto conectado composicion canales eventualmente incluidos plataforma sobre DTT. | article | en | Multiculturalism|Political science|Sociology|Law|Criminology | https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1753-9137.2010.01089.x | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2023754266', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1753-9137.2010.01089.x', 'mag': '2023754266'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Communication, Culture & Critique |
“Their corpses will reach the base of heaven”: a third-millennium BC war memorial in northern Mesopotamia? | Anne Porter (https://openalex.org/A5027684565)|Thomas McClellan (https://openalex.org/A5008516322)|Susanne Wilhelm (https://openalex.org/A5001768984)|Jill A. Weber (https://openalex.org/A5079777778)|A. C. Baldwin (https://openalex.org/A5025013483)|Jean Colley (https://openalex.org/A5034561504)|Brittany Enriquez (https://openalex.org/A5014755877)|Meagan Jahrles (https://openalex.org/A5033398143)|Bridget Lanois (https://openalex.org/A5063558307)|Vladislav Malinov (https://openalex.org/A5051210747)|Sumedh Ragavan (https://openalex.org/A5055800214)|Alexandra Robins (https://openalex.org/A5018472370)|Zarhuna Safi (https://openalex.org/A5032117644) | 2,021 | Burial mounds piled high with enemy corpses are well known in Mesopotamian inscriptions as symbols of victory, but no archaeological examples have so far been recovered. Archaeological investigations a tall mound adjacent to the site Tell Banat Syria revealed an unusual, late third-millennium BC mortuary population, dominated by adult and sub-adult males. The systematic placement these human remains associated assemblages suggests that, rather than containing combatants, this was memorial community's battle dead. authors propose that deceased belonged organised army, broader implications for state administration adherence or resistance new regime fostered such monumentalisation. | article | en | Mesopotamia|Victory|Battle|Ancient history|Archaeology|Heaven|Population|History|Adversary|Resistance (ecology)|Geography|Demography|Sociology|Law|Biology|Mathematics|Ecology|Statistics|Politics|Political science | https://doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2021.58 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3173004480', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2021.58', 'mag': '3173004480'} | Syria | C144024400 | Sociology | Antiquity |
“Their wounds are our wounds”: a case for affective solidarity between Palestine and Kashmir | Ather Zia (https://openalex.org/A5058707403) | 2,020 | Both Palestine and the Indian held Kashmir have become hallmarks of a postcolonial siege manifest in heavy militarisation, illegal occupation, human rights violations, an excruciating love born from for people’s resistance solidarity. While different, strong overlaps exist between two conflicts having been midwifed by waning British Empire 1947; subsequent internationalisation fighting against type contemporary international politics that subsumes them under so-called ‘Islamic terrorism.’ Also noticeable is motif ‘suffering’ makes tragedy resonate with pathos Palestine. This paper focuses on vantage Kashmir, where people herald Palestinian struggle as pioneering beacon just struggle. I illustrate how Kashmiris, come to harbour Palestinians ‘affective solidarity’ which evident their modes lend support liberation credibility Kashmir’s own movement. | article | en | Solidarity|Terrorism|Palestine|Siege|Politics|Resistance (ecology)|Islam|Empire|Law|Political science|Ancient history|Gender studies|Sociology|Political economy|History|Ecology|Archaeology|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1080/1070289x.2020.1750199 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3016553805', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/1070289x.2020.1750199', 'mag': '3016553805'} | Palestine | C144024400|C203133693 | Sociology|Terrorism | Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power |
“Then He Stabbed Me with a Spear”: Aggressive Sacred Images and Interreligious Polemics | Monica Mitri (https://openalex.org/A5012962678) | 2,021 | Abstract This paper studies Coptic communal identity in early Islamic Egypt by analyzing two hagiographical narratives from the Christian Copto-Arabic text The History of Patriarchs Alexandria . relate incidents sacred images that become ‘aggressive’ when they retaliate against insults. Although relation between religious violence and art has merited much scholarly attention, focus is usually on humans as aggressors victim. reverse scarcer, its rarity means we miss an opportunity to rethink such communicative modes rhetoric be contextually interpreted. Here I argue these aggressive were tools power within a polemic discourse aimed at proclaiming divine truth, undergirding it with supernatural power, ultimately shaping around this discourse. | article | en | Narrative|Rhetoric|Identity (music)|Islam|Power (physics)|Arabic|Relation (database)|Focus (optics)|Literature|Sociology|Aesthetics|History|Philosophy|Art|Linguistics|Theology|Physics|Quantum mechanics|Database|Computer science|Optics | https://doi.org/10.1163/15700682-12341532 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3214301379', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1163/15700682-12341532', 'mag': '3214301379'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | Method & Theory in The Study of Religion |
“Then One Day We Create Something Unexpected”: Tribalography's Decolonizing Strategies in LeAnne Howe's <em>Evidence of Red</em> | Elizabeth Horan (https://openalex.org/A5066564115)|Seonghoon Kim (https://openalex.org/A5049205269) | 2,013 | "Then One Day We Create Something Unexpected":Tribalography's Decolonizing Strategies in LeAnne Howe's Evidence of Red Elizabeth Horan (bio) and Seonghoon Kim Much the recent, growing acclaim for work Choctaw writer Howe concerns her first second novels, Shell Shaker (2001) Miko Kings (2006).1 Her mixed genre volume, (2005, henceforth, Evidence) has, by contrast, received relatively less attention. puts into practice theory that developed two earlier, influential essays, "Tribalography: The Power Native Stories" "The Story America: A Tribalography." Those essays conjunction with reflect experience "storyweaving" collaborations members Spiderwoman Theater, which built from reciprocal relation performers audience (Stanlake, American 7, 25, 201-10).2 In as on tribalography, a mixture lyric, reflective, narrative prose appear. While includes substantial passages dramatic dialogues monologues, contain explicit theorizing about storytelling transformational, arising collective processes identities: "Creation stories, numerous Indian tribes, gave birth to [Native] people" ("Tribalography" 118). shifts time characterize narratives novels correspond goal announces essays: should establish "past, present future milieu" native epistemologies (118). theories she aim toward decolonization part longer-term strategies Indigenous survivance. Such decolonization, whether brought through reading or performance, is primarily psychological process political aspects individuals groups learn recognize reject colonial oppression. storyweaving tribalography Evidence, prospect [End Page 27] arises text's pointing poking fun at habits thought, speech, self-perception warped, inadequate, dangerous views colonizer. This aspect represents continuation skills "Tribalography" suggest, employs parodic mimicry set mental motion. Storyweaving then seeks replace damaging falsehoods colonialism representing an alternative, showing how traditional forms knowledge are available day. representations alternatives traverse wide swathes time. She draws positive attention setting stories startling but relevant contemporary contexts, moving across space. example, speaker's travel interactions Palestinians, Syrians, Jews Middle East, brief sojourns Europe, locations US West show personal presents possibility alternative pacts alliances, corresponding what has written elsewhere traditions diplomacy. Still another linguistic revitalization, manifest phrases followed semantic explanations throughout work. that's been particularly practiced self-referential use photography, yet technique juxtaposing past present.3 All these survivance involve one-on-one interaction performance. Acoma Simon Ortiz shapes interest opens quotes Ortiz's volume Going Rain. drama congruent observations resilience peoples, who have subsumed appropriated European culture religion "in their own—Indian—terms," using "prayer, song, drama-ritual, story-telling" tribes "creatively responded forced colonization" ("Toward" 8, 9-10).4 regards such cultural creativity on-going resistance 10). performance situation storyteller Craig Womack (Creek-Cherokee), clear affinity Howe, observes stating "Indian people speak themselves . [End... | article | en | Storytelling|Narrative|Literature|Power (physics)|History|Sociology|Art|Physics|Quantum mechanics | https://doi.org/10.5250/studamerindilite.25.1.0027 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1037077371', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.5250/studamerindilite.25.1.0027', 'mag': '1037077371'} | Syria | C144024400 | Sociology | Studies in American Indian Literatures |
“Then What Have I to do with Thee?”: On Identity, Fieldwork, and Ethnographic Knowledge | Suzanne R. Kirschner (https://openalex.org/A5044725274) | 1,987 | Cultural AnthropologyVolume 2, Issue 2 p. 211-234 Free Access “Then What Have I to do with Thee?”: On Identity, Fieldwork, and Ethnographic Knowledge Suzanne R. Kirschner, Kirschner Department of Human Development Harvard UniversitySearch for more papers by this author First published: May 1987 https://doi.org/10.1525/can.1987.2.2.02a00030AboutPDF ToolsExport citationAdd favoritesTrack citation ShareShare Give accessShare full text full-text accessPlease review our Terms Conditions Use check box below share version article.I have read accept the Wiley Online Library UseShareable LinkUse link a article your friends colleagues. Learn more.Copy URL Share linkShare onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditWechat References Cited Bateson, Gregory 1980a Steps an Ecology Mind. New York: Ballantine. 1980b Mind Nature: A Necessary Unity. Bantam. Bernstein, Richard 1983 Beyond Objectivism Relativism: Science, Hermeneutics Praxis. Philadelphia: University Pennsylvania Press. Blake, William 1973 The Poetry Prose Blake. David Erdman ed. , Doubleday. Briggs, Jean 1970 Kapluna Daughter. In Women in Field. Peggy Golde Pp. 19– 44. Chicago: Aldine. Chodorow, Nancy 1978 Reproduction Mothering. Berkeley: California Crapanzano, Vincent 1977 Writing Ethnography. Dialectical Anthropology 2(1): 69– 73. 1980 Tuhami: Portrait Moroccan. Chicago Damrosch, Leopold, Jr. Symbol Truth Blake's Myth. Princeton: Princeton Darwin, Charles 1955 Expression Emotion Man Animals. Philosophical Library. [1872]. Devereux, George 1967 From Anxiety Method Behavioral Sciences. Hague: Mouton. Dinnerstein, Dorothy 1976 Mermaid Minotaur: Sexual Arrangements Malaise. Harper Row. Donnelly, Julie Cotton Empathy: Its Contribution Adult during Parenthood. Unpublished Qualifying Paper, Graduate School Education, University. Dumont, Jean-Paul Headman I: Ambiguity Ambivalence Fieldworking Experience. Austin: Texas Ekman, Paul 1974 Universal Facial Expressions Emotion. Culture Personality. Robert A. LeVine 8– 15. Foucault, Michel Order Things. Vintage Books. Fox Keller, Evelyn 1985 Gender Science. Haven: Yale Gadamer, Hans-Georg 1979 Problem Historical Consciousness. Interpretive Social Rabinow M. Sullivan eds. 103– 160. Gardner, Judith Kegan 1981 Female Identity Women. Difference. Elizabeth Abel 177– 191. Geertz, Clifford Interpretation Cultures. Basic Native's Point View. 225– 241. Gilligan, Carol 1982 Different Voice. Cambridge: Golde, Introduction. 1– Odyssey Encounter. 67– 93. Hoffman, Martin Empathy, its Prosocial Implications. Nebraska Symposium on Motivation (25). C. B. Keasey 169– 217. Lincoln: Perspectives Difference between Understanding People Things: Role Affect. Cognitive Development. John Flavell Lee Ross 81. Cambridge Hochschild, Arlie Russell Managed Heart: Commercialization Feelings. Izard, E. 1971 Emotions Constructs Personality Research. Handbook Modern Theory. Raymond Cattell Ralph Mason Dreger Washington, DC: Hemisphere. Kohut, Heinz Analysis Self. International Universities Kondo, Dorinne K. Inside Outside: Fieldworker as Conceptual Anomaly. Paper presented at 81st Annual Meeting American Anthropological Association. DC. Landes, Ruth Woman Anthropologist Brazil. 119– 139. Miller, Baker Toward Psychology Boston: Beacon Powdermaker, Hortense 1966 Stranger Friend. W. Norton. Rabinow, Reflections Fieldwork Morocco. Paul, Turn: Emergence Approach. Sulllivan 21. Ricoeur, Model Text: Meaningful Action Considered Text. 73– 101. Rogers, Carl Becoming Person. Houghton Mifflin. Rosaldo, Michele Z. Passion. Stoller, J. 1975 Symbiosis Masculinity. Perversion: Erotic Form Hatred. 135– 162. Pantheon. Tomkins, S. 1962 Affect, Imagery, vols. Springer. Weidman, Hazel Hitson 239– 263. Citing Literature Volume2, Issue2May 1987Pages ReferencesRelatedInformation | review | en | Ethnography|Sociology|Identity (music)|Portrait|Anthropology|Art history|Philosophy|History|Aesthetics | https://doi.org/10.1525/can.1987.2.2.02a00030 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2074410262', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1525/can.1987.2.2.02a00030', 'mag': '2074410262'} | Morocco | C144024400 | Sociology | Cultural Anthropology |
“Then and Now”: The Making of a Visual Frontier | Shimrit Lee (https://openalex.org/A5066634407) | 2,022 | Abstract This article explores the role of visual field in establishing and expanding frontier Jewish settlement pre-state Palestine. In late nineteenth early twentieth centuries, Zionist funds, including National Fund Foundation Fund, among others, produced distributed material an ideologically controlled way that was meant to resonate with American audiences deeply invested their own mythologies. Through examination work formative photographers Abraham Soskin Zoltan Kluger, as well forms found at Palestine Pavilion 1939–40 World's Fair New York, author identifies three central tenets building wove through field: transformation, citizenship, security. | article | en | Frontier|Judaism|Mythology|Ideology|Pavilion|Palestine|State (computer science)|Sociology|History|Political science|Law|Archaeology|Classics|Politics|Ancient history|Algorithm|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1215/21582025-10048212 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4311895213', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1215/21582025-10048212'} | Palestine|State of Palestine | C144024400 | Sociology | |
“Then the Conscience of Humanity Arose”: Kishon and the Nations of the World | Gideon Nevo (https://openalex.org/A5021749964) | 2,021 | Abstract For many years, humorist Ephraim Kishon diligently brandished his satirical whip at Israel’s socio-economic socialist structure, while vividly portraying the vicissitudes of Israeli ‘homo economicus’ in labyrinth modern life. This line writing brought him fame, both Israel and abroad. At later stages career though, a significant portion work was dedicated to relationship between its neighbors world. In this area has articulated cemented stern nationalistic worldview. A systematic analysis worldview is matter for several articles. article I will focus on Kishon’s treatment national entities that are not part immediate circle confrontation (i.e., neighboring Arab states) but rather scattered far wide all over | article | en | Humanity|Stern|Homo economicus|Conscience|Sociology|Religious studies|Philosophy|Aesthetics|History|Ancient history|Epistemology|Theology|Neoclassical economics|Economics | https://doi.org/10.1163/1872471x-bja10026 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3167968522', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1163/1872471x-bja10026', 'mag': '3167968522'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | European Journal of Jewish Studies |
“There Are Always Grounds for Seeking a World That Is More Free and More Just”: An Interview with Noam Chomsky on Israel, Palestine, and Zionism | Noam Chomsky (https://openalex.org/A5072532913)|Joel Wainwright (https://openalex.org/A5026093235)|Oded Nir (https://openalex.org/A5008635452) | 2,018 | In this dialogue, Joel Wainwright and Oded Nir interview one of the most influential commentators on Israel Palestine, Noam Chomsky. Their wide-ranging discussion examines key controversies surrounding issue: Israeli aggression, paradigms for potential solutions to conflict, early Zionism, Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions campaign, analogy between Israel/Palestine apartheid South Africa. | article | en | Zionism|Palestine|Boycott|Divestment|Sanctions|Analogy|Political science|Mandatory Palestine|Law|Sociology|Ancient history|History|Philosophy|Epistemology|Politics | https://doi.org/10.1080/08935696.2018.1525966 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2902371673', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/08935696.2018.1525966', 'mag': '2902371673'} | Israel|Palestine | C144024400 | Sociology | Rethinking Marxism |
“There Are Many Cases That You Carry with You That Leave Scars”: Burnout and Secondary Trauma among Pediatric Residents in Routine and Covid Times | Or Kaplan (https://openalex.org/A5041363081)|Michal Kaplan (https://openalex.org/A5020207733)|Rotem Shalev (https://openalex.org/A5047436110)|Michal Maimon (https://openalex.org/A5073686760) | 2,023 | The current research joins previous studies in examining post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and burnout among healthcare workers. focuses on the experiences of pediatric residents working an emergency department both normal times during Covid pandemic. Research conducted prior to pandemic outbreak shows negative psychological effects Most that was within positivistic-quantitative paradigm. study is qualitative who provide medical services a unique population peripheral region Israel, namely Bedouin-Arab population. questions are following: What characterizes residents’ work, general pandemic? Do they show signs secondary trauma? How do perceive their work with population, especially study, phenomenological genre, included 14 large hospital Israel’s periphery. Semi-structured clinical interviews were employed, addition questionnaires examined PTSD enhance reliability findings. results all reported stressful incidents which patients’ physical integrity threatened. described special nature cases treated routine outbreak, stems mostly from specific characteristics While at early stages pandemic, experienced reduced pressure, substantial difficulties later crisis, intensified sense emotional stress. feeling inadequately prepared for dealing traumatic events. According results, most displayed trauma (12 participants 11 questionnaires), can be classified into categories based DSM-5. In interviews, various burnout. indicated symptoms 10 participants. Giving voice residents, highlights complexity as well role crisis. Based findings, recommendations have been made policymakers. importance raising awareness implications rough conditions need develop social support intervention programs might improve well-being professional work. | article | en | Burnout|Pandemic|Population|Medicine|Family medicine|Health care|Psychiatry|Psychology|Nursing|Clinical psychology|Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)|Disease|Environmental health|Infectious disease (medical specialty)|Pathology|Economics|Economic growth | https://doi.org/10.4236/ojmp.2023.121002 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4318461624', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.4236/ojmp.2023.121002'} | Israel | C160735492 | Health care | Open Journal of Medical Psychology |
“There Is Always an Excuse to Blame the Girl”: Perspectives on Sexual Harassment at a Jordanian University | Irina Bergenfeld (https://openalex.org/A5062881506)|Cari J. Clark (https://openalex.org/A5040159822)|Seema Sandhu (https://openalex.org/A5026243214)|Kathryn M. Yount (https://openalex.org/A5042600726)|Aida Essaid (https://openalex.org/A5084547015)|Jude Sajdi (https://openalex.org/A5025634579)|Rand Abu Taleb (https://openalex.org/A5063743186)|Zoe Robbin (https://openalex.org/A5087746388)|Brian Batayeh (https://openalex.org/A5073295567)|Ahad Zwooqar (https://openalex.org/A5001141657)|Rachael A. Spencer (https://openalex.org/A5076662509) | 2,022 | Sexual harassment (SH), defined as unwelcome conduct of a sexual nature, presents global public health issue and barrier to empowerment for women girls. To understand the perceived causes SH in Jordanian university context, we conducted focus groups (n = 6) participatory data collection with students 317) interviews staff administrators 5) at university. These identified norms governing men's women's behavior, institutional climate policies, tribal conservatism protection perpetrators, early socialization underlying SH. Campus-based interventions should adopt approaches aimed multiple levels social ecology. | article | en | Harassment|Context (archaeology)|Conservatism|Empowerment|Blame|Socialization|Psychological intervention|Psychology|Political science|Criminology|Social psychology|Sociology|Public relations|Law|Psychiatry|Politics|Geography|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1177/10778012221079373 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4213434555', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/10778012221079373', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35200046'} | Jordan | C144024400 | Sociology | Violence Against Women|PubMed |
“There Is No Fat in Heaven”: Religious Asceticism and the Meaning of Anorexia Nervosa | Caroline Giles Banks (https://openalex.org/A5038969993) | 1,996 | EthosVolume 24, Issue 1 p. 107-135 “There Is No Fat in Heaven”: Religious Asceticism and the Meaning of Anorexia Nervosa CAROLINE GILES BANKS, BANKS lecturer Anthropology University North Carolina at CharlotteSearch for more papers by this author First published: March 1996 https://doi.org/10.1525/eth.1996.24.1.02a00040Citations: 23AboutPDF ToolsExport citationAdd to favoritesTrack citation ShareShare Give accessShare full text full-text accessPlease review our Terms Conditions Use check box below share version article.I have read accept Wiley Online Library UseShareable LinkUse link a article with your friends colleagues. Learn more.Copy URL Share linkShare onEmailFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditWechat REFERENCES American Psychiatric Association 1994 Diagnostic Statistical Manual Mental Disorders. 4th ed. Washington, DC: Association. 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Citing Volume24, Issue1March 1996Pages ReferencesRelatedInformation | review | en | Heaven|Asceticism|Anorexia nervosa|Meaning (existential)|Anorexia|Philosophy|Psychology|Art|Psychoanalysis|Medicine|Internal medicine|Psychotherapist|Theology|Eating disorders|Psychiatry | https://doi.org/10.1525/eth.1996.24.1.02a00040 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2090072605', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1525/eth.1996.24.1.02a00040', 'mag': '2090072605'} | Morocco|West Bank | C2776394216 | Eating disorders | Ethos |
“There Is Zero Regulation on the Selling of Alcohol”: The Voice of the Youth on the Context and Determinants of Alcohol Drinking in Lebanon | Nasser Yassin (https://openalex.org/A5005493196)|Rima Afifi (https://openalex.org/A5005338810)|Neil Singh (https://openalex.org/A5024243187)|Reem Saad (https://openalex.org/A5059379539)|Lilian Ghandour (https://openalex.org/A5002210479) | 2,018 | Alcohol-related research from the Arab world has rarely touched on experiences or views of adolescents. In this article, we present an in-depth analysis youth alcohol drinking patterns and determinants derived focus group discussions completed with more than 100 Lebanese high school/vocational students (15-19 years). The social ecology use framework guided our analysis. Findings reveal that is perceived as a pervasive serious public health problem, triggered by complex web relations, facilitated lax policies. Recommendations to curb heavy/harmful among adolescents include regulating role industry, providing alternative recreational spaces/pass-times, educating about alcohol-related harms, promoting its harms. confirm framework, suggest addition macro level influence model, namely, comprehensive harm reduction policy. | article | en | Harm|Alcohol|Context (archaeology)|Harm reduction|Alcohol industry|Environmental health|Psychology|Recreation|Public health|Social psychology|Medicine|Political science|Business|Geography|Advertising|Nursing|Chemistry|Biochemistry|Archaeology|Law | https://doi.org/10.1177/1049732317750563 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2783598990', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/1049732317750563', 'mag': '2783598990', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29307267'} | Lebanon | C138816342|C529928208 | Harm reduction|Public health | Qualitative Health Research|PubMed |
“There Is a Big Question Mark”: Managing Ambiguity in a Moroccan Maternity Ward | Jess Marie Newman (https://openalex.org/A5011488726) | 2,019 | Abstract In Morocco, where extramarital sex and abortion are illegal, single mothers’ ambiguous status before the law inflects medical decision‐making. Leaky boundaries between court hospital required doctors administrators to work with multiple forms of documentation while anticipating external surveillance. Gaps everyday experience legalized identity created confusion across institutions. When discussing mothers, staff often spoke “question marks” that flagged tensions legibility liability, disappearance documentation. Managing question marks ramified surveillance categorization. Ultimately, however, attempts administratively resolve ambiguity gaps inconsistencies allowed vulnerable patients disappear from view. | article | en | Ambiguity|Documentation|Categorization|Abortion|Confusion|Identity (music)|Legibility|Psychology|Sociology|Law|Public relations|Social psychology|Political science|Business|Epistemology|Pregnancy|Computer science|Philosophy|Physics|Biology|Acoustics|Psychoanalysis|Advertising|Genetics|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1111/maq.12510 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2919035462', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/maq.12510', 'mag': '2919035462', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30816594'} | Morocco | C144024400 | Sociology | Medical Anthropology Quarterly|PubMed |
“There Is a Change Coming […] in the Lives of Girls and Women.” Del Jordan’s and Catherine Sloper’s Ways to Independence | Paula Suchorska (https://openalex.org/A5062600569) | 2,016 | This chapter offers a comparative analysis of two film adaptations: Agnieszka Holland’s Washington Square (Dir. Holland. Hollywood Pictures, The US, 1997) and Ronald Wilson’s Lives Girls Women (1994a, b) in terms the development their female protagonists, Catherine Sloper Del Jordan, respectively, from weak innocent girls to independent women. Paula Suchorska begins by discussing ways which Henry James Alice Munro depict protagonists works. She then focuses on presentation main characters, relations with other women role men lives adaptations. discusses factors that have significant impact Del’s Catherine’s independence, arguing each them reaches different stage freedom. | chapter | en | Independence (probability theory)|Gender studies|Hollywood|Performance art|Sociology|Art|Art history|Mathematics|Statistics | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-24061-9_8 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2467000523', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-24061-9_8', 'mag': '2467000523'} | Jordan | C144024400 | Sociology | Second language learning and teaching |
“There Is an Istanbul That Belongs to Me”: Citizenship, Space, and Identity in the City | Anna Secor (https://openalex.org/A5019399360) | 2,004 | Abstract The citizenship ideal of the Turkish republic has taken shape through logics alterity, defined by and both a paradoxical understanding Turkishness rise Kurdish identity politics. Citizenship in Turkey represents an uneasy marriage between ethnic civic conceptions national belonging. This article develops analysis everyday spatial practice Istanbul narratives produced focus group discussions with Kurdish-identified, migrant women. Their stories explore how citizenship, as hegemonic process that assembles identities, fixes power relations, disciplines space, is encountered contested practices life, what Michel de Certeau calls tactics “making do.” Viewing dominant discourses techniques organization (“strategies,” Certeau's terms), this study focuses on participants narrate their own resistance to appropriation codings “the citizen” stranger” context. brings fore ways which encounter position them strangers citizens, use anonymity strategies they traverse city spaces, moments situate themselves political subjects schools, neighborhoods, workplaces Istanbul, enactment life. | article | en | Citizenship|Gender studies|Sociology|Context (archaeology)|Everyday life|Identity (music)|Turkish|Politics|Appropriation|Narrative|Aesthetics|Political science|Geography|Epistemology|Law|Archaeology|Philosophy|Linguistics | https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8306.2004.09402012.x | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1977588591', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8306.2004.09402012.x', 'mag': '1977588591'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Annals of The Association of American Geographers |
“There Must Be a Reason”: Osama, Saddam, and Inferred Justification | Monica Prasad (https://openalex.org/A5075862523)|Andrew J. Perrin (https://openalex.org/A5088290919)|Kieran Bezila (https://openalex.org/A5082222819)|Steve Hoffman (https://openalex.org/A5025429291)|Kate Kindleberger (https://openalex.org/A5015970532)|Kim Manturuk (https://openalex.org/A5047404798)|Ashleigh Smith Powers (https://openalex.org/A5051900131) | 2,009 | One of the most curious aspects 2004 presidential election was strength and resilience belief among many Americans that Saddam Hussein linked to terrorist attacks September 11. Scholars have suggested this result a campaign false information innuendo from Bush administration. We call environment explanation. Using technique “challenge interviews” on sample voters who reported believing in link between 9/11, we propose instead social psychological explanation for link. identify number mechanisms use maintain beliefs face disconfirming information, show subset main reason believe it made sense administration's decision go war against Iraq. inferred justification : these voters, fact led search it, which them infer existence ties Iraq 9/11. | article | en | Terrorism|Presidential system|Face (sociological concept)|Resilience (materials science)|Administration (probate law)|Social psychology|Psychological resilience|Presidential election|Epistemology|Iraq war|Sociology|Political science|Criminology|Psychology|Law|Social science|Politics|Philosophy|Physics|Thermodynamics | https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-682x.2009.00280.x | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2047471858', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-682x.2009.00280.x', 'mag': '2047471858'} | Iraq | C144024400|C203133693 | Sociology|Terrorism | Sociological Inquiry |
“There Was Something Inside of Me I Needed to Let Out”: Occupied Masculinities, Emotional Expression and Rap Music in a Palestinian Refugee Camp | Chloe Skinner (https://openalex.org/A5049003422) | 2,021 | Although normative constructions of masculinity in Palestine denote emotional suppression as an idealized attribute, extreme subjugation under the grinding realities a colonial military occupation requires that this ideal is negotiated. This article explores Palestinian rap channel through which emotions related to individual and collective oppression are expressed within (fluid) parameters particular emergent masculine performance. Through qualitative research with young men living refugee camp, I argue expression musical culture both functions reconfigure binary gendered dynamics, while simultaneously masculinizing emotionality dialogic performance emotion, nationalism, resistance, paternalism. In some ways, patriarchal binaries hence challenged rap, other ways these reconfigured so men’s can be subsumed them. article, therefore, examines negotiation “masculinity suppression” context internal powers routinely threatened by forces. | article | en | Masculinity|Gender studies|Sociology|Expression (computer science)|Context (archaeology)|Refugee|Nationalism|Social psychology|Psychology|Political science|Law|History|Politics|Archaeology|Computer science|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1177/1097184x211019076 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3172996712', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/1097184x211019076', 'mag': '3172996712'} | Palestine | C144024400 | Sociology | Men and Masculinities |
“There Will Only Be Lots of Chit-Chat”: How Hamas Leaders and Media Interviewers Handle Controversial Topics | Chris McVittie (https://openalex.org/A5023473044)|Rahul Sambaraju (https://openalex.org/A5022591805)|Alan McKinlay (https://openalex.org/A5031894916) | 2,011 | Abstract This article examines media interviews with Hamas political leaders conducted between January 2006 and December 2008, immediately before the outbreak of war in Gaza. The analysis presented here focuses on role footing shifts posing challenging questions their consequential relevance for exchange that followed which attended to interviewers' provided own accounts. results show confer interactional benefits interviewers interviewees alike. Such allow all participants construct discussion as being “newsworthy” relevant a wider audience do “neutralism.” At same time, attribute contentious allegations third parties criticize nominated sources. In so doing, initial enable discussions topics proceed without breakdown. | article | en | Relevance (law)|Politics|Construct (python library)|Political science|Public relations|Psychology|Media studies|Sociology|Social psychology|Law|Computer science|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1080/08351813.2011.546057 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2067949789', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/08351813.2011.546057', 'mag': '2067949789'} | Gaza | C144024400 | Sociology | |
“There are only a few things that you cannot manage without internet”: Realization of capabilities through internet (non)use by ultra-Orthodox Jewish women | Rivka Neriya-Ben Shahar (https://openalex.org/A5010209659)|Avi Marciano (https://openalex.org/A5078514886)|Amit M. Schejter (https://openalex.org/A5068648476) | 2,023 | In this study we focus on internet nonuse among Israeli ultra-Orthodox Jewish women, members of a community that either refrains from using the or deploys content-filtering when it does access in some situations. We conducted in-depth interviews to empirically answer two questions: First, how do women perceive their nonuse? Second, what direct and indirect solutions they create realize desired capabilities contemporarily require access? found adhering religious strictures means more than obedience commitments leaders, while may seem like self-imposed disenabling act, holds valuable social advantages at individual, family, levels. | article | en | The Internet|Obedience|Judaism|Internet privacy|Realization (probability)|Sociology|Public relations|Social psychology|Psychology|Computer science|Political science|World Wide Web|Theology|Philosophy|Statistics|Mathematics | https://doi.org/10.1080/01972243.2023.2226121 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4382396886', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/01972243.2023.2226121'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | The Information Society |
“There are so many ways to tell a story”: An Interview with Carlos Martínez Assad | Rachel Norman (https://openalex.org/A5068524565) | 2,023 | In this interview, Carlos Martínez Assad reflects on his transition from a long career as an academic and historian to author of fiction, well what it means be Lebanese in Mexico. Before delving into the creative world novels, taught professor sociology at National Autonomous University Mexico (UNAM). As scholar, he has published prolifically (over twenty books essays) received numerous prestigious awards, including Guggenheim Fellowship, Medal Historic Merit, Mexican Prize Arts Sciences. His fiction draws heavily research history, acknowledges that although grants artistic license, goal is write fictionalized accounts are still accurate possible. process, states, one imagining how history might duplicated, allowing for new encounter with Lebanon, lived again family left behind. | article | en | Medal|The arts|Art history|Sociology|Art|History|Visual arts | https://doi.org/10.24847/v10i12023.398 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4383957412', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.24847/v10i12023.398'} | Lebanon | C144024400 | Sociology | Mashriq & Mahjar |
“There is No Need for Translation: She Understands”: Teachers’ Mediation Strategies in a Bilingual Preschool Classroom | Mila Schwartz (https://openalex.org/A5023166612)|Naomi Gorbatt (https://openalex.org/A5041748438) | 2,017 | In this study, we explored how major theoretical principles and concepts in the mediation strategies of Vygotsky's sociocultural theory are realized an Arabic−Hebrew preschool Israel. The aim study was to examine teachers encourage children use their second language (L2) during teacher−child conversations. particular, as a response relatively low motivation for L2 (Arabic) use, teachers’ intended Arabic.The participants were one Hebrew model teacher, Arabic using either or first (L1). We applied thematic analysis methodological framework. Data collected academic year, including video recordings conversations, analyzed quantitatively qualitatively. following content categories extracted: explicit request L2, managing children's demand direct translation, teacher learner, contributions from experts. observation showed that diverse strategies, such scaffolding, identification child's zone proximal development, modeling. Avoidance translation activate development boost involvement learning. | article | en | Mediation|Hebrew|Sociocultural evolution|Psychology|Semitic languages|Mathematics education|Linguistics|Arabic|Pedagogy|Sociology|Social science|Philosophy|Anthropology | https://doi.org/10.1111/modl.12384 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2609936665', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/modl.12384', 'mag': '2609936665'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | The Modern Language Journal |
“There is No Safety”: The Intersectional Experiences of Chaldean Catholic and Orthodox Women in Iraq | Yohanna Yousef (https://openalex.org/A5050217223)|Nadia Butti (https://openalex.org/A5083255626) | 2,022 | This CREID Policy Briefing provides recommendations to address the marginalisation and discrimination faced by Chaldean Catholic Christian women in Iraq. communities Iraq have threats throughout their history. Their numbers declined considerably recent years as more Christians been displaced or forced migrate due war, occupation persecution. research, which focuses on experiences of Orthodox men Iraq, demonstrates commonalities among different groups men. However, it also highlights specific challenges facing women, interlinked with identities who are part a religious minority geographic location. | report | en | Persecution|Gender studies|History|Sociology|Political science|Law|Politics | https://doi.org/10.19088/creid.2022.026 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4311926111', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.19088/creid.2022.026'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | |
“There is Something”: Charlie Galibert’s Corsica | Matei Candea (https://openalex.org/A5057216390) | 2,014 | “There is Something”: Charlie Galibert’s Corsica Matei Candea writes itself alone, alone it reads itself. Where am I on this Moebius strip, where can guess the time that trembles under transparent skin of island, and see, same skin, prosaic magical theater a thousand emotional tattoos, other forms forces existence, scene upon scene, which play flaming shadows villagers as, sunlike, they stand upright yet incline towards mystery? Qualcosa c’hè [there something] —Charlie Galibert (2004b:145)1 French anthropologist Didier Fassin has recently complained “predominant epistemological position” his discipline in France remains oriented remoteness structure, leaving “little space for ethnography nearby, heterogeneous, changing societies” (2006:2). evocative studies Corsican village Sarrola-Carcopino (see especially 2004a, 2004b, 2008) produce welcome disturbance to intellectual landscape. work engages with Corsica, France’s most prominent “internal other,” not as structural invariant, but complex, shifting historical entity. While principal focus one village, radically reshuffles venerable tradition community studies, crafting complex multi-vocal account doubles up powerful anthropological meditation identity, difference, place. [End Page 525] How does describe village? Like many commentators before him since (Lenclud 1979, Ravis-Giordani 1983, 2007), encountered difficulty producing monographic village: any attempt at meaningful totalization comes against twin problems internal differentiation external extensions (Galibert 2005). Others who faced have resolved through new geographic typologies (Geronimi 1983; cf. 2004b:65), or simply eschewed project describing place, turning instead into an “arbitrary location” pursue traces (Candea 2007, 2010). By contrast, made difficult choice staying despite its multiplicities. Eschewing mode, echoing “polyphony” characteristic singing (2004b:142), produced “polygraphy” Sarrola-Carcopino, seeks approach repeated diverse returns. In first book, La Corse, une Ile et le monde, (2004a) turns inside-out, tracing extension phenomenological place across space. The book unravels reassembles minute examination letters inhabitants, turned colonial officer turn 20th century. Taking us from South-East Asia Sudan via Madagascar, extended multi-sited coherence “carried within oneself end world” (2004a:45), showing how thousands miles away keep alive kinship locality. Guide non touristique d’un corse (2004b) provides more personal reflection drawn years own residence there, experiment epistemology deep possibility insider-outsider perspective. This short written multiple voices, alternating poetic theoretical, weaving intertextually out long quotations. result image describes: multiple, evocative, full resonances. following Sarrola 14–18 (2008), further historically well geographically detailed, phenomenologically-informed historiography World War I’s interface particular. continuity are traced chapter (2008:131–175) acts 526] temporal axis along specific lives deaths 1914–1918 gather their meaning. Taken together, accounts show poignantly power islander identity achieved very multiplicity perspective, how... | article | en | Corsican|Ethnography|Identity (music)|Agency (philosophy)|History|Aesthetics|Sociology|Art|Philosophy|Anthropology|Epistemology|Linguistics | https://doi.org/10.1353/anq.2014.0028 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2089421372', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1353/anq.2014.0028', 'mag': '2089421372'} | Sudan | C144024400 | Sociology | Anthropological Quarterly|Apollo (University of Cambridge) |
“There is a Massacre of Women”: Violence Against Women, Feminist Activism, and Hashtags in Turkey | Rüstem Ertuğ Altınay (https://openalex.org/A5011867623) | 2,014 | "“There is a Massacre of Women”: Violence Against Women, Feminist Activism, and Hashtags in Turkey." Media Studies, 14(6), pp. 1102–1103 | article | en | Domestic violence|Gender studies|Criminology|Political science|Sociology|Psychology|Human factors and ergonomics|Poison control|Medical emergency|Medicine | https://doi.org/10.1080/14680777.2014.975445 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1970555420', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14680777.2014.975445', 'mag': '1970555420'} | Turkey | C144024400|C542059537 | Domestic violence|Sociology | Feminist Media Studies |
“There is always a new normal”‐Psychological Transformation of Nurses ‐A Post Pandemic Qualitative Study | George Vellaramcheril Joy (https://openalex.org/A5000057683)|Albara Alomari (https://openalex.org/A5017030678)|Kalpana Singh (https://openalex.org/A5020502409)|Kamaruddeen Mannethodi (https://openalex.org/A5010664076)|Nesiya Hassan (https://openalex.org/A5058596431)|Jibin Kunjavara (https://openalex.org/A5010732000)|Ederlie Encarnacion PITIQUEN (https://openalex.org/A5092867158)|Badriya Lenjawi (https://openalex.org/A5053308871) | 2,023 | Background Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) almost ceased to spread across the globe, but post Covid psychological experiences are rarely documented. It is essential understand individual needs and challenges regarding working during covid-19 pandemic resilience health continuing work in aftermath of this crisis. Objective To explore transformation staff nurses after COVID-19 Methods A phenomenological purposive sampling approach was employed. Registered at largest organization Qatar includes 14 facilities were invited participate study. 17 who deployed first, second third wave 19 participated interview. Data collected through semi-structured face-to-face interviews using quarantine measures. The interview data analyzed inductive thematic analysis. Results participants summarized into three themes fear zone, Learning zone growth zone. These classified 10 sub-themes Fear anxiety, Influence media news, Frequent change policies guidelines factors .Secondly Coping mechanism, teamwork, establishing compassionate care, social acceptance, personal professional benefits helps them learn psychologically. Thirdly such as confident &amp; resilient, Sense purpose Change life perception meaning Conclusion Working imposed many on workload stress. However, different waves may increase resilience, confidence nurses. Their previous handling difficult situations make become more dealing with stressful under pressure. | article | en | Thematic analysis|Psychology|Pandemic|Psychological resilience|Anxiety|Snowball sampling|Coping (psychology)|Interpretative phenomenological analysis|Nonprobability sampling|Workload|Nursing|Perception|Qualitative research|Social psychology|Medicine|Clinical psychology|Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)|Psychiatry|Sociology|Disease|Population|Infectious disease (medical specialty)|Social science|Environmental health|Pathology|Neuroscience|Computer science|Operating system | https://doi.org/10.20944/preprints202309.0909.v1 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4386728095', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.20944/preprints202309.0909.v1'} | Qatar | C144024400 | Sociology | |
“There is no Difference Whatsoever Between Family and Nationality”: Imagining the Nation as a Family in Ömer Seyfettin’s Stories | Metin Yüksel (https://openalex.org/A5044869373) | 2,013 | This essay examines three stories by “the father of Turkish short story writing” Omer Seyfettin (1884-1920): Primo Turk Cocugu , Fon Sadristayn’in Karisi Oglu; and Ashab-i Kehfimiz . Following a contextualization Seyfettin’s life works in the broader turbulent political historical context late Ottoman Empire, this suggests that for successful nation is based on family. In other words, between lines these found idea both real metaphorical sense, concept family used to “imagine nation.” To achieve complete consisting happy parents children thus nation, suggest, linguistic cultural homogeneity necessary. Yet precondition might not always be sufficient realization nation. | article | en | Nationality|Turkish|Politics|Contextualization|Sociology|Literature|History|Gender studies|Linguistics|Art|Political science|Law|Philosophy|Interpretation (philosophy)|Immigration | https://doi.org/10.17065/huiibf.02986 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1755806404', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.17065/huiibf.02986', 'mag': '1755806404'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Hacettepe Üniversitesi İktisadi ve İdari Bilimler Fakültesi Dergisi |
“There is no fear in my lexicon” vs. “You are not normal if you won’t be scared” | Alison Stern Perez (https://openalex.org/A5079064147)|Yishai Tobin (https://openalex.org/A5017430463)|Shifra Sagy (https://openalex.org/A5021524200) | 2,010 | Bus drivers in Israel have coped with decades of stress, fear, and the constant threat terror. This paper summarizes a qualitative analysis form content narratives told by Israeli bus who directly experienced terror attack. A preliminary discourse semiotic case study is presented here as representative ‘broken’ narrative, reflected what initially appear internal contradictions both content. The non-random distribution personal pronouns analyzed, hypotheses are postulated regarding meaning interviewee’s communicative strategies telling his narrative coping lived experience. In particular, interviewee makes openly conflicted statements sense fear willingness to admit being scared, while using first-person gendered second-person uniquely patterned manner that also reflects this ambivalence. careful these seeming contradictions, inconsistencies, patterns leads ultimate suggestion certain messages individual can reveal narrator’s feelings attitudes about surrounding hegemonic social discourse. drivers, facilitates collective obligation act cope resiliently, discourages ‘less acceptable’ reactions. | chapter | en | Narrative|Social psychology|Ambivalence|Psychology|Feeling|Obligation|Meaning (existential)|Sociology|Linguistics|Political science|Law|Philosophy|Psychotherapist | https://doi.org/10.1075/sin.11.08per | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2477927427', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1075/sin.11.08per', 'mag': '2477927427'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Studies in narrative |
“There is no trace of him”: the Australian Red Cross, its Wounded and Missing Bureaux and the 1915 Gallipoli Campaign | Melanie Oppenheimer (https://openalex.org/A5061085448)|Margrette Kleinig (https://openalex.org/A5049044669) | 2,015 | One of the lesser known stories Gallipoli campaign was significant support provided to Australian Imperial Force by array voluntary patriotic funds. Mobilized from beginning war and operating both on Home Front in Egypt, large network individuals organizations varied sandbag funds, provision recreational equipment hostel accommodation, foodstuffs medical supplies. This article focuses Red Cross, formed outbreak August 1914 as a branch British Cross Society. Its considerable contribution humanitarian organization concentrating sick wounded soldiers included Wounded Missing Bureaux. Using records South Information Bureau, this explores programme its efforts trace missing for family members friends. Through case study analysis, we find another lens with which examine effects explore broader social familial more generally. | article | en | Home front|Front (military)|Recreation|Battlefield|Accommodation|First world war|TRACE (psycholinguistics)|Political science|Spanish Civil War|History|Genealogy|Media studies|Economic history|Ancient history|Law|Geography|Sociology|Psychology|Linguistics|Philosophy|Neuroscience|Meteorology | https://doi.org/10.1080/19475020.2016.1174590 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2342738002', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/19475020.2016.1174590', 'mag': '2342738002'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | First World War Studies |
“There was a Problem, and it was Solved!”: Legitimating the Expulsion of `Illegal' Migrants in Spanish Parliamentary Discourse | Luisa Martín Rojo (https://openalex.org/A5006439765)|Teun A. van Dijk (https://openalex.org/A5018838940) | 1,997 | In this article we examine some discursive aspects of political legitimation by analyzing the speech Spanish Secretary Interior, Mayor Oreja; on occasion a military-style expulsion group African `illegal' migrants from Melilla—the enclave in Morocco—in summer 1996. After theoretical analysis legitimation, study three levels legitimation: (a) pragmatic: various strategies justification controversial official actions; (b) semantic: ways discourse represents its partisan view events or properties actors as `true' `facts'; and (c) sociopolitical: way self-legitimates itself authoritative delegitimates alternative discourses. For these several structure (style, grammar, rhetoric, semantic moves, etc.) are examined detail. | article | en | Legitimation|Rhetoric|Politics|Style (visual arts)|Grammar|Political science|Legitimacy|Sociology|Discourse analysis|Rhetorical question|Linguistics|Law|History|Philosophy|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1177/0957926597008004005 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2116922423', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/0957926597008004005', 'mag': '2116922423'} | Morocco | C144024400 | Sociology | Discourse & Society |
“There's More to This Pain Than Just Pain”: How Patients' Understanding of Pain Evolved During a Randomized Controlled Trial for Chronic Pain | Marianne S. Matthias (https://openalex.org/A5083619737)|Edward J. Miech (https://openalex.org/A5055817856)|Laura Myers (https://openalex.org/A5082080121)|Christy Sargent (https://openalex.org/A5087744681)|Matthew J. Bair (https://openalex.org/A5079677468) | 2,012 | Chronic pain is prevalent, costly, and exerts an emotional toll on patients providers. Little known about chronic in veterans of the recent military conflicts Afghanistan Iraq (OEF/OIF/OND [Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi New Dawn] veterans). This study's objective was to ascertain veterans' perceptions a multicomponent intervention tested randomized controlled trial for OEF/OIF/OND with musculoskeletal (ESCAPE: Evaluation Stepped Care Pain). Qualitative interviews were conducted arm ESCAPE. Questions related experiences components, overall intervention, strengths, suggestions improvement. Twenty-six (21% total patients) participated. Patients purposefully sampled include treatment responders (defined as ≥30% reduction pain-related disability or severity) non-responders. Non-completers (completed <50% trial) also sampled. analysis guided by grounded theory, using constant comparative methodology. Both non-responders spoke their evolving understanding experience during trial, how this new helped them manage more effectively. evolution reported under 2 themes: 1) learning recognize physical psychosocial factors pain; 2) through actions thoughts. Perspective Responders both described making connections between other lives, these positively influenced they managed pain. Traditional quantitative measures response interventions may not capture full benefits that report experiencing. | article | en | Psychosocial|Chronic pain|Medicine|Intervention (counseling)|Randomized controlled trial|Physical therapy|Pain catastrophizing|Grounded theory|Qualitative research|Psychiatry|Surgery|Social science|Sociology | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpain.2012.03.007 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2019351157', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpain.2012.03.007', 'mag': '2019351157', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22537558'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | The Journal of Pain|PubMed |
“There's a Man in My Bed”: The First Experience of Sex Among Modern-Orthodox Newlyweds in Israel | Ofra Shalev (https://openalex.org/A5025104173)|Nehami Baum (https://openalex.org/A5044846456)|Haya Itzhaki (https://openalex.org/A5028300274) | 2,013 | The first experience of sex is a significant life event for men and women. Studies investigating first-time focus largely on relationships at young age among teenagers, whereas studies that in the context marriage are extremely sparse mainly clinical population unconsummated marriage. authors explore individual mutual emotional effect intercourse Modern-Orthodox newlywed couples Israel. In-depth interviews with 36 women during their year revealed unique challenges difficulties related to sexuality general particular. findings indicate sexual experienced by as associated behavioral difficulties, which appear be rooted traditional nature religious society reasoning justifications these detail different coping strategies—of couple. might relevant other societies only after also support professionals therapists addressing couples’ needs similar populations. | article | en | Human sexuality|Psychology|Sexual intercourse|Context (archaeology)|Coping (psychology)|Population|Developmental psychology|Social psychology|Gender studies|Demography|Sociology|Clinical psychology|Paleontology|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1080/0092623x.2012.675021 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1964306314', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/0092623x.2012.675021', 'mag': '1964306314', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23152968'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy|PubMed |
“There’s no separation of Church and state”, a metaphorical analysis of Muslim native speaker teachers’ representations of English language teaching and Islam in Saudi Arabia | Ismael Louber (https://openalex.org/A5025678994)|Mayez Almayez (https://openalex.org/A5085242374) | 2,023 | There has been an increased interest among researchers concerning the relationship between faith and English language teaching (ELT) in context of global spread English; however, to this date, very few studies have focused on ELT Islam. Considering wider sociopolitical, ideological or religious issues connected English, study draws experiences five Muslim native English-speaking teachers (MNESTs) Kingdom Saudi Arabia (KSA) by qualitatively investigating their representations Islam ELT. Based a non-realist analysis metaphors, explores participants’ worldviews positionalities as MNESTs KSA, thereby exploring how impacts professional practice. The concludes that is inextricably intertwined with broader such religion, argues these links need be explicitly addressed field. | article | en | Islam|Ideology|Context (archaeology)|Sociology|Pedagogy|Field (mathematics)|Religious education|Linguistics|Faith|Islamic culture|Epistemology|Political science|History|Politics|Philosophy|Theology|Mathematics|Archaeology|Pure mathematics|Law | https://doi.org/10.1080/15427587.2023.2235449 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4384155137', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/15427587.2023.2235449'} | Saudi Arabia | C144024400 | Sociology | Critical Inquiry in Language Studies |
“These Are My People” | Jason Mellard (https://openalex.org/A5024656307) | 2,017 | This chapter covers the politics of country music through a variety different angles. First, it explores music’s intersections with electoral politics, as candidates have employed songs or artists in support their campaigns, themselves run for political office. Second, looks to history subjects appearing songs, from beginning hillbilly recording 1920s debates over Iraq War 2000s. Finally, article posits shifting cultural populism that surges genre, tendency identifying “nation” and “people” audience music. Artists note who appear analysis include Jimmie Davis, Dixie Chicks, Steve Earle, Merle Haggard, Toby Keith, Willie Nelson, Eck Robertson, Woody Guthrie. | book | en | Politics|Country|Populism|Popular music|Variety (cybernetics)|History|Art|Media studies|Sociology|Political science|Visual arts|Law|Management|Artificial intelligence|Computer science|Economics | https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190248178.013.11 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2734468955', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190248178.013.11', 'mag': '2734468955'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | Oxford University Press eBooks |
“These Days of<i>Shoah</i>”: History, Habitus, and Realpolitik in Jewish Palestine, 1942–1943 | Daniel Levine (https://openalex.org/A5086593853) | 2,017 | This article explores the role of history and historical memory in formation early Zionist/Israeli national security doctrine. To that end, it makes three moves. First, a series public addresses made by Zalman Rubashov (Shazar) 1942–1943. A key intellectual Jewish community preindependent Palestine (the Yishuv), means to help his listeners make sense of, respond collectively to, unfolding destruction European Jewry. Second, draws cautious parallels between those pronouncements postwar work Friedrich Meinecke, prominent German historian sometime teacher Rubashov. In both cases, I suggest, does more than moment political transition: It seeks reframe self-understandings citizens their collective relations. Third, drawing on recent memoir Noam Chayut, Israeli antioccupation activist, explore how can be lost when claims upon which they are predicated lose immediacy, naturalness, or coherence. | chapter | en | Judaism|Politics|Doctrine|The Holocaust|Jewish history|Sociology|Political science|History|Law|Jewish studies|Philosophy|Theology | https://doi.org/10.1108/s0198-871920170000032005 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2605361649', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1108/s0198-871920170000032005', 'mag': '2605361649'} | Israel|Palestine | C144024400 | Sociology | Political Power and Social Theory |
“These People Have an Irrevocable Right to Self-Government”: United States Policy and the Palestinian Question, 1977–1979 | Victor V. Nemchenok (https://openalex.org/A5015812734) | 2,009 | Upon entering office, Carter Administration officials placed a heavy emphasis on integrating human rights into United States foreign policy. They also sought to contain festering Arab–Israeli tensions in the Middle East. The intersection of these two issues was Israeli–Palestinian conflict. This article examines Administration's attempts solve that conflict and bring peace region. It argues policymakers developed sincere dedication safeguarding Palestinian rights, but their understanding those limited scope defined through lens security strategic interests. In spite good-faith effort satisfy desires while maintaining constructive relationship with Israel, ultimately failed alter status quo because regional developments. As Washington's thinking changed, so did urgency rights. | article | en | Administration (probate law)|Political science|Safeguarding|Status quo|Public administration|Government (linguistics)|Scope (computer science)|Human rights|Faith|Security interest|Middle East|Law|Medicine|Linguistics|Philosophy|Nursing|Theology|Computer science|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1080/09592290903455717 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2014233152', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/09592290903455717', 'mag': '2014233152'} | Israel | C169437150|C2776743756 | Human rights|Safeguarding | Diplomacy & Statecraft |
“These points are Arab”: nationalist rhetoric in the sports press | Tamir Sorek (https://openalex.org/A5078025083) | 2,007 | Previous chapters have emphasized the integrative aspects of soccer and historical role it played in inhibiting national protest among Arab-Palestinian minority Israel. Soccer's conservative has been challenged by new Arabic press that developed Israel since mid 1980s. Analyzing Arab as a “contested terrain” is meaningful mainly because vocal concrete opposition sports journalists to hegemonic meanings produced both stadiums Hebrew media. This active extensive nationalist tone relatively new. The effect 1948 war on media was similar its implications for Palestinian independent infrastructure. Namely, elite – most publishers, editors, were exiled newspapers ceased exist (Caspi Kabaha 2001). Under Israeli rule, these replaced official mouthpieces Histadrut Zionist parties. only newspaper survived al-Ittiḥad , mouthpiece Communist Party, which had expressed an oppositional line but subjected strict censorship. Since 1980s however, experienced relative prosperity number diversity undergone significant shift political tone. described Caspi (2001) “transformation from [status quo oriented] mobilized press, nationally conscious self struggle society.” | chapter | en | Rhetoric|Nationalism|Political science|Media studies|History|Sociology|Philosophy|Law|Linguistics|Politics | https://doi.org/10.1017/cbo9780511488870.006 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2487905258', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/cbo9780511488870.006', 'mag': '2487905258'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Cambridge University Press eBooks |
“They Are All Good Boys” | Revital Sela‐Shayovitz (https://openalex.org/A5038120122) | 2,014 | This paper analyzes the construction of incidents gang rape in Israeli newspapers between years 2000 and 2010. The study examines differences news media framing individual rape. Results indicate that coverage significantly differs from Newspaper over-emphasizes instances relation to occurrences by means sensational headlines “yellow” journalism. Moreover, reflects a convergence gender, race, class oppression through blaming marginalizing victims, criminalizing rapists socially marginal groups, absolving offenders most closely associated with upper middle class. These findings suggest play key role perpetuating patriarchal hegemony social inequality. | article | en | Newspaper|Framing (construction)|Criminology|Journalism|Oppression|Inequality|Sociology|Gender studies|Political science|Social psychology|Psychology|Media studies|Geography|Law|Politics|Mathematical analysis|Mathematics|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1080/14680777.2014.993675 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2198667516', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14680777.2014.993675', 'mag': '2198667516'} | Israel | C144024400|C45555294 | Inequality|Sociology | Feminist Media Studies |
“They Are Khawārij of Our Time:” Relying on Background Knowledge and Long-Term Memory to Justify Fighting ISIS in Jordanian Political Discourse | Ahmad El-Sharif (https://openalex.org/A5078032583) | 2,022 | Abstract This study focuses on a discourse practice that metaphorically associates ISIS with an early Islamic sect known as the Kharijites. constructs calls back background knowledge and memory of historical narratives experiences create conceptual frames communicate meanings war atrocities. These were used by King Abdullah II Jordan to justify Jordan’s military participation against (circa 2014–2018). On basis “blending theory” metaphor, this shows how depicting Kharijites has undergone selective associations ideological aim constructing persuasive coercive discourses intervention ISIS, primarily foregrounding scripts threat victimization. That, in turn, leads instigation illusive incomplete associations. | article | en | Foregrounding|Metaphor|Narrative|Ideology|Islam|Sociology|Politics|Conceptual metaphor|Ambivalence|Intervention (counseling)|Epistemology|Psychology|Gender studies|Social psychology|Aesthetics|Political science|Literature|History|Law|Linguistics|Art|Philosophy|Archaeology|Psychiatry | https://doi.org/10.2478/jnmlp-2022-0004 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4223889460', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.2478/jnmlp-2022-0004'} | Jordan | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Nationalism, Memory & Language Politics |
“They Are Now Community Police”: Negotiating the Boundaries and Nature of the Government in South Sudan through the Identity of Militarised Cattle-keepers | Naomi Pendle (https://openalex.org/A5023852896) | 2,015 | Armed, cattle-herding men in Africa are often assumed to be at a relational and spatial distance from the ‘legitimate’ armed forces of government. The vision constructed South Sudanese government 2005 by Comprehensive Peace Agreement removed legitimacy non-government groups including localised, armed, defence that protected communities cattle. Yet, militarised Sudan have had various relationships with governing Peoples’ Liberation Movement/Army over last thirty years, blurring – non boundary. With tens thousands killed since December 2013 Sudan, questions being asked about options for justice especially elites. A contextual understanding their relationship time is needed understand genesis apparent this violence. | article | en | Government (linguistics)|Legitimacy|Herding|Negotiation|Identity (music)|Political science|Maritime boundary|Boundary (topology)|Political economy|Criminology|Law|Sociology|Geography|International law|Politics|Archaeology|Philosophy|Linguistics|Physics|Acoustics|Mathematical analysis|Mathematics | https://doi.org/10.1163/15718115-02203006 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1128464450', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1163/15718115-02203006', 'mag': '1128464450'} | Sudan | C144024400 | Sociology | International Journal on Minority and Group Rights|London School of Economics and Political Science Research Online (London School of Economics and Political Science) |
“They Covet Fields and Houses … and Seize Them”: Interpreting Micah 2:2 in Light of Economic Deprivation for Holding on to Power in Nigeria | Solomon O. Ademiluka (https://openalex.org/A5021591044) | 2,023 | Micah 2:2 condemns the injustice of land grabbing in eighth-century Israel. Contrary to traditional perception that each clan’s belonged it as a permanent inheritance, by eighth century BCE had become commodity could be bought and sold, or even seized. The article examines context public elections Nigeria where, having been pauperised ruling class, electorate yield themselves politicians who exploit them keep power. Employing historical-critical descriptive methods, concludes passage speaks Nigerian sense just economic exploitation peasant farmers violated theocratic order, this attitude is inimical democratic rule good people. | article | en | Peasant|Context (archaeology)|Power (physics)|Theocracy|Democracy|Injustice|Clan|Political science|Law|History|Political economy|Politics|Sociology|Archaeology|Physics|Quantum mechanics | https://doi.org/10.25159/2663-6573/10682 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4377833141', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.25159/2663-6573/10682'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal for Semitics |
“They Do Not Know How to Deal with Native Unrest”: British intervention and unintended consequences in French North Africa, 1940–1946 | D. C. Leonard (https://openalex.org/A5068492418) | 2,012 | As the Second World War raged, Allied forces moved across North Africa, expelling Axis armies and winning territory in Algeria Tunisia. Free French leaders struggled to regain control over their former colonial territories, British officials stepped into breach, process providing an important opening for African Arab national exploit pushing independence. Far from isolated outbreak of violence, Algerian revolution that emerged 1950s grew large part a complicated international environment included transnational anti-colonial currents old imperial rivalries. | article | en | Unrest|Colonialism|Independence (probability theory)|Unintended consequences|Intervention (counseling)|Political science|History|Economic history|Development economics|Law|Psychology|Statistics|Mathematics|Psychiatry|Politics|Economics | https://doi.org/10.1353/cch.2012.0029 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2038932049', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1353/cch.2012.0029', 'mag': '2038932049'} | Algeria|Tunisia | C47768531 | Development economics | Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History |
“They Don’t Know One Little Thing” | Pamela Bone (https://openalex.org/A5030245084) | 2,005 | The quote that serves as the title for this chapter is by an Iraqi woman in Jordan, being interviewed BBC at time of toppling statue Saddam Hussein. She provided response when she was asked about antiwar protesters, together with other women who were gathered to recount horrors regime Some women's “sexual crimes” included having been raped one Saddam's sons. emerging global consensus human rights override national sovereignty broke down over Iraq. Iraq brought war against terrorism, Islam versus democracy, rights, secularism religious fundamentalism. It badly needs world believe it can become a normal country. | chapter | en | Sovereignty|Human rights|Fundamentalism|Terrorism|Islam|Democracy|Secularism|Political science|Law|Islamic fundamentalism|Statue|Religious studies|Criminology|Sociology|History|Theology|Ancient history|Politics|Philosophy | https://doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520244863.003.0022 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2485644803', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520244863.003.0022', 'mag': '2485644803'} | Iraq|Jordan | C144024400|C169437150|C203133693 | Human rights|Sociology|Terrorism | University of California Press eBooks |
“They Give No Cordials to Heighten the Fever”: Lady Mary, Corruption, and the Problem of Royal Influence | Alexis McQuigge (https://openalex.org/A5045065663) | 2,014 | This article considers the relationship between Mary Wortley Montagu’s letters from Turkey and her subsequent support for smallpox inoculation, public criticism of Royal College Physicians their approach to managing outbreak 1721, reputation as a woman sexual excesses long before she left husband in 1739. I argue that vilification press following return had little do with any imagined misconduct while travelling, but was rather consequence vocal insistent engagement debates about inoculation during 1720s. attribute continued opinions early years, including those expressed by family after death, combination desire voice influence son-in-law, Lord Bute, whose opposition publication Turkish Embassy Letters death directly tied his own, than her, troubles public. | article | en | Turkish|Opposition (politics)|Law|Criticism|Censorship|Misconduct|History|Reputation|Criminology|Classics|Sociology|Religious studies|Political science|Philosophy|Politics|Linguistics | https://doi.org/10.3138/ecf.27.2.181 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2031262823', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.3138/ecf.27.2.181', 'mag': '2031262823'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Eighteenth-century fiction |
“They Have Eyes and See Not” | Dafna N. Izraeli (https://openalex.org/A5048614967) | 1,993 | An analysis of the display gender in an Israeli museum social history decodes practices by which constructs and uses difference Jewish life to construct male dominance marginalize women. It reinforces a stereotypical world women remain nameless voiceless have no contribution show for themselves. Far from being reflection historical reality, women's marginalization is erasure survival. This trivialization goes unnoticed visitor, whom seems perfectly natural factually acceptable, contributes preservation inequality society. Thus, Beit Hatefusot can be seen as metaphor nonconscious ideology that marginalizes culture results their exclusion such activities are honored or glorified bring money power. | article | en | Ideology|Judaism|Gender studies|Power (physics)|Sociology|Dominance (genetics)|Metaphor|Politics|Psychology|Social psychology|Aesthetics|Art|History|Political science|Law|Theology|Biochemistry|Chemistry|Physics|Archaeology|Quantum mechanics|Gene|Philosophy | https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1471-6402.1993.tb00659.x | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2035367759', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1471-6402.1993.tb00659.x', 'mag': '2035367759'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Psychology of Women Quarterly |
“They Keep an Eye on You”: Minority Pressure and its Implications for Dual Identity Among Six Immigrant Groups in the Netherlands | Diana Cárdenas (https://openalex.org/A5026057018)|Fenella Fleischmann (https://openalex.org/A5014003820) | 2,022 | The present study analyses perceived pressure to conform minority group norms and examines its implications for identity (in-)compatibility among six immigrant groups in the Netherlands ( N = 5,783). We analyzed whether orientation toward majority diversity climate explained individual differences pressure. Subsequently, we estimated multigroup models examine moderated association between identifications. found substantial that were not well by groups, or climate. Immigrants who had spent a larger proportion of their life receiving society experienced more, but those more work experience less Perceived was higher as hospitable immigrants, also at levels intergroup hostility. Minority identifications negatively associated across all only Moroccan-Dutch did significantly moderate this association. Specifically, became compatible (i.e., positively associated) lower pressure, trend observed other except Turkish-Dutch; yet these interaction, though similar magnitude direction, statistically significant. concluded dynamics may contribute multiple identifications, research is needed understand characteristics explain members’ identification patterns. | article | en | Psychology|Immigration|Social psychology|Turkish|Perception|Ethnic group|Cultural diversity|Minority group|Hostility|Association (psychology)|Developmental psychology|Sociology|Political science|Linguistics|Philosophy|Neuroscience|Anthropology|Law|Psychotherapist | https://doi.org/10.1177/13684302221138035 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4311516346', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/13684302221138035'} | Morocco|Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Group Processes & Intergroup Relations |
“They Left Not for Sausage, but for Dignity”: the Concept of Dignity in the Late Soviet Polemics on Jewish Emigration | Галина Зеленина (https://openalex.org/A5085471729) | 2,022 | The Jewish national movement in the late Soviet decades declared its concern about infringed dignity of Jews; emigration to Israel was considered a way restore it, while very struggle for reight leave USSR seen as dignity. article reveals various ways gaining and defending one’s practices texts activists, or Refuseniks, describes this concept within number binary oppositions: unconditional — conditioned, universal categorized, individual group, integral subject external influence. rhetoric refuseniks regard is examined context ego documents press, including vast corpus anti-Zionist publications, appears one central categories polemics conducted on pages newspapers, open letters Samizdat. | article | en | Dignity|Emigration|Judaism|Rhetoric|Newspaper|Context (archaeology)|Law|Political science|Sociology|Gender studies|Religious studies|History|Philosophy|Theology|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.18254/s207987840021759-3 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4295847165', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.18254/s207987840021759-3'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Istoriâ |
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