24 results
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2. Mobile Commons and/in Precarious Spaces: Mapping Migrant Struggles and Social Resistance.
- Author
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Trimikliniotis, Nicos, Parsanoglou, Dimitris, and Tsianos, Vassilis S.
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRANTS , *SPACETIME , *PRECARITY , *SOCIAL movements , *SUBJECTIVITY , *POLITICAL movements , *PRECARIOUS employment , *SOCIAL history ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
This article explores the constructions and dynamics of subaltern migrant subjectivities in three arrival cities, Athens, Istanbul and Nicosia. The paper draws on empirical research in three cities geopolitically located in the most south-eastern part of the Mediterranean basin and the boundary triangle connecting Europe, Asia and Africa. This is essentially a process where the will, agency and praxis of subaltern migrants in the context of social struggles are interwoven with precarious spaces. Precarity is at the core of their daily existence: precarious labour, precarious stay and precarious lives. The generation, maintenance, evolution, even erosion of mobile commons are consequential of social processes and struggles driven by subaltern and precarious subjects, migrants and non-migrants alike. The article explores how the generation of claims to rights is restructuring Lefebvre’s ‘right to the city’, as new forms of commons through mobility, resistance and digital materialities are contesting the sovereign governance and surveillance technologies in Europe and beyond. The paper contends that such perspectives from the borders of Europe, that is, in and out of Europe, are not only crucial to the understanding of what is happening in Europe, but are an advanced glimpse into potentialities of the world ahead. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Does education 'trump' nationality? Boundary-drawing practices among highly educated migrants from Turkey.
- Author
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Yanasmayan, Zeynep
- Subjects
- *
HIGHER education & society , *SOCIAL boundaries , *TURKS , *EDUCATION of immigrants , *CULTURAL pluralism , *TRANSNATIONALISM , *SOCIAL structure , *EDUCATION ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
Inspired by a super-diversity approach, this paper seeks to explore the influence of the 'ethnic hierarchy' of 'old' minority groups over the way 'new' migrants from Turkey negotiate their interaction in the daily life in three settings: Amsterdam, London and Barcelona. By focusing on highly educated migrants from Turkey who by virtue of their country of origin or religion are positioned at the bottom of 'ethnic hierarchies', it strives to understand the significance of these different sources of diversity in daily interaction. Applying boundarydrawing strategies developed for ethnic boundaries, this paper argues that education does not necessarily 'trump' nationality, but allows for substantial claims of difference. New migrants from Turkey carve out a space for themselves by on the one hand homogenizing Turkish or other Muslim communities through attributing 'unwanted' behaviours and on the other redefining the boundaries of their individual identity with emphasis on different sources of diversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Life because of Righteousness.
- Author
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Starling, David
- Subjects
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ROMANS , *SPIRIT in literature , *SOCIAL gospel , *CHRISTIANS , *CHRISTIAN missions , *MANNERS & customs ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
This paper commences with an outline of the vision of the missio Dei that Paul offers to his readers in Rome, taking as a starting point the letter's thesis statement in 1:16-17. The remainder of the paper traces the key pneumatological themes of the letter and orients them in relation to this overarching vision. The picture that emerges is one that highlights the close connectedness between the Spirit's life-giving work and the saving righteousness manifested in Christ, proclaimed in the gospel, and at work within the church. Life without righteousness and righteousness without life are both, for Paul, equally unthinkable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Transnational families and the subjective well-being of migrant parents: Angolan and Nigerian parents in the Netherlands.
- Author
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Haagsman, Karlijn, Mazzucato, Valentina, and Dito, Bilisuma B.
- Subjects
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IMMIGRANTS , *AFRICANS , *PARENTS , *IMMIGRANT families , *ANGOLANS , *NIGERIANS , *WELL-being , *SEPARATION (Psychology) , *PARENT-child relationships & psychology , *TWENTY-first century , *SOCIAL history , *ECONOMIC history ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
Studies on transnational families argue that the subjective well-being of migrant parents is negatively affected by living separated from their children. Most studies employ qualitative methods without a control group and hence are not able to distinguish whether the effects found are associated with separation only or with other factors. This paper investigates the association between parental subjective well-being and parent–child separation by comparing migrant parents who have at least one child in their country of origin with those who live with all their children in the Netherlands. The paper further investigates whether the same associations are found between migrant groups from Angola and Nigeria. Results indicate that transnational parents indeed report lower subjective well-being, as measured by happiness, life satisfaction and mental health for both groups and additionally, self-assessed health for Angolans. However, legal status, socio-economic status and the quality of the parent–child relationship are found to be important mediators. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Super-diverse street: a ‘trans-ethnography’ across migrant localities.
- Author
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Hall, Suzanne M.
- Subjects
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CULTURAL pluralism , *ETHNOLOGY , *PUBLIC spaces & society , *PUBLIC spaces , *IMMIGRANTS , *ROADS , *CITIES & towns , *GLOBALIZATION & society , *ROADS -- Social aspects ,SOCIAL aspects ,21ST century economics ,SOCIAL conditions in England - Abstract
This paper emerges from an ethnography of the economic and cultural life of Rye Lane, an intensely multi-ethnic street in Peckham, South London. The effects of accelerated migration into London are explored through the reshaping and diversification of its interior, street and city spaces. A ‘trans-ethnography’ is pursued across the compendium of micro-, meso- and macro-urban spaces, without reifying one above the other. The ethnographic stretch across intimate, collective and symbolic city spaces serves to connect how the restrictions and circuits of urban migration have different impacts and expressions in these distinctive but interrelated urban localities. The paper argues for a trans-ethnography that engages within and across a compendium of urban localities, to understand how accelerated migration and urban ‘super-diversity’ transform the contemporary global city. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. After Florida: Towards an economics of diversity.
- Author
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Nathan, Max
- Subjects
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CULTURAL pluralism , *DEMOGRAPHIC change , *POPULATION geography , *ECONOMICS ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
In recent years, most European countries have experienced substantial demographic changes and rising cultural diversity. Understanding the social and economic impacts of these shifts is a major challenge for policymakers. Richard Florida’s ideas have provided a popular – and pervasive – framework for doing so. This paper assess Florida’s legacy and sets out a ‘post-Florida’ framework for ‘technology, talent and tolerance’ research. The paper first traces the development of Florida’s ideas. ‘Florida 1.0’, encapsulated by the Three Ts framework, has performed badly in practice. There are problems in bringing causality to the fundamental relationships, and in consistently replicating the results in other countries. ‘Florida 2.0’, though suggests that Creative Class metrics have value as alternative measures of human capital. This create space for a post-Florida agenda based on economic micro-foundations. I argue that the growing body of ‘economics of diversity’ research meets these conditions, and review theory and empirics. Urban ‘diversity shocks’ shift the size and composition of populations and workforces, with impacts operating via labour markets, and through wider production and consumption networks. While short-term labour market effects are small, over time low-value industrial sectors may become migrant-dependent. Diversity may help raise productivity and wages through innovation, entrepreneurship, market access and trade channels. Bigger, more diverse cities help generate hybridised goods and services, but may also raise local costs through crowding. All of this presents new challenges for policymakers, who need to manage diversity’s net effects, and address both economic costs and benefits. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Stakeholder management theory meets CSR practice in Swedish mining.
- Author
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Ranängen, Helena
- Subjects
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STAKEHOLDER theory , *SOCIAL responsibility of business , *SPECIAL interest groups (Associations) , *STAKEHOLDERS , *GENDER inequality , *ETHICS ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
CSR needs to be implemented into every level of an organization to have a meaningful impact, and management systems are proven useful for CSR practice. Benefits of integrating all CSR aspects into a sustainability management system are often claimed. Stakeholder theory can advance CSR practice. This case study explores how a company reacts to and appropriates stakeholder theory through interviews and workshops with the top management of corporate responsibility. This is an empirical addition to the dominant conceptual contributions to stakeholder management framed within the concept of management system thinking. The focus is on identification of stakeholders and the estimation of 'who and what really counts'. This study support conceptual papers and suggest Mitchell and colleagues' model for the initial step of SMS. It shows that theory easily can be practised and that it works well. The company highlighted the discussions where it had to look at stakeholders from different perspectives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Exploring Ceremony: The Archaeology of a Men's Meeting House (‘Kod’) on Mabuyag, Western Torres Strait.
- Author
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Wright, Duncan, Stephenson, Birgitta, Taçon, Paul S.C., Williams, Robert N., Fogel, Aaron, Sutton, Shannon, and Ulm, Sean
- Subjects
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ARCHAEOLOGY , *RITUAL , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL finds , *ROCK art (Archaeology) , *HISTORY ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
The materiality of ritual performance is a growing focus for archaeologists. In Europe, collective ritual performance is expected to be highly structured and to leave behind a loud archaeological signature. In Australia and Papua New Guinea, ritual is highly structured; however, material signatures for performance are not always apparent, with ritual frequently bound up in the surrounding natural and cultural landscape. One way of assessing long-term ritual in this context is by using archaeology to historicize ethno-historical and ethnographic accounts. Examples of this in the Torres Strait region, islands between Papua New Guinea and mainland Australia, suggest that ritual activities were materially inscribed at kod sites (ceremonial men's meeting places) through distribution of clan fireplaces, mounds of stone/bone and shell. This paper examines the structure of Torres Strait ritual for a site ethnographically reputed to be the ancestral kod of the Mabuyag Islanders. Intra-site partitioning of ritual performance is interpreted using ethnography, rock art and the divergent distribution of surface and sub-surface materials (including microscopic analysis of dugong bone and lithic material) across the site. Finally, it discusses the materiality of ritual at a boundary zone between mainland Australia and Papua New Guinea and the extent to which archaeology provides evidence for Islander negotiation through ceremony of external incursions. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Putting flesh to the bone: looking for solidarity in diversity, here and now.
- Author
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Oosterlynck, Stijn, Loopmans, Maarten, Schuermans, Nick, Vandenabeele, Joke, and Zemni, Sami
- Subjects
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SOLIDARITY , *CULTURAL pluralism , *CITIZENSHIP , *SOCIAL norms , *VALUES (Ethics) , *PLACE (Philosophy) , *SPACE , *SOCIAL aspects of time ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
In many Western European countries, concern rises that both formal mechanisms of redistribution and informal acts of charity, reciprocity and support are challenged by ethnic and cultural diversity. Against such gloomy perspectives, this paper draws on insights from sociology, geography, pedagogy and political science to argue that four traditional sources of solidarity (interdependence, shared norms and values, struggle and encounter) remain relevant, but require a rethinking of their spatial and temporal framing to capture today's intricate engagements of solidarity. More specifically, we draw on theories from the aforementioned disciplines to claim that our understanding of solidarities grounded in the spatial boundedness of territorial states and the intergenerational continuity of supposedly culturally homogeneous nations should be complemented and enriched with an in-depth knowledge of solidarities developing in an entirely different spatio-temporal register, namely that of the everyday places and practices in which people engage across ethnic and cultural boundaries. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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11. "Consumerist Terrorists": Battles over Agricultural Antibiotics in the United States and Western Europe.
- Author
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R. FINLAY, MARK and MARCUS, ALAN I.
- Subjects
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AGRICULTURAL antibiotics , *GOVERNMENT regulation -- Social aspects , *SCIENCE & civilization , *LIBERTARIANISM -- Social aspects , *AGRICULTURAL policy , *AUTHORITARIANISM , *HISTORY , *GOVERNMENT policy ,SOCIAL aspects ,UNITED States politics & government ,WESTERN European politics & government - Abstract
This paper examines the reception and regulation of antibiotics in animal agriculture in the United States and Europe. It finds two different cultural traditions. In the United States, a libertarian ethos, aided and abetted by big agriculture, hampers effective regulation. Authoritarianism in Europe promotes active and aggressive regulation. These two thrusts have something in common: both effectively obscure science and scientific debate. Policy on the two sides of the Atlantic reflects a priori assumptions rather than thorough scientific scrutiny. We assert that there is a larger moral here. Indeed, scientism as practiced and expertise generally lack the technological competence to define an objective course. Repeated dependence on the quest for scientific objectification to resolve public issues stands as nothing more than desperate and naive pipedreams of what science and expertise can establish; they can and do contribute precious little to the discussion. Cultural presumptions and contemporary economic imperatives have set and will continue to be the basis for "scientific" decision-making and "rational" governmental policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The collective singularity of anti-racist actors: a case study of the Roma minority in the Czech Republic.
- Author
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Hušek, Petr and Tvrdá, Kateřina
- Subjects
- *
ROMANIES , *ANTI-racism , *COLLECTIVE action , *DISCOURSE , *RACISM , *TWENTY-first century , *SOCIAL history ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
This paper focuses on building a theory of collective singularity using the case of anti-racist collectives targeting the marginalized Roma minority in the Czech Republic. The collective singularity concept is one in which the values, norms, and practices that constitute a collective render it impossible for the group to transcend its own axioms in any manner other than by rejecting precisely these constitutive elements. The concept of anti-racism contains the trope of ‘the other’, perceived not only as an object of protection, integration, assistance, and interest, but also as an object under pressure to find its own (anti-)concept. Anti-racism oscillates around four dispositives (hysteria, paternalism, individualism, bionumerics) and finds itself unable to follow a radical pluralism with the potential to undermine the roots of the hegemonic discourse. As a result, the dispositives of anti-racism essentially become a ‘hidden’ form of disciplination, reproducing oppression and the impossibility of self-deconstruction. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Efforts to Implement Smart Specialization in Practice—Leading Unlike Horses to the Water.
- Author
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Kroll, Henning
- Subjects
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TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *TECHNOLOGY & economics , *SURVEYS , *TELEPHONE interviewing , *CHANGE ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
This paper reflects on the implementation of the RIS3 policy agenda. Based on two surveys and various phone interviews, it underlines that Europe's diverse pattern of institutional arrangements poses locally contingent policy challenges in which regional governance capacities are at least as important an issue as techno-economic potentials. In detail, it demonstrates how Southern Europe profited from novel practices while Eastern Europe had to invest substantially to change existing routines. Concluding, it argues that the main merit of RIS3 processes may, in fact, lie in their contribution to changing routines and practices of governance even if those, for now, remain without measurable effect on policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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14. Online Islamophobia and the politics of fear: manufacturing the green scare.
- Author
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Ekman, Mattias
- Subjects
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ISLAMOPHOBIA , *ONLINE social networks , *FEAR & society , *RACISM , *MUJAHIDEEN , *MUSLIMS , *WESTERN civilization , *SOCIOLOGY of blogging , *DISCOURSE , *RIGHT-wing extremism , *MULTICULTURALISM , *COMPUTER network resources , *MULTICULTURALISM -- Social aspects ,ISLAM & society ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
Negative attitudes and explicit racism against Muslims are increasingly visible in public discourse throughout Europe. Right-wing populist parties have strengthened their positions by focusing on the ‘Islamic threat’ to the West. Concurrently, the Internet has facilitated a space where racist attitudes towards Muslims are easily disseminated into the public debate, fuelling animosity against European Muslims. This paper explores part of the online Islamophobic network and scrutinizes the discursive strategies deployed by three ‘prominent’ online actors. By combining social network analysis and critical discourse analysis, the study shows that Islamophobic web pages constitute a dynamic network with ties to different political and geographical milieus. They create a seemingly mainstream political position by framing racist standpoints as a defence of Western values and freedom of speech. The study also shows that Islamophobic discourse is strengthened by xenophobic currents within mass media, and by the legitimization of intellectuals and political actors. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Threats, Challenges, and Finnish-Russian Cross-Border Security Cooperation: A Finnish Perspective.
- Author
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Laine, Jussi
- Subjects
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SECURITY management , *BORDER security , *THREATS , *GEOPOLITICS -- Social aspects , *COOPERATION , *INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,FINLAND-Soviet Union relations ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
Finland's security is integrally linked with its immediate surroundings, Europe, and global development. Given that Finland considers Russia to be one of the main challenges to its security, cross-border security cooperation with it is limited. Over the years the Finnish border authorities have, nevertheless, developed effective joint working practices with their Russian counterparts which provide a unique communication channel, even in the present geopolitical climate. The present paper address the Finnish-Russia security cooperation, and its lack, within a wider European frame and pits the practical experiences against ongoing theoretical discussion on security and threat perceptions. It argues that despite the more multifaceted understandings of borders and the EUropeanised rhetoric, the Finnish-Russian border is still very much a classic state border guarded by two states from their respective perspectives. In the Finnish-Russian case the content of cooperation has more to do with border management than with more coherent border security, as the former is build on a more common ground than the latter. Increased cooperation and Russian convergence with EU models of border security and management would certainly be of benefit, but Russia's willingness to cooperate seems half-hearted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
16. European influence on diversity policy frames: paradoxical outcomes of Lyon's membership of the Intercultural Cities programme.
- Author
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Downing, Joseph
- Subjects
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MINORITIES , *MULTICULTURALISM , *MEMBERSHIP , *PUBLIC institutions , *CULTURAL relations , *FRAMES (Social sciences) , *GOVERNMENT policy , *TWENTY-first century , *SOCIAL history ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
This paper examines the formulation of policy frames towards new minorities in France by analysing Lyon's membership of the European Commission's and Council of Europe's Intercultural Cities programme (ICP). Here, with culture accounting for 20% of Lyon's budget, emphasis is placed on the adoption of the Charte de Coopération Culturelle to use cultural institutions to implement difference-orientated policies. Critically, important issues emerge with this strategy. The effort to engage new minorities is hampered by significant apathy from cultural institutions in Lyon, and the limited geographical area of Lyon included in the ICP. Finally, institutions who engage with promoting interculturality co-opt existing organizations, with negative implications for the treatment of diversity in the city. This illustrates the problems with a European framework fostering a policy frame based on recognition for minorities in a context that has yet to fully embrace such policies at the national level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Superdiversity and conviviality: exploring frameworks for doing ethnography in Southern European intercultural cities.
- Author
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Padilla, Beatriz, Azevedo, Joana, and Olmos-Alcaraz, Antonia
- Subjects
- *
CULTURAL pluralism , *CITIES & towns , *ETHNOLOGY , *IMMIGRANTS , *CULTURAL relations , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *TWENTY-first century , *SOCIAL history ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
International migration contributes to increasing cultural diversity in many European cities. Historically, migration studies have focused on the integration of immigrants foregrounding race/ethnicity and identity issues, limiting our understanding of intercultural diversity. A new paradigm focusing on relational patterns among groups is emerging, highlighting the importance of mutual relations, interactions and influences among residents of different origins and backgrounds, including the experience of both immigrants and autochthonous populations. The notions of superdiversity and conviviality have significantly contributed to this debate. This paper discusses how both were methodologically operationalized in multi-sited ethnographies carried out in Lisbon and Granada, during 2009–2012. Superdiversity and conviviality are the main theoretical frameworks used to understand how interculturality is lived and experienced at the local level. We reflect on their strengths and weaknesses, unpacking common assumptions about race, ethnicity and culture, specifically looking at the negotiation of difference in intercultural events. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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18. Delivering maternity services in an era of superdiversity: the challenges of novelty and newness.
- Author
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Phillimore, Jenny
- Subjects
- *
MATERNAL health services , *CULTURAL pluralism , *WOMEN immigrants , *NOVELTY (Perception) , *SOCIAL services , *TWENTY-first century , *SERVICES for immigrants , *SOCIAL history ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
The population complexity associated with superdiversity brings a wide range of challenges for social welfare providers. Commentators have outlined concerns about the ability of service providers to meet the welfare needs of ever diversifying populations and point to potential problems in identifying the nature of need in rapidly changing superdiverse neighbourhoods as conventional approaches to consultation based around ethnicity become practically impossible. Using data collected in the West Midlands, which explored maternity service needs from the perspectives of new migrants and maternity professionals, some key barriers to effective welfare delivery in superdiverse areas are explored. The paper outlines the emergence of two challenges important in shaping new migrant access to maternity care in an era of superdiversity – novelty and newness – and proposes further research to examine the extent to which these challenges are faced in other social welfare services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Whitening a diverse Dutch classroom: white cultural discourses in an Amsterdam primary school.
- Author
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Weiner, Melissa F.
- Subjects
- *
RACIAL identity of white people , *PRIMARY schools , *EDUCATION , *DUTCH national character , *WHITE people , *DISCOURSE , *RACE & society , *RACISM , *MINORITY students , *CLASSROOMS , *TWENTY-first century , *RELIGION , *EDUCATION & society , *SOCIAL conditions of students , *MANNERS & customs , *SOCIAL history ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
Diverse schools have become the norm throughout much of what is considered the West. Many urban classrooms feature few white European children but are located in nations dominated by Eurocentric epistemologies and discourses that oppress minority students by devaluing their cultures. Most European scholarship fails to analyse cultures of whiteness in educational settings. This paper addresses this gap by documenting cultural discourses of whiteness infusing a diverse primary school classroom in Amsterdam. Discourses reflecting white cultural norms of order, time, cleanliness, and Western and Christian superiority dominated a classroom containing only one white Dutch child. These discourses contribute to diverse students' explicit racialization while promoting the supremacy of white Dutch culture. They are both assimilationist and exclusionary, suggesting that many students, because of their backgrounds, will never be considered fully Dutch. Findings are of relevance to all nations dominated by white cultures with large populations of students of colour. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Narratives of ethnic identity among practitioners in community settings in the northeast of England.
- Author
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Parks, Judith and Askins, Kye
- Subjects
- *
ETHNICITY & society , *ETHNICITY , *COMMUNITIES , *NARRATIVES , *SOCIAL services , *SOCIAL constructionism , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *MINORITIES , *CULTURAL pluralism , *ETHNIC differences , *SOCIAL history , *TWENTY-first century ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
The increasing ethnic diversity of the UK has been mirrored by growing public awareness of multicultural issues, alongside developments in academic and government thinking. This paper explores the contested meanings around ethnic identity/ies in community settings, drawing on semi-structured interviews with staff from Children's Centres and allied agencies conducted for a research project that examined the relationship between identity and the participation of parents/carers in services in northeast England. The research found that respondents were unclear about, especially, white ethnic identities, and commonly referred to other social categorizations, such as age, nationality, and circumstances such as mobility, when discussing service users. While in some cases this may have reflected legitimate attempts to resist over-ethnicizing non-ethnic phenomena, such constructions coexisted with assumptions about ethnic difference and how it might translate into service needs. These findings raise important considerations for policy and practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Back to the Future: revisiting the contact hypothesis at Turkish and mixed non-profit organizations in Amsterdam.
- Author
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Achbari, Wahideh
- Subjects
- *
CONTACT hypothesis (Sociology) , *TURKS , *ETHNICITY & society , *SOCIAL aspects of trust , *CULTURAL pluralism , *CULTURAL relations , *TWENTY-first century , *SOCIAL history ,NONPROFIT organizations & society ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
This paper revisits the contact hypothesis by assessing differences in generalized trust among participants of Turkish non-profit organizations and ethnically mixed organizations in Amsterdam. Most voluntary sector research takes the contact hypothesis at its core and assumes that the concentration of ethnic minorities in non-profit organizations is detrimental to learning generalized trust. These studies assume that diversity within organizations is better for developing generalized norms without examining participation in ethnically homogenous organizations. I address this gap in the literature by analysing the variance of generalized trust among organizations and their participants. I achieve this through the analysis of purposively designed survey data. The findings suggest that a contact mechanism at voluntary organizations is problematic and should not be asserted uncritically. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Does Rural Origin Affect Immigrants' Contact with Natives? A Study of Turks in Six European Countries.
- Author
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Lancee, Bram and Seibel, Verena
- Subjects
- *
TURKS , *SOCIAL conditions of immigrants , *INTERMARRIAGE , *ASSIMILATION (Sociology) , *CITY dwellers , *COUNTRY life , *TWENTY-first century , *SOCIAL history , *EMIGRATION & immigration ,SOCIAL aspects ,EUROPEAN emigration & immigration - Abstract
This paper analyses differences in rural and urban origin in visits from natives and the occurrence of interethnic marriages of Turkish immigrants in six European countries. We argue that values and human capital explain the relationship between rural-urban origin and contact with natives. The value-based hypothesis stipulates that differences in contact with natives are due to values and predispositions that correlate with people's rural and urban origin. The human capital hypothesis predicts that variation between rural and urban origin can be ascribed to differences in human capital accumulation. Using the Six Country Immigrant Incorporation Comparative Survey (SCIICS), the results show that Turkish immigrants with a rural origin have fewer visits from natives and are less likely to intermarry. Furthermore, educational attainment, destination country language proficiency, religious identification and identification with the origin culture explain a substantial part of the rural origin effect. However, also when accounting for values and human capital, we find a significant direct effect of rural origin, suggesting that rural and urban immigrants build social relations differently. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Technologies of Appearance: Hair Behaviour in Early Medieval Europe.
- Author
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ASHBY, STEVEN P.
- Subjects
- *
HAIR care & hygiene , *HAIR , *PERSONAL grooming , *FASHION history , *MEDIEVAL European history , *MANNERS & customs ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
Personal appearance in general - and the grooming of hair in particular - has long held a position of interest in historical, art-historical, and literary scholarship. The same cannot be said of archaeology, and the material aspects of personal grooming in the construction and communication of identity have not been fully synthesized. As a result, little attempt has been made to understand the social role of hair in less well documented societies, such as those of early medieval northern and western Europe. This paper considers archaeological, iconographic and documentary evidence for the significance of and physical engagement with hair in early medieval northern and western Europe', and offers a model for the interpretation of grooming as a social phenomenon. It is argued that grooming was a socially meaningful practice, and that it played a key role in the construction of early medieval identities, as well as in the maintenance and manipulation of boundaries and distinctions between individuals and groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Family Constellations and Life Satisfaction in Europe.
- Author
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Vignoli, Daniele, Pirani, Elena, and Salvini, Silvana
- Subjects
- *
SATISFACTION , *FAMILIES , *QUALITY of life , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *FAMILY relations -- Social aspects , *FAMILY constellations (Therapy) ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
Existing research on family and well-being has generally focused on the traditional family, and has largely ignored the increasing diversity in family forms and relations. Our aim in this paper is to help fill this gap by investigating the extent of the relationship between living arrangements and life satisfaction (LS) in Europe. We examined variations in life satisfaction by applying a multilevel approach (i.e., individuals nested in countries) to data from the 2007 European Quality of Life Survey. First, we found that levels of life satisfaction among families consisting of couples with children were significantly higher than among people in other (less typical) family arrangements. Second, our results illustrate that after the socioeconomic situation of the family was taken into account, the influence of family status on LS disappeared almost completely. Overall, our findings suggest that the lower levels of life satisfaction experienced by people living in atypical families can be largely attributed to their weaker socioeconomic position. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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