194 results
Search Results
2. Non-recognizing the Other? Discursive deligitimation of the EAEU by the EU.
- Author
-
Arynov, Zhanibek, Orazgaliyev, Serik, and Issova, Laura
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL cooperation on counterterrorism ,CULTURAL policy ,EUROPEANIZATION ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) - Abstract
The Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), despite being regarded as the most developed integration project in the post-Soviet area, has faced different hurdles in acquiring international recognition. Especially, the EU, the EAEU's Significant Other, has been reluctant to formally recognize it, in spite of close ties with EAEU member states as well as of its own self-image as a supporter of regional integrations. This paper focuses on this puzzle and examines how the EU has been discursively explaining its non-recognition of the EAEU at the institutional level. Based on the analysis of EU-articulated narratives since 2010, the paper reveals three dominant representations of the EAEU in the EU discourse: (1) Russia's geopolitical project; (2) a protectionist union; and (3) a dysfunctional union. These narratives have been used by Brussels to create the EAEU's image as a threatening Other, thus justifying why the EU cannot formally recognize the EAEU and officially engage with it. The paper also identifies five different stages of the EU's discursive representation of the EAEU since 2010, when its tone and content varied. The paper concludes that such non-recognition from the Significant Other still limits the EAEU's international agency despite its increasing interest in cooperation with non-Western actors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. European Union funds and corruption in the ex-communist member states.
- Author
-
Mutascu, Mihai
- Subjects
CORRUPTION prevention ,EUROSCEPTICISM ,EUROPEAN integration ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation on counterterrorism ,CULTURAL policy ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,EUROPEANIZATION - Abstract
The paper analyses the impact of European Union (EU) funds on corruption in the EU ex-communist countries by following a panel Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) approach. The panel includes 10 former EU communist countries, over 2007–2019. The key findings reveal that an improvement in the EU funds paid and their rate of absorption can reduce the level of corruption in the long-run in the recipient EU ex-communist countries. This is due to better monitoring of EU funds paid compared with national resources, and a more efficient and fairer channel of EU funds absorption. In parallel with the EU funds, corruption can be controlled in certain conditions by the degree of economic development, size of government, level of democratisation and religiosity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. From qualified to conspirative Euroscepticism: how the German AfD frames the EU in multiple crisis.
- Author
-
Roch, Juan
- Subjects
EUROSCEPTICISM ,EUROPEAN integration ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation on counterterrorism ,CULTURAL policy ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,EUROPEANIZATION - Abstract
Research on Euroscepticism tends to portray parties opposing European integration or criticising the European Union (EU) as a family of Eurosceptic parties (either hard or soft). Recent literature, however, offers empirical evidence on the ambivalence and diversity of the EU critique. What is still unclear are the reasons behind the chameleonic nature of Euroscepticism and the implications that this may have for the EU critique and the changes proposed about EU policy or institutions. The present article addresses this question exploring the role of EU crises to capture the changing nature of Euroscepticism and suggests that it is related to contextual pressures on the political debate around the EU. The paper develops this argument and illustrates it through the analysis of the Alternative für Deutschland in Germany, covering the EU crises of the last decade, including the recent period of the COVID-19 pandemic and the Ukraine invasion. Drawing on a corpus of party manifestos and speeches between 2013 and 2022, this study shows that there are three main frames used by the party to criticise the EU. It also concludes that these frames involve distinct political implications for the EU critique and the alternative proposals presented by the party. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Spain as the EU's 'champion' in Latin America: elites, government trustworthiness, and free trade.
- Author
-
Rivas Otero, José Manuel and Bohigues, Asbel
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL cooperation on counterterrorism ,CULTURAL policy ,EUROPEANIZATION ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) - Abstract
This paper addresses attitudes around the projection of the EU among Latin American elites, namely the determinants of support for a Free Trade Agreement between the two regions and the trustworthiness of the EU government. We take as data elite surveys conducted in 15 Latin American countries (2014–2019) and consider sociodemographics, ideology, support for democracy, views of foreign powers, exports to the EU, and electoral democracy. Results show that ideology and support for democracy are key determinants of support for an interregional FTA, and that the trustworthiness of governments in the US, China, and Spain covary with attitudes toward the EU. The latter (trust in the government in Spain) proves to be the main driver and, furthermore, its impact is conditional on the economic strength (observed as exports) of the EU: wherever the EU is not a strong economic actor in Latin America, trust in the Spanish government does nothing but improve the image of the EU. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The sense of nations for cooperation. How threat perception and ideology influence counterterrorism cooperation between EU members.
- Author
-
Baraldi, Francesco
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL cooperation on counterterrorism ,PREVENTION of domestic terrorism ,CULTURAL policy ,EUROPEANIZATION ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,EUROSCEPTICISM - Abstract
Which factors influence bilateral counterterrorism (CT) cooperation between EU Member States? Although scholars have studied European CT, the question still needs to be answered. This paper addresses the issue by introducing a new theoretical framework that combines CT and Foreign Policy Analysis (FPA) literature. As citizens' threat perception increases, governments are pressed to act. Overall, centrist cabinets tend to rely more on cooperation agreements; likewise, pushed by threat perception, left-wing executives also recourse to international cooperation. I tested this framework on a newly collected dataset, which comprehends bilateral CT agreements signed among EU Members from 2002 to 2017. As such, this paper fosters studies on EU CT, focusing on a less debated issue: bilateral cooperation between EU Member States. The results support the initial hypotheses, disclosing a robust influence of threat perception and cabinet ideology on the number of bilateral CT agreements signed. Furthermore, they show that the perception of the threat is more influential on cooperation than the actual impact of terrorism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. An unpublished contribution to Ethnic Groups and Boundaries: 'Interethnic relations in Toro' by Axel Sommerfelt.
- Author
-
Jakoubek, Marek
- Subjects
ETHNIC relations ,TRIBES ,ETHNICITY ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) - Abstract
One of the most cited anthropological books, Ethnic Groups and Boundaries: The Social Organization of Culture Difference (Barth, Fredrik, ed. 1969a. Ethnic Groups and Boundaries: The Social Organization of Culture Difference. Bergen: Universitetsforlaget) is an output of the symposium held in Bergen in 1967. Eleven participants took part in the symposium and eleven papers were discussed. The book, however, consists, apart from Barth's prodigious 'Introduction', of only seven chapters. Four papers remained unpublished. One of these unpublished contributions is 'Inter-etniske relasjoner i Toro' ('Interethnic relations in Toro') by Axel Sommerfelt. In 2019, the year of 50th anniversary of publishing Ethnic Groups and Boundaries, Sommerfelt's manuscript was disinterred from oblivion. The text presents an outline of a background of Sommerfelt's research in Western Uganda from 1958 to 1960, on which it is based, and a discussion of its terminological and conceptual point of view, with a special attention to key shift from 'tribe' to 'ethnic group'. In the last part, a kind of counterfactual Ethnic Groups and Boundaries are presented, i.e. what Ethnic Groups and Boundaries might have looked like if Axel Sommerfelt's chapter had been included in the original book. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Barriers and facilitators of access to maternity care for African-born women living in Australia: a meta-synthesis of qualitative evidence.
- Author
-
Bali, Ayele Geleto, Vasilevski, Vidanka, and Sweet, Linda
- Subjects
EMPLOYEE attitudes ,MATERNAL health services ,MEDICAL personnel ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,INFANT care - Abstract
Background: Adverse perinatal health outcomes are notably high among African-born women living in Australia. This problem is partly attributed to their lower engagement in maternity care services as compared to Australian-born women. Various barriers might limit African-born women's access to and use of services; however, these barriers are not well documented. Therefore, this review aimed to synthesise current qualitative evidence on barriers and facilitators of access to maternity care for African-born women living in Australia. Methods: The search was conducted in MEDLINE, CINAHL, Embase, PsychInfo, and Maternity and Infant Care databases on 16 April 2023. All articles retrieved were meticulously screened for eligibility by two independent reviewers with any disagreements resolved through discussion. The quality of the included articles was evaluated using the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool. Studies were screened in Covidence and analysed in NVivo. The findings were organised and presented using Levesque's framework of healthcare access. Results: Out of 558 identified papers, 11 studies comprising a total of 472 participants met the eligibility criteria. The review highlighted provider-side barriers such as shortage of information, unmet cultural needs, long waiting times, low engagement of women in care, discrimination, and lack of continuity of care. User-side barriers identified include communication issues, difficulty navigating the health system, and lack of trustful relationships with healthcare providers. In contrast, the review pinpointed provider-side facilitators including positive staff attitudes, service availability, and the proximity of facilities to residential homes, while user-side facilitators such as cultural assimilation and feeling valued by healthcare providers were noted. Conclusions: This review identified barriers and facilitators of access to maternity care for African-born women living in Australia. Empirical evidence that would inform potential changes to policy and practice to address African-born women's unique health needs was highlighted. Designing and implementing a culturally safe service delivery model could remove the identified access barriers and improve African-born women's engagement in maternity care. Moreover, reinforcing factors associated with positive healthcare experiences is essential for improving maternity care access for this priority population. Systematic review registration: PROSPERO CRD42023405458. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Europeanization of citizens vis-á-vis regional politicians: the case of the German-speaking Community of Belgium in the Euregio Maas-Rhine.
- Author
-
Donat, Elisabeth and Lenhart, Simon
- Subjects
EUROPEANIZATION ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,EUROSCEPTICISM ,NATIONALISM ,SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
Cross-border regions are often deemed laboratories for initiatives to increase Europeanization. Our paper examines the German-speaking Community of Belgium in the Euregio Maas-Rhine to assess the relevance of everyday cross-border activities to the perception that living in a border region presents a unique opportunity to feel and think as a European. Departing from the assumptions of both Deutsch's transaction theory and Allport's contact hypothesis, we analyze Eurobarometer data (population-level surveys) and use data from focus groups with regional MPs. Results from quantitative data analysis suggest that perceptions of life in cross-border regions are positively influenced by frequent cross-border movement (functional dimension) as well as general trust in other people (emotional dimension). Our qualitative data from focus groups support the findings from the quantitative analysis and demonstrate further that it is not merely the quantity but the quality of contacts that contribute to a gradual 'growing together'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. When do football fans tend to acquire a more Europeanised mind-set? The impact of participation in European club competitions.
- Author
-
Brand, Alexander, Niemann, Arne, and Weber, Regina
- Subjects
EUROPEANIZATION ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,CHAMPIONS League (Soccer tournament) ,EUROSCEPTICISM ,NATIONALISM ,SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
How has the Europeanisation of football at the level of governance (due to for example the effects of the Bosman ruling and the formation of the UEFA Champions League) – influenced the identities of football fans? This paper explores how such structural Europeanisation in football is influencing identifications among fans. Based on an analysis of articulations in selected online message boards, we distil the positioning of fans towards 'Europe' in football, and the factors which shape it. We control for three main avenues of impact: the club level, the league level, and the societal context. Our inquiry is based on a set of paired comparisons of fan scenes for football clubs in four different European countries. Results show that the factor carrying the most explanatory power is the club's participation in European-level competition. Although this broadly confirms a 'contact hypothesis' – according to which the more fans are exposed to cross-border contacts, the less relevance they attribute to aspects of national belonging – significant variations of how frequent exposure to European-level competition translates into more Europeanised perceptions do exist. For European identity studies, the work corroborates that a lifeworld arena such as football can foster Europeanised identifications, albeit not in a uniform manner. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Assimilation and economic development: the case of federal Indian policy.
- Author
-
Miller, Melinda C.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,UNITED States census ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,ECONOMIC indicators ,PERSONAL names - Abstract
Throughout the nineteenth century, federal Indian policy oscillated between two extreme positions: assimilation versus isolation. While scholars have often been interested in the impact of past federal policy on current levels of economic development among American Indian tribes, none have explicitly examined the influence of federal assimilation policy on long-run economic development. In this paper, I take advantage of tribal-level variation in the application of federal policies to estimate the effect of assimilation on long-run economic performance. To quantify the impact of such policies, I introduce a novel measure of cultural assimilation: the prevalence of traditional indigenous names relative to common American first names. To calculate the distribution of name types, I have gathered the names and locations for all American Indians enumerated in the 1900 United States census. After classifying each name, I calculated the reservation-specific share of non-indigenous names. I estimate the relationship between cultural assimilation in 1900 and per capita income from 1970 through 2020. I find that historical levels of assimilation are consistently associated with higher levels of per capita income in all census years. The results are robust to the inclusion of a variety of cultural and institutional controls and regional fixed effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Interethnic relations in Toro: Some issues.
- Author
-
Sommerfelt, Axel Alfssøn
- Subjects
ETHNIC relations ,MANUSCRIPTS ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,ANTHROPOLOGY - Abstract
This paper was written in Norwegian in 1967 for the symposium, organized by Fredrik Barth, that led to the publication of Ethnic Groups and Boundaries in 1969. My paper was never submitted for publication, however, and the present text is a direct translation of the original manuscript. It explores ethnic processes in Uganda before independence, from the point of view of a group under domination, and strategies adopted by the ethnic Konzo minority vis a vis the Toro in the Bwamba area. In accordance with the doctrine of indirect rule, the British administration had given the Toro extensive freedoms to legally and politically control the entire Kingdom of Toro, including the minority Konzo and Amba groups. Early attempts among Konzo of assimilation into Toro society in order to access economic and political resources failed, largely due to Toro exclusiveness. I argue that this failure led to a further accentuation of ethnic boundaries. These processes precede the later rebellions against Toro rule, which flared up in Ruwenzori after independence. My paper brings attention to the ways in which political subordination shapes ethnic dynamics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. "so much about myself I didn't understand": Rememory and the Problematics of a lost identity in Sally Morgan's My Place.
- Author
-
M. M., RAIHANAH and IDRUS, MOHD MUZHAFAR
- Subjects
ABORIGINAL Australians ,RECOLLECTION (Psychology) ,CONSCIOUSNESS ,INDIGENOUS ethnic identity ,CRITICS ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) - Abstract
This paper presents the problems of a lost identity in My Place, an Australian aboriginal autobiography by Sally Morgan. Albeit literary critics have questioned the 'indigeneity' and 'reality' concerning the narration of stolen generation, this paper situates the reading of My Place within the issue of (un)making and recuperation of sociocultural consciousness of the self. Through the lens of rememory as an exercise of recollection and rediscovery of the past, the analysis focuses on the triangulation of the themes of self, culture, and consciousness as represented in My Place. The findings indicate that rememory as illustrated in My Place, is evident in the protagonist's exploration of her personal history, her discovery of cultural/racial history, and her realisation of the double consciousness that comes with being a member of the aboriginal community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Is sport's 'gateway for inclusion' on the latch for ethnic minorities? A discourse analysis of sport policy for inclusion and integration.
- Author
-
Dowling, Fiona
- Subjects
DISCOURSE analysis ,MINORITIES ,POLICY analysis ,PRACTICE (Sports) ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,SPORTS - Abstract
Scholars have increasingly called for the need to problematise and critically examine sport policy for integration/inclusion. This article aims to contribute to this ongoing debate by presenting a Foucauldian-inspired discourse analysis of the languaging of three decades of Norwegian sport policy for integration/inclusion, as well as non-sport policy that seeks to use sport as a policy tool. The analysis demonstrates how ideas and practices about the integration of ethnic minorities in sport are constructed in the shadows of the 'real business' of sport. Self-evident 'Truths' about inclusion/integration convey simplistic notions of assimilation into existing sport practices, reify notions of homogenous groups both with regard to the majority and the ethnic minority Norwegian population, distributing power unequally across the majority–minority divide, and contribute to construct sport as a racially coded, Eurocentric practice. The pervasive, long-standing idea that sport is inclusive works discursively to marginalise contradictory ideas, such as the complexities of integration that focus upon the need for a transformation of structures and practices, and 'Truths' like resourceful ethnic minorities or an adaptable sports organisation remain currently almost un thinkable. The analysis bears witness to scholars' claims for the need to broaden research methodologies and policies for integration in/through sport, such that inequitable, Eurocentric, assimilated practices can be re-languaged to enable hybrid, transnational sports spaces frequented by resourceful participants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Reinscribing History, Culture and Gender Dynamics Through Girmitiyas' Fables.
- Author
-
Khan, Sheehan S. and Patni, Gunja
- Subjects
BRITISH colonies ,CULTURE ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,SLAVERY ,FICTION writing ,HISTORIOGRAPHY ,SLAVE labor ,FABLES - Abstract
The indenture system gave rise to the migration and settlement of Indians--as a substitute for slave labor--in various plantation colonies overseas. The scholarship of the West/colonizers pushed such events of the East/colonies to the fringes. Amitav Ghosh, known for his historical fiction writing, delves deep into the recesses of history and lends voice to the marginalized in the Ibis Trilogy, set in the earlier decades of the 19th century when the Slavery Abolition Act of the British Empire (1833) came into existence. The plantation owners were seeking substitution for the former slaves, and a solution was soon found in the form of girmitiyas (indentured laborers). Krishna Gubili, a descendant of an indentured Indian, also meditates on the plight of the 'coolies' on the plantation sites of the British Empire. Both Ghosh and Gubili critically reflect on the unmapped and unheard Girmitiya Saga. The paper studies Ghosh's Sea of Poppies (2008) and Gubili's Viriah... (2018) to understand the causes behind the migration of the multitude of Indians to unknown lands and their experiences. It also examines the gender dynamics of the migration, the state of the laborers, the experiences of the female, and the 'cultural assimilation.' [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
16. The Brazilian Indigenous as an Uneven Identity: Reading an Indigenous Woman's Voice in Márcia Wayna Kambeba's Poems.
- Author
-
Lupati, Federica
- Subjects
ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,BRAZILIAN literature - Abstract
Orality has always been the main channel through which culture and knowledge has passed onto generations of Indigenous peoples in Brazil. Yet, today, the need to resist cultural assimilation or, even worse, annihilation, has led to the creation of new, written materials where Indigenous people can speak for themselves by relating their history, defending their identity, and their cultural territory. Among these, Brazilian geographer, poet, and activist Márcia Wayna Kambeba of the Omágua/Kambeba people uses literature as a space where decolonial thought and traditional knowledge meet to build a philosophical, political, and poetic view on indigenous identity in general and on the experience of Indigenous women in particular. Drawing from previous studies on Brazilian Indigenous literature, decolonial theory, and decolonial feminism, this paper discusses Kambeba's works and underpins the relevance and need to examine the specificity of the experience of Brazilian Indigenous women writers as fundamental participants in the periphery of the world-literature to discuss the postcolonial configurations of identities in present-day Brazilian society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Security and identity: threats and anxieties for the internationally mobile student.
- Author
-
Li, Zhen
- Subjects
CHINESE students in foreign countries ,CHINESE students ,ONTOLOGICAL security ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,ANXIETY ,SOLIDARITY - Abstract
The paper reports on an empirical study of Chinese international students' experiences of personal safety and security at universities in a UK city. After locating these concerns in relation to current political, social and epidemiological contexts, it reviews the developments that have taken place in our understanding and theorisation of 'safety' and, in particular, 'security' of international students, noting the powerful implications of Marginson's most recent conceptualisation of the issues. The paper proposes the addition of Giddens's notion of ontological security to this developed conceptual framework. Findings from the empirical study make it clear that many students in the study remain concerned over their safety and security, and feel that their concerns are not fully appreciated by the 'authorities' to whom they might be expected to turn for support. For information and support on matters of personal safety, therefore, these Chinese students' first recourse is to compatriot fellow students, reinforcing a sense of inter-dependence based on shared subjective identities. Rather than treating this 'in-community' solidarity as potentially undermining wider cross-cultural contact and communication, this paper proposes that a strengthened sense of 'ontological security' provides a foundation for cross-cultural functioning that does not entail cultural assimilation and a 'subaltern' status. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. PRZEKŁAD JAKO NARZĘDZIE POJEDNANIA? O TŁUMACZENIU KANADYJSKICH LITERATUR RDZENNYCH NA JĘZYK FRANCUSKI W DOBIE DEKOLONIZACJI.
- Author
-
CZUBIŃSKA, MAŁGORZATA
- Subjects
TRUTH commissions ,LINGUISTIC minorities ,AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL fiction ,CANADIAN history ,FRENCH language ,AUTOBIOGRAPHY ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) - Abstract
The common assumption is that translation helps to share ideas and build bridges between societies, cultures and languages. Nevertheless, in Canadian history translation has been a tool of colonial domination and oppression of indigenous communities as well as francophone minorities scattered across Canada after 1763. In view of the above, this paper aims to show from a translational point of view the attempts to redress decades of persecution and assimilation that are currently taking place, particularly in light of the findings and recommendations of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission released in June 2015. The analysis covers a unique context, involving the translation of works of Indigenous Literature into a minority language such as French in Canada. After presenting current trends in this area, the paper will discuss an autobiographical novel Halfbreed by Metis author Maria Campbell, which appeared in French translation in 2021 almost half a century after the original was published. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Enduring fears: the monstrosity of Chinese Filipinos in Chito Roño's Feng Shui (2004).
- Author
-
Velasco, Joseph Ching and De Chavez, Jeremy
- Subjects
POSTCOLONIALISM ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,NATIONALISM - Abstract
This paper examines enduring fears and anxieties about 'Chineseness' that widely and persistently circulate in the Philippine cultural imaginary. Chinese Filipinos have historically been implicated in a prejudicial politics of recognition within the Philippine postcolonial state, which has attempted to forge a national identity through problematic notions of ethnic and cultural purity. To undermine what Franz Fanon calls the pitfalls of national consciousness, scholars have often turned to concepts such as syncretism and hybridity, which celebrates heterogeneity and diversity as it opposes essentialism and purity. The agenda of this paper, however, is to examine the forces that generate obstacles to an affirmative politics of cultural assimilation and belonging. Toward that goal, we offer a symptomatic reading of the film Feng Shui (2004), which we suggest condenses anxieties about Chineseness that circulate in the Philippine cultural imaginary, anxieties that amplify difference and potentially undermine the reparative force of hybridity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Teaching and Preaching: Missionary Education and Colonial Subjects in Italian Eritrea (1890–1935).
- Author
-
Tesfamariam, Temesgen
- Subjects
- *
COLONIES , *CATHOLIC missions , *ASSIMILATION (Sociology) , *MISSIONARIES , *PREACHING , *LABOR supply - Abstract
During European colonial times in Africa and elsewhere, missionary education was an integral part of the colonial instruments for political domination, economic exploitation, and cultural assimilation. This paper aims to investigate the process of making colonial subjects through missionary education that was mainly provided by Catholic and Evangelical mission schools during the Italian colonial period in Eritrea. The paper argues that the Catholic and Evangelical mission schools distinctively worked to achieve their separate objectives that can be explained as employment versus salvation, teaching versus preaching, flag versus Bible, and hands versus soul, respectively. While the Catholic mission school focused on training the hand in order to supply labour, the Evangelical mission school stressed harvesting the soul to cultivate a docile labour force. Despite their differences, the works of the Catholic and Evangelical mission schools placed much emphasis on and exerted much effort to producing a class of colonial subjects that could serve as brokers of power. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. ОВЛАДЯВАНЕ НА ДЕЙСТВИЕТО ИЗВАЖДАНЕ НА ЧИСЛАТА ДО 20 С ПРЕМИНАВАНЕ ЧРЕЗ ИЗПОЛЗВАНЕ НА ИНТЕРАКТИВНИ РАБОТНИ ЛИСТОВЕ ЗА ОБУЧЕНИЕ.
- Author
-
Ангелова, Владимира and Николова, Александра
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL resources ,ELECTRONIC packaging ,ELEMENTARY schools ,PRIMARY schools ,SCHOOL year ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) - Abstract
The mathematics curriculum for the first grade of primary school / compulsory preparation/ outlines six main topics which define the educational content intended for learning. One of these topics is Addition and Subtraction of numbers within 20 with regrouping. This paper aims to present a study related to the creation of original package of electronic educational content, which was developed in order to help the 7 – 8-year-old students acquire the knowledge and skills of subtracting numbers within 20 with regrouping. The e-learning content package includes worksheets created on the digital online platform LiveWorksheets. The degree of effectiveness of the developed electronic educational resources was examined during the academic year 2021/2022. 144 students from the first grade of primary school participated in the experimental study. The obtained results of the experiment and their analysis show that the application of the presented original package of electronic educational resources leads to an easier and deeper assimilation of knowledge and skills for subtracting numbers within 20 with regrouping. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Negotiating Identity through Travel: Japan through a Bengali Woman's Lens.
- Author
-
Kankaria, Lipika and Banerjee, Sutanuka
- Subjects
INTERRACIAL marriage ,BRITISH occupation of India, 1765-1947 ,IDENTITY (Psychology) ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,PUBLIC spaces ,CONTENT analysis - Abstract
The paper seeks to analyze how Hariprabha Takeda, a Bengali woman, in the early twentieth century negotiated with the issues of identity, integration, and cultural assimilation in her narrative from the standpoint of an insider in a Japanese household. Through a close textual analysis of her travelogue Bongomohilar Japan Jatra (1915) and other memoirs (translated as The Journey of a Bengali Woman to Japan (1915) & Other Essays by Somdatta Mandal in 2019), the paper attempts to examine how she was influenced by the Japanese culture and blurred the strict demarcations of private and public spaces through interracial marriage. The paper argues that the notion of pan- Asian identity gained prominence due to the active interest of travelers in exploring and developing cultural and political links between colonial Bengal and Japan, which forms the background to Hariprabha's transnational connections. A critical investigation of her translated narrative opens up various embedded cultural, gender and class issues that she encapsulated as a colonized woman and, thus, helps in situating it in the larger sociocultural and political scenario. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
23. Identificational Orientations among Three Generations of Migrants in France.
- Author
-
Okai, Ewurama A and Behrman, Julia A
- Subjects
IMMIGRANTS ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,BICULTURALISM ,SOCIAL cohesion - Abstract
Scholarship on migrant identity increasingly shows that migrants can—and often do—construct multifaceted identities. Yet, questions around migrant identity formation remain contested in France, given a strongly assimilationist policy context that (in theory) precludes multiple identification. This paper explores intergenerational patterns of migrant identification in France using a nationally representative sample of 1st-, 1.5th-, and 2nd-generation migrants in France from five diverse sending regions in the Trajectories and Origin Survey. We conduct a latent profile analysis to identify qualitatively different unobserved (or latent) categories of migrant identification based on observed responses to questions of identification and belonging. These analyses suggest there are five distinct "identificational orientations" among migrants: assimilated, active bicultural, othered bicultural, detached bicultural , and ethnic. While the assimilated and ethnic categories provide some support for a traditional assimilation framework, biculturalism is widely prevalent and multifaceted: We identify three distinct varieties of biculturalism (active, othered, and detached). We also provide evidence of segmentation in identificational assimilation by region of origin and conduct multivariate analyses that shed insight into the experiences that correlate with different identificational orientations. Our findings question the presumed threat of strong ethnic identification to France's national cohesion and offer starting points for future research on how complex identities are formed within strongly assimilationist receiving contexts like France. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Imperial literacy, choice and F.W. Albrecht's Lutheran experiments in Aboriginal education in post-war Central Australia.
- Author
-
Ellinghaus, Katherine and Judd, Barry
- Subjects
EDUCATION of Aboriginal Australians ,ABORIGINAL Australian children ,LUTHERAN missions ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,MISSIONARIES - Abstract
This paper argues that Aboriginal children's engagement with education in the central Australian region of the Northern Territory in the mid-twentieth century can be understood as strategic engagements with formal western education systems and assimilation policies. It addresses a methodological problem stemming from a project that focuses on the work of the Finke River Mission (FRM) and its head missionary Friedrich Wilhelm Albrecht who, during the 1950s and 1960s, initiated an education scheme that targeted 'half-caste' Indigenous girls living on pastoral stations in central Australia. The scheme demonstrates the key concern of this special issue in that it is an example of the entanglements of transnational forces with local expressions of Indigenous education in Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Impact of road connectivity on urbanisation: a case study of Central Brahmaputra Valley, Assam, India.
- Author
-
Saikia, Ashish and Kar, Bimal Kumar
- Subjects
URBAN growth ,CITY dwellers ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,URBANIZATION ,SOCIAL integration ,SPATIAL variation - Abstract
Road connectivity is among the few factors which trigger the urbanisation and development process in a region. It facilitates trade, transport, social integration, economic development, socio-economic interaction and cultural assimilation. The present paper aims at analyzing the road infrastructure of Assam with special focus on the Central Brahmaputra Valley. The significance of the study area lies in providing smooth accessibility to the East Asian countries, especially in terms of Act East Policy. The study constitutes an investigation of the growth of road length, road density and connectivity in the study area in spatio-temporal context. Here, growth in road infrastructure has been compared with the growth in urban population and towns. Spatial variation in terms of growth can clearly be seen while discussing the growth of road connectivity and urban growth. Morigaon district has experienced the highest growth in terms of both road connectivity and urban population which clearly reveals that a strong positive relationship exists between the growth of road infrastructure and urban growth. The study has the potential of becoming a guideline for the policy makers to implement action plans for increasing the degree of accessibility in the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Variación en la pronunciación de la/s/implosiva: datos del nivel sociocultural alto en el corpus PRESEEA-Sevilla.
- Author
-
Jiménez Fernández, Rafael and León-Castro Gómez, Marta
- Subjects
PRONUNCIATION ,SOCIOLINGUISTICS ,FACTORS of production ,LANGUAGE & culture ,SOCIAL influence ,STATISTICAL correlation ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,SOCIAL factors ,SPANISH language - Abstract
Copyright of Boletín de Filología is the property of Universidad de Chile, Facultad de Filosofia y Humanidades and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Negotiating claims of 'whiteness': Indo-European everyday experiences and 'mixed-race' identities in the Netherlands.
- Author
-
Doornbos, Julia, van Hoven, Bettina, and Groote, Peter
- Subjects
INDO-Europeans ,POSTCOLONIALISM ,MULTIRACIAL people ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,INTERGENERATIONAL couples - Abstract
This paper examines identity formations and negotiations among Indo-Europeans, and senses of 'race' in the postcolonial Netherlands. We do so by analysing daily practices of 'being', 'feeling' and 'doing' identities by second- and third-generation Indo-Europeans in the North-Eastern Netherlands. The paper contributes to 'mixed-race' literature by highlighting new, underexplored contexts in which 'mixed-race' identities are negotiated. We focus on practices, relations and transmissions across two generations and changing contexts within the Netherlands. Drawing on life story interviews, the narratives reveal how participants' identities are politically and historically contingent, shaped by larger structures of racialized violence Indo-Europeans experienced in both the Dutch East Indies and the Netherlands. Identities are navigated in various ways with divergences and negotiations between self-identification, social imposition and familial and biological narrative. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. New shoes.
- Author
-
See-Tho, Michelle
- Subjects
ASSIMILATION (Sociology) - Published
- 2024
29. Hispanic Men's Earnings Mobility Across Immigrant Generations: Estimates Using Tax Records.
- Author
-
Villarreal, Andrés and Tamborini, Christopher R
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRANTS , *SOCIOECONOMICS , *ASSIMILATION (Sociology) , *INTERGENERATIONAL mobility , *HISPANIC Americans - Abstract
Whether immigrants and their descendants are catching up socioeconomically with the rest of society is a fundamental question in the study of immigrant assimilation. In this paper, we examine the progress that Hispanic immigrant men make catching up with the earnings of later-generation Whites across generations. We rely on data from multiple years of the Current Population Survey linked with individuals' tax earnings. This unique dataset allows us to overcome some important limitations of previous studies that employ a synthetic generation approach in which individuals born approximately one generation earlier are used as proxies for actual parents. Our matching strategy also enables us to identify the exact third generation and evaluate the contribution of ethnic attrition to estimates of intergenerational mobility. Second-generation Hispanic men are found to experience lower mobility than later-generation Whites for most values of parental earnings. However, their lower mobility can be explained by their immigrant parents' lower education levels. In contrast, third-generation Hispanic men experience lower mobility even after accounting for parental education and ethnic attrition. This finding is consistent with a stalling or reversal in the socioeconomic progress of Hispanics beyond the second generation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Crossroads of Three Nations: Czechoslovak Ethnic Policy towards Railwaymen and Industrial Workers in Cieszyn Silesia, 1920–1938*.
- Author
-
GĄSIOR, Grzegorz
- Subjects
ETHNIC relations ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,INDUSTRIAL workers ,RAILROAD employees ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) - Abstract
Cieszyn Silesia is a region which was divided between Czechoslovakia and Poland in 1920. Czechoslovakia obtained the industrially developed and strategically important part, which had a large Polish and German population. The purpose of this paper is to analyse the minority policy of the Czechoslovak state administration by focusing on the examples of state-run railway employees and workers in large, mostly private, industrial establishments. It discusses the mechanisms of an ethnic policy that functioned in a particular, distinctive region at the crossroads of three cultures—German, Polish and Czech. Policies towards minorities in Czechoslovakia in the period before the Munich Agreement of 1938 have often been regarded as democratic and tolerant. Nonetheless, the integration of Cieszyn Silesia was a significant challenge for Czechoslovak authorities and their actions were often in contradiction with liberal principles. This paper focuses not on the legislation, but on the practical approaches that contributed to the enhancement of the position of the Czech nation. In the case of both railwaymen and industrial workers, the state authorities took action that had a common goal—the Czechification of the region. The main difference in methods used against both groups depended on the direct dependence of the former (railwaymen) on the state as their employer. In the case of industrial workers, state policies had a less direct impact, but nonetheless created conditions conducive to discriminatory and assimilationist pressures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Piil Pesenggiri: Study on Leadership and Public Trust of the Penyimbang Adat in the Indigeneous Lampung Community.
- Author
-
Nurdin, Bartoven Vivit and Utami, Sindi
- Subjects
TRUST ,COMMUNITIES ,LEADERSHIP ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,ACCULTURATION ,SOCIAL change ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,ETHNICITY - Abstract
This paper examines Piil Peseinggiri, which is a concept of cultural philosophy of the indigenous people of Lampung. Piil Peseinggiri is briefly defined as "high self-esteem," which provides deep understanding and meaning. Symbolically, the Piil Peseinggiri is the identity of the Lampung people who are very strong and difficult to change, it can be said that it is the core of the culture that is difficult to change. Meanwhile, other Lampung cultures began to experience a reduction due to transmigration, acculturation, assimilation, and various cultural changes that occurred in Lampung society, where the population was only 13% compared to the Javanese ethnicity which was almost 64%. However, Piil Peseinggiri is very important and has the potential to build the character of the community, especially the character of the leader, in the Lampung indigenous community called the Penyimbang. The Penyimbangr is the customary head who leads the community or clan. The counter must have a good Piil Peseinggiri so that it has a high level of trust from the members of the indigenous community. The leadership and trust built by the counterweight is something that needs to be studied to reflect on how local leadership contributes to national leadership and fosters public trust. This study uses a qualitative method with an ethnographic approach, the research was carried out in several Pepadun community groups, namely in Way Kanan and Sai Batin in Kalianda. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. How subjective economic status matters: the reference-group effect on migrants' settlement intention in urban China.
- Author
-
Wang, Chenglong and Shen, Jianfa
- Subjects
ECONOMIC status ,INTENTION ,SOCIAL participation ,COMMUNITIES ,IMMIGRANTS ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,HUMAN settlements - Abstract
How migrants' behaviour shapes their intention to settle in their destination (settlement intention) has rarely been examined. This paper pays special attention to the role of the reference-group effect, captured by subjective economic status, in shaping migrants' intention to settle in urban China. We found that both sending communities and receiving communities contribute to the reference-group effect on settlement intention. Compared with their relatives, friends, and colleagues in their hometowns and destinations, migrants with a higher subjective economic status have a stronger intention to settle. A 1-unit increase in the relative position of a migrant's subjective economic status in the sending or receiving community contributes to a 19.6 per cent or 19.4 per cent increase in the possibility of a migrant's intention to settle. Additionally, cultural assimilation, social participation, and identification mediate the relationship between subjective economic status in the reference group and settlement intention. We also found that objective economic status in the destination increases subjective economic status in the reference group in the hometown and destination. Both objective and subjective economic status affect migrants' settlement intention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Healing Toward Interdependency: Building Skills and Resistance Through Immigrant and Indigenous Employment.
- Author
-
Tanaka, Yukiko
- Subjects
IMMIGRANTS ,EMPLOYMENT ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,SOLIDARITY ,NEOLIBERALISM - Abstract
Indigenous and immigrant communities have both been targeted by the Canadian government with employment interventions as a means of integration and assimilation. This article examines an employment program run by an immigrant settlement agency in Saskatoon, Canada, that brings Indigenous people and immigrants together to build their employment skills and learn about each other's cultures. Through participant observation, interviews, and sharing circles, I analyze the possibilities for building solidarity and resistance to neoliberalism within the structure of a state-funded program. I build on Simpson's (2016; 2018) concept of constellations of co-resistance to analyze the possibilities and limitations of resistance within the shadow state. While the program does adhere to some typical neoliberal "soft skill" development, both staff and participants negotiate within the constraints of the shadow state to enact resistance. This resistance to settler colonialism is expressed through a framework of healing: program staff draw from Indigenous knowledge to build interdependency and kinship between Indigenous people and immigrants as a means toward employment. This paper's conceptual intervention is a synthesis of scholarship on assimilation of Indigenous people and integration of immigrants through employment training, and contrasting it with constellations of co-resistance. In doing so, I show that resistance to the state's assimilationist aims is possible through alliances between Indigenous people and immigrants, but there are limits to the extent of resistance because of the shadow state structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. DE LA VISUALIZACIÓN AL (CON)TACTO DEVOTO. APROXIMACIÓN A LA INTERACCIÓN FÍSICA CON LAS HERMAS GRIEGAS.
- Author
-
Huerta Segovia, Pelayo
- Subjects
VISUAL perception ,RITES & ceremonies ,STATUES ,RITUAL ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) - Abstract
Copyright of Imafronte. Revista de Historia del Arte is the property of Servicio de Publicaciones de la Universidad de Murcia and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. EN TORNO A LA IMPLANTACIÓN DE LA SEGUNDA GENERACIÓN ANDALUCISTA EN CATALUÑA: LOS ORÍGENES DE LA ESTRUCTURA DE LA "NOVENA PROVINCIA" DEL PARTIDO SOCIALISTA DE ANDALUCÍA (PSA).
- Author
-
de Villar Iglesias, José Luis
- Subjects
ELECTIONS ,POLITICAL participation ,DEMOCRATIZATION ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,CULTURAL nationalism ,RADICALS ,IMMIGRANTS - Abstract
Copyright of Historia Actual Online is the property of Asociacion de Historia Actual and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Painting Race in Hanif Kureishi's The Buddha of the Suburbia.
- Author
-
URSACHI (HASMAȚUCHI), Emilia
- Subjects
RACE ,SUBURBS ,CULTURAL pluralism ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,CULTURE conflict ,POSTCOLONIAL literature - Abstract
The multicultural context generated cultural diversity but also cultural conflicts. Hanif Kureishi's The Buddha of Suburbia deals with problems generated by the cultural difference, focusing on the condition of individuals in a multicultural context. Racial hybridity is a prominent theme in Hanif Kureishi's novel, The Buddha of Suburbia, as it explores the complex identities of its characters in a multicultural society. Set in the suburbs of London during the 1970s, the novel follows the journey of its mixed-race protagonist, Karim Amir, and his challenges of cultural assimilation and self-discovery. Through Karim's experiences, Kureishi skilfully analyses the concept of racial hybridity and its implications in a society that is increasingly diverse. This paper focuses on the representation of race, identity and home in postcolonial literature, mainly in Hanif Kureishi's The Buddha of the Suburbia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
37. Shifting legibility: racial ambiguity in the US racial hierarchy.
- Author
-
Modi, Radha
- Subjects
RACE identity ,ASSIMILATION of immigrants ,RACIALIZATION ,SOUTH Asians ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) - Abstract
Existing frameworks of assimilation and group boundaries are limited in making sense of experiences of racial ambiguity. What happens when racial groups are mistaken for other groups, and how does this phenomenon relate to the racial hierarchy? This paper investigates the on-the-ground mechanisms of racial ambiguity that formal institutions, like the Census, do not capture, yet are the lived realities for many immigrant groups. Through analysis of 120 interviews and supplemental observations, I find that the racialization of second-generation South Asians shifts between racial ambiguity and racial legibility in daily life. I present a theoretical concept – localized racialization – to reveal the transient, yet defining, racial experiences of groups residing in the racial middle. Localized racialization centres multiple factors of skin colour, intersectional status markers, and situational contexts that tether racial experiences to the local. This study's South Asian participants reveal persistent racial dynamism at the micro-interactional level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Winning battles with a joke: a qualitative inquiry of humour in the Indian Army.
- Author
-
Sumagna, Bhowmick and Vijaya, R.
- Subjects
WORK environment ,ARMED Forces ,SOCIAL cohesion ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) - Abstract
Humour in military organizations can be antithetical given the rigid hierarchy, high degrees of work formalization, and obedience to hierarchy. This paper explores how humour is initiated, propagated and maintained in the Indian Army. We conducted twelve in-depth interviews with retired army professionals and used Braun and Clarke's (2006) thematic analysis to capture the study's main findings. Three major themes emerged - organizational humour, leader humour, and team humour. We found humour is essential in combating stress, increasing social cohesion, facilitating newcomer assimilation, and promoting a positive work environment. We also found evidence of subversive humour used in forms of resistance to challenge the hierarchical structure subtly. We have provided a three-part schema of workplace humour which sheds interesting insights on workplace humour. Our findings will contribute to understanding how military humour helps to maneuver challenges of a stressful work situation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. 'We are people of the Islands': translocal belonging among the ethnic Chinese of the Riau Islands.
- Author
-
Setijadi, Charlotte
- Subjects
ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,CHINESE language ,ETHNOGRAPHIC analysis ,MINORITIES ,NATIONALISM - Abstract
The Riau Islands Chinese are an anomaly in the study of Chinese Indonesians. For one, while many of their ethnic Chinese counterparts in other parts of Indonesia can no longer speak Chinese due to the New Order regime's assimilation policy, Chinese languages are alive and well in the Riau Islands. Based on ethnographic fieldwork conducted in 2017–2018, this paper seeks to understand the Riau Islands Chinese's cultural resilience and sense of belonging as a borderland ethnic minority. I argue that long-standing inter-Island and cross-border mobilities and cultural flows with Singapore have been central to the maintenance of Riau Islands Chinese identity. Utilising translocality as a theoretical framework to understand the processes of identity formation and place-making that transcend national borders, I contend that the case study of the Riau Islands Chinese challenges the conventional state-centric modes of analyses prevalent in the study of ethnic Chinese communities in Southeast Asia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Precedent of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights: State Compliance and Judicial Performance in Brazil, Colombia, Argentina, Chile, and Bolivia.
- Author
-
Resende, Ranieri L
- Subjects
HUMAN rights ,LEGAL judgments ,PERSUASIVE technology ,COURTS ,INTERNATIONAL law ,STATE laws ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) - Abstract
Considering the external effects of adjudicative activity of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, structural questions emerge regarding the influence of IACtHR precedent in judicial branches of the Parties to the American Convention on Human Rights. In this sense, this paper seeks to apply the theoretical typologies developed by Ryan Goodman and Derek Jinks to the analysis of operative mechanisms of influence of international law inside the States' jurisdictions. In this regard, it was necessary to create new specific categories (eg, acculturative persuasive precedent, selective persuasive precedent), to test whether they suitably describe the application of Inter-American precedents, in an attempt to categorize the recent performance of the highest courts in Brazil, Colombia, Argentina, Chile, and Bolivia. Additionally, the concept of double control of conventionality has presented essential perspectives for the compliance with IACtHR judgments by demanding States, as well as the interpretation and application of national laws deemed compatible, or not, with the Pact of San José. In the end, quantitative analysis played an important role in measuring each national court's assimilation of international precedents as it outlined scenarios of explicit adoption of Inter-American Court precedent by national judicial branches. Sampled States were classified as follows: a) Brazil: selective persuasive IACtHR precedent with low performance; b) Colombia: acculturative persuasive IACtHR precedent with high performance; c) Argentina: selective persuasive IACtHR precedent with moderate performance; d) Chile: selective persuasive IACtHR precedent with high performance; and e) Bolivia: acculturative persuasive IACtHR precedent with moderate performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Clases dentro de las clases: Innovación docente para el alumnado del Máster en Formación del Profesorado de matemáticas.
- Author
-
Del Amo, Rosa Gómez, Peinado Rocamora, Pedro, and Moreno-Mediavilla, Daniel
- Subjects
- *
MASTER'S degree , *EDUCATION research , *BACHELOR'S degree , *MATHEMATICS students , *SECONDARY education , *ONLINE education , *ASSIMILATION (Sociology) - Abstract
Teacher training and innovation in the academic field are basic processes for improving the quality of education. This paper presents an innovative didactic experience for students of the Master’s Degree in Teacher Training in Secondary Education and bachelor’s degree, of an online university, in the specialty of mathematics. The educational innovation arises after the detection of difficulties in the assimilation of the contents taught in the subject of Teaching Innovation and Initiation to Educational Research by the participating students. The experience consists of a real simultaneous interaction (online) between the students of the Master’s Degree in Mathematics and the students of bachelor’s degree of a public center of Secondary Education, in Spain, while they receive classes in their center in a face-to-face way. The didactic methodology used in this experience is based on the principles of the Flipped Classroom and, at all times, the material necessary for its understanding and assimilation has been shared with the Master’s students. To analyze this experience, a questionnaire was used to collect information before and after the experience, a satisfaction survey and a focus group. The results indicate that the students of the online Master’s program consider this experience very necessary, since it favors the perception of the environment to which they must adapt and, in addition, the visualization of real cases provides a significant vision that completes and complements the theoretical training received. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. PRÁCTICAS DE PUBLICACIÓN Y TRAYECTORIAS FORMATIVAS INTERNACIONALIZADAS DE CIENTÍFICOS SOCIALES EN UNA REGIÓN MEXICANA.
- Author
-
SORDO, JUAN
- Subjects
- *
REGIONAL development , *SOCIAL scientists , *RESEARCH personnel , *SOCIAL capital , *SCIENTIFIC development , *ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This paper compares publication practices among social scientists from northeastern Mexico who were trained within the country or abroad. It focus critically on late regional scientific development (2000-2020) under the influence of a national academic evaluation scheme strongly aligned to the global publication system. A quantitative analysis was carried out on a selection of self-reported scientific production by a sample of researchers. It was found that both profiles have assimilated the hegemonic publication criteria. Also, that those trained abroad generally have better performances (some linked to their social capital). But, nonetheless, regional collaborations that could contribute to a sustainable local scientific practice are moderately more frequent in locally trained researchers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Sociology against Zionism? The Thought of French Jewish Sociologist René Worms on Jews and Judaism at the Beginning of the Twentieth Century.
- Author
-
Mosbah-Natanson, Sébastien
- Subjects
ZIONISM ,TWENTIETH century ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,SCIENTIFIC racism ,JUDAISM ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) - Abstract
Among French Jewish intellectuals who rejected Zionism in the early twentieth century was René Worms, a sociologist who used sociological theories as well as "franco-judaïsme," the French-Jewish model of assimilation, to oppose it. In 1920–21, during debates organized by the Société de sociologie de Paris on the future of Palestine and Zionism, Worms used various theories to counter Jewish nationalism. Influenced by biology and race science, he began by denying the existence of a Jewish race, emphasizing the racial heterogeneity of modern Jews. His understanding of the evolution of modern religions toward universalism, influenced by Auguste Comte and Émile Durkheim, also discredited Zionism. Finally, his sociology of nationality, interwoven with Ernest Renan's conception of the nation, precluded any national claim to Judaism. This article examines the arguments Worms made and compare them to those of other speakers in debates between sociologists in Paris. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Assimilation as the Residue of AGREE.
- Author
-
Abu-Abbas, Khaled Hasan
- Subjects
LINGUISTIC analysis ,SATISFACTION ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) - Abstract
An Optimality Theoretic approach to assimilation is proposed where all assimilation processes result from the interaction of a single syntagmatic markedness constraint that requires sequences of sounds to AGREE in all feature specifications with a variety of faithfulness constraints that seek to IDENT input feature specifications. Assimilation or the lack of it is the residue of AGREE after satisfaction of higher ranked IDENT constraints. AGREE is analyzed as a single gradient constraint rather than a set of categorical constraints each obligating agreement in a specific feature. The study concludes that a gradient interpretation of AGREE is theoretically appropriate since it meets the general principle of economy in the structure of our language faculty and also supports the general move towards convergence rather than divergence in linguistic analysis. The outcomes of the study also prove to be practically appropriate in handling various assimilation processes from different languages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Immigrant generation and religiosity: a study of Christian immigrant groups in 33 European countries.
- Author
-
Molteni, Francesco and van Tubergen, Frank
- Subjects
IMMIGRANTS ,RELIGIOUSNESS ,CHRISTIANS ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,MUSLIMS - Abstract
Although Christian migrant groups make up a sizeable part of the immigrant population in Europe, little is known about their religiosity. This paper studies patterns of intergenerational change and proposes and tests hypotheses that specify when and why changes across generations are stronger. Using data from the European Social Survey (2002–2018) on 33 European countries, it is found that there is a strong pattern of intergenerational decline in the level of religiosity among Christian migrant groups in Europe. This process of religious decline is by no means universal. Results show that children from two foreign-born parents are much more religious than children from intermarried (foreign-born and native) couples. We also observe that intergenerational decline is much less pronounced in European countries that are more religious. Finally, when Christian migrant groups belong to a religious minority group, this is associated with higher levels of religiosity in both the first and second generation. It is argued that these insights can explain the 'puzzling' strong intergenerational religious transmission among Muslim migrant groups in Western European societies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Aspects of Modern Greek nationalism: the educational policy of the first period of governance of the Liberal Party in Greece (1915–1924) and 'national integration'.
- Author
-
Iliadou-Tachou, Sofia, Kipouropoulou, Evmorfia, and Kouremenou, Eirini
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,NATIONAL unification ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,EDUCATIONAL objectives ,GREEK language ,ACCULTURATION ,ACHIEVEMENT - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to describe and interpret the main objectives of the educational policy of the central elites of the Liberals in the region of Greek Macedonia during the period 1915–1924 concerning the process of assimilation and especially the cultural assimilation, the structural integration and the psychological identification of the so-called xenophone or allophone population. We investigate the Glinos Foundation Archive using CDA techniques in combination with the historical interpretative method. Αn assimilation process with mild practices took place, while the achievement of national homogenization through literacy via the demotic Greek language teaching was considered as the main goal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. ANÁLISIS DEL CUERPO HUMANO MEDIANTE LOS APUNTES DE DIBUJO: La modelización plástica a través de la observación.
- Author
-
GONZÁLEZ VÁZQUEZ, MARGARITA
- Subjects
HUMAN body ,HUMAN experimentation ,ART students ,ARTISTS ,DRAWING ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) - Abstract
Copyright of Human Review is the property of Eagora Science and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Ramifications of cultural exports for cultural dynamics: assimilation of McDull, a Hong Kong movie series relocated to China.
- Author
-
Pun, Boris Lok Fai and Fung, Anthony
- Subjects
ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,CULTURAL industry management ,INTELLECTUAL property ,CULTURE conflict - Abstract
This paper discusses the cultural implications of the assimilation of Hong Kong movie production in the process of China–Hong Kong coproductions. Local Hong Kong cultural products tend to be stripped of their local characteristics to cater to the Chinese market when prosperous businesses become based in China. Moreover, distinctive cultural resources in the Hong Kong movie industry, such as techniques, professionals, and intellectual property (IP), are assimilated and coopted by China's cultural industry to ensure the success of its future development. This assimilation may result in cultural conflict, which was indicated by the reaction of Hong Kong audiences to China's embezzlement of their cultural products. This study analyzes three animated movies in the McDull series through focus group interviews with movie investors and audiences in Hong Kong and China. The findings show that assimilation driven by economic factors induces negative sentiment in Hong Kong audiences as they witness the assimilation of their nostalgic icons. Based on these findings, the ramifications of such assimilation for cultural dynamics are considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Tracing racism in antiracist narrative texts online.
- Author
-
Archakis, Argiris
- Subjects
RACISM ,CRITICAL discourse analysis ,AMBIGUITY ,IMMIGRANTS ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) - Abstract
Τhis paper studies online narrative texts, which, despite their declared antiracist stance, reproduce racist positionings against migrants. Based on the broader framework of Critical Discourse Analysis, our main research question concerns the ways racist and antiracist positionings coexist. To this end, we employ an enriched version of Bamberg's tripartite model which distinguishes the micro-levels of narrative world and narrative interaction, from which the positionings towards the discourses of the macro-level, in the present case the national discourse, emerge. A common feature of the media narratives under study is the ambiguity between an antiracist reading and a motile racist one. In these readings the denοuncement of majority instances of illiberal/frozen racism coexist with the representation of migrants as people largely assimilated to the majority context. Due to this coexistence, such texts become vehicles of liquid racism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Being a Swedish teacher in practice: analysing migrant teachers' interactions and negotiation of national values.
- Author
-
Ennerberg, Elin
- Subjects
TEACHERS ,IMMIGRANTS ,GENDER inequality ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,RITUALS (Liturgical books) ,POLITICAL integration - Abstract
National values or imagined communities are often reflected in a country's educational system. In this paper, a teaching course for migrant teachers in Sweden is used to reflect on how some of these national values and practices are presented and subsequently negotiated by course leaders and course participants. While measures that emphasise national values are often criticised as assimilationist, building partly on Goffman's work it is argued that a discussion of national values can also serve to unveil hidden rituals that are otherwise taken for granted, while also pointing both to the potential usefulness and pitfalls of civic education. For example, while course teachers try to avoid presenting the Swedish value system as superior to that of other countries, certain 'sacred' national values, such as a commitment to gender equality, are seen as non-negotiable. For participants, their previous teaching identity can be used both as a resource in navigating the course and for work practice. But for some participants, their previous teaching identity is seen as in need of adjustment in order for them to follow Swedish teaching and school 'rituals'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.