5 results on '"Petite ville"'
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2. Impeded Sociability: Racial Consciousness and Racialized Immigrants’ Sense of Sociable and Unsociable Places in Semi-rural Alberta, Canada.
- Author
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CHOON-LEE CHAI, ORCUTT, SARAH, and ADJEI, JONES
- Subjects
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IMMIGRANTS , *RACE identity , *RACIAL identity of white people , *REFUGEES , *SOCIABILITY - Abstract
Immigrant settlement success hinges on effectively reconstructing social life in the receiving society. With the increased admission of racialized immigrants to Canada, it is imperative to investigate how their sense of sociability and belonging manifests within the broader context of white-dominant Canadian society. This research examines everyday place-based experiences of settlement sociability among racialized immigrants based on the understanding that racial matters are spatial matters. Using the photovoice method, ten racialized recent immigrant men aged 27 to 50, mostly from African and West Asian origins, expressed their settlement experiences through photo-rendering of places of comfort and discomfort. The participants had lived in Canada for less than ten years and immigrated to Canada through the refugee, family, and economic immigration admission categories. Findings indicate that racialized immigrants felt comfortable in “de-racialized” spaces, where they were temporarily relieved from their ethnic visibility and a sense of being out of place. They were uncomfortable in areas that triggered “racialized insecurity,” where they felt vulnerable because of their racialized identity. The analysis further points to the emotional and embodied nature of racial experiences: participants’ uneasy sense of otherness is rooted in their racialized physiques that inhabit a socio-cultural environment where whiteness is the somatic norm. The findings of this research call attention to the need for a closer inspection of how places of immigrant settlement and race are inextricably linked. The promotion of settlement sociability needs to go beyond physical proximity to social closeness, valuing co-ethnicity and cultural familiarity, especially in the initial stage of settlement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Geo(foto)grafias de uma pequena cidade: diversas ruralidades ou ruralidades habitadas?
- Author
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Fraga Portugal, Jussara, Silva Ribeiro, José Marcos, and Santos de Oliveira, Simone
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SMALL cities , *CITIES & towns , *ARID regions , *GEOGRAPHY , *PRESS relations , *RURALITY - Abstract
This text is an excerpt of a research developed within the scope of the Course Completion Work (TCC) of the graduation in Degree in Geography from the State University of Bahia (UNEB), Campus IX Serrinha, semi-arid region of Bahia, entitled: "Campo, city, urban and rural: concepts, representations and approaches in Geography textbooks". For the present essay, we used the photographic records that are part of the methodological collection of the research to weave reflections from a theoretical contribution that deals with small towns, ruralities, photographs and the teaching of Geography. The reflections defend the insertion of the students? daily spatial practices in the approaches of concepts and themes of Geography at school. Besides, the unique dynamics of the small town through the manifestations of ruralities that occur in it also explains its particularities in relation to medium and large cities, and its recognition in the context of teaching Geography, conceives other and different modes of understanding these spaces and of the ways of being of the who experience them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Sizing up Crime and Weather Relationships in a Small Northern City.
- Author
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Castle, Ysabel and Kovacs, John
- Subjects
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SMALL cities , *OFFENSES against property , *BURGLARY , *WEATHER , *CRIME , *POLICE services , *VIOLENT crimes - Abstract
Small study areas are vastly underrepresented in the criminological literature, including the literature on the relationship between crime and weather. North Bay, ON (population 50,000) provides a useful study area in which to begin to address this lack. Using five years of police call for service data (2015–2019), negative binomial regression models were used to assess the relationships between weather variables and assaults, break and enters, domestic disputes, and thefts. For each crime type, the resulting models were compared based on their Aikake information criteria (AICs) to determine which performed the best. Significant relationships were found to differ between crime types. Temperature played a significant role in determining the temporal distribution of thefts, while for break and enters a model without weather variables performed best, even though both are property crimes. Similarly, for violent crimes, assaults were found to be positively correlated to temperature, while domestic disputes depended mainly on day of the week. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Quel rôle de l’action publique dans le déploiement d’initiatives locales de solidarité alimentaire ? L’exemple d’une épicerie sociale dans une petite ville de l’Hérault
- Author
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Néel, Claire, Perrin, Coline, Soulard, Christophe-Toussaint, and Burgel, Sophie
- Subjects
Changement d’échelle ,Petite ville ,[SHS.GEO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Geography ,Epicerie sociale ,Action publique - Abstract
This paper analyzes the role of public action in the development of local food solidarity initiatives. It is based on the case study of a social grocery store located in a small town in Hérault, France. At first, the project was conceived by the Department as an element of its social policies. The main goal was to set up a social grocery store in a rural area without any food bank accessible, in a spatial justice perspective. To settle this top-down initiative, the Department relied on a non-profit organization that was already active locally and had a strong mobilizing power. Nevertheless, the local appropriation of the initiative was limited by an opposition movement led by food retailers afraid of economic competition, in a deprived small town. In this conflictual context, local governments first chose not to support the initiative. However, cooperation at the communal and intercommunal levels has gradually developed as a result of local political and institutional changes, and of the success of the initiative. Public action takes different forms depending on the institutional level. On the one hand, local actors mainly support the initiative through occasional actions, whose main objective is to provide a short-term response to a social need. On the other hand, at the Department and Pays levels, public actors aim at accompanying the initiative over the long term. They consider the social grocery store as an living lab to facilitate a systemic change in food systems and in social action. This reinforcement of public intervention is a driver for scaling the initiative and increasing its transformative impact., Cette communication analyse le rôle de l’action publique dans le déploiement d’initiatives de solidarité alimentaire à partir du cas d’étude d’une épicerie sociale située dansune petite ville de l’Hérault. La genèse du projet s’est faite de manière descendante, dans le cadre de l’action sociale du Département. Pour réussir son ancrage territorial, les acteurs départementaux se sont appuyés sur une association déjà présente localement et disposant de capacités de mobilisation. Néanmoins, les difficultés socio-économiques du territoire ont freiné l’appropriation locale du projet. Des coopérations aux échelons communal et intercommunal se sont toutefois progressivement développées sous l’effet d’évolutions conjoncturelles et de la démonstration de l’utilité sociale du projet. Cette densification de l’intervention publique constitue un vecteur de changement d’échelle de l’initiative.
- Published
- 2022
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