402 results on '"Minority community"'
Search Results
52. Climate Change, Gender Roles, and Hierarchies: Socio-economic Transformation in an Ethnic Minority Community in Viet Nam
- Author
-
Soma Dey
- Subjects
Gender Studies ,Minority community ,Political science ,Viet nam ,Ethnic group ,Ethnology ,Climate change ,Development - Published
- 2021
53. Occupation’s Role in Producing Inclusive Spaces: Immigrants’ Experiences in Linguistic Minority Communities
- Author
-
Anne-Cécile Delaisse, Suzanne Huot, Luisa Veronis, and W. Ben Mortenson
- Subjects
Canada ,030506 rehabilitation ,030504 nursing ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Immigration ,Emigrants and Immigrants ,French ,Linguistics ,Gender studies ,Context (language use) ,Transactional analysis ,Space (commercial competition) ,language.human_language ,03 medical and health sciences ,Minority community ,Occupational Therapy ,Critical ethnography ,Ethnography ,language ,Humans ,Sociology ,Occupations ,0305 other medical science ,media_common - Abstract
While the “situatedness” of occupation in the context of migration has been explored using various approaches, there remains a need for a holistic and dynamic understanding of the concept of space and the spatiality of occupation. Adopting Lefebvre’s theory of the production of space and taking a transactional approach to occupation, we examined the role of immigrants’ occupational engagement in the production of Francophone minority community spaces in Metro Vancouver, Canada. We completed a critical ethnography and focus on findings from participant observations and in-depth and go-along interviews with French-speaking immigrants. Findings shed light on the influence of immigrants’ occupational engagement on the production of minority spaces. To study the spatiality of occupation comprehensively, we need to move beyond an examination of the immediate environment to address other components of the production of space as well as the interrelation of spaces through occupation.
- Published
- 2020
54. The Economic Impacts of the Coronavirus On the Muslim Minority Community
- Author
-
Rusdee Taher and Muhammad Mansour Madroh
- Subjects
Minority community ,Political science ,medicine ,Economic impact analysis ,medicine.disease_cause ,Socioeconomics ,Coronavirus - Abstract
The paper aims to reveal the economic impacts of the Coronavirus on Muslim minorities, using the Muslim minority in Thailand as a model. The Corona pandemic affected Thailand like its effect on other countries, but the effect differed in regions from others and in categories from others as well, and the effect included all fields, but its impact varies in one field for another and the most important of these areas in which the Corona pandemic affected significantly, clearly and clearly in the field Economic. The importance of the paper also lies in the fact that it talks about a part of the Islamic world that may be forgotten or unknown to many people, and that it uses the descriptive analytical method as a way to study the case, The results were reached, including: The spread of Islam in the Thailand was early and included all land and sea routes, The Muslim minority in Thailand enjoys diversity and difference in social, cultural and political characteristics, which enabled it to occupy a unique position in the demographic component of Thailand in particular, and the map of the Islamic world in general, The impact of the Corona pandemic on the Muslim minority in Thailand is clear and clear, and comprehensive in all aspects of life, most notably the economic aspect of the minority. The impact of the Corona pandemic on the economic side of Muslim minorities in Thailand has varied greatly, which confirms the importance of taking into consideration by decision-makers. In these societies this variation and difference when doing the treatment and suggesting solutions. The paper recommended: To conduct field studies to clarify the effects of the Corona pandemic on the economy and other aspects of life.
- Published
- 2020
55. The case of Alevis in Turkey: a challenge to liberal multiculturalism
- Author
-
Mustafa Şen and Aret Karademir
- Subjects
021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,History ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,02 engineering and technology ,0506 political science ,Minority community ,Multiculturalism ,Political science ,Political economy ,Political Science and International Relations ,050602 political science & public administration ,Minority rights ,media_common - Abstract
This paper investigates how and why Alevis in Turkey have insisted that they are not a minority community and have been reluctant to formulate their religio-cultural demands in the framework of min...
- Published
- 2020
56. Racial/Ethnic Minority Community College Students' Critical Consciousness and Social Cognitive Career Outcomes
- Author
-
Lian Liu, Simeon Kulp, Nathalie Lynn, Sabrina Carroll, Katherine Melo Li, Elizabeth Angélica Cantú, Germán A. Cadenas, Alissa Ruth, and Tameka Spence
- Subjects
Critical consciousness ,Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Minority community ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,General Psychology ,Applied Psychology ,Racial ethnic ,Social cognitive theory - Published
- 2020
57. The Victimization of the Ahmadiyya Minority Group in Indonesia: Explaining the Justifications and Involved Actors
- Author
-
Max Regus
- Subjects
Government ,Minority group ,BL51-65 ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,indonesia ,victimization ,Islam ,Criminology ,islam ,the ahmadiyya ,Minority community ,violence ,State (polity) ,Political science ,Ethnography ,Philosophy of religion. Psychology of religion. Religion in relation to other subjects ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,media_common - Abstract
This article discusses the victimization of the Ahmadiyya minority community in Indonesia. This article can be considered as one of the crucial studies that analyze the problems faced by the Ahmadiyah minority group in Indonesia due to violence. This study's importance relates to academic efforts in understanding the complexities of the Ahmadiyya community's victimization in Indonesia. This study is also essential in providing input or recommendations for the state, social elements (NGOs), and the Ahmadiyah group. This article proposes the theory of violence as an analytical framework for understanding violence against the Ahmadiyah group. This article provides vital objectives in understanding two aspects of the victimization process of the Ahmadiyya group. First, justifications for the victimization is based on state and religious decrees. Second, the victimization process involves actors and institutions. Besides, this study was conducted using a systematic qualitative review as a method. The data has been collected through extensive reviews on previous studies, ethnographic reports, institutional reports, NGO reports, government, and media.
- Published
- 2020
58. Modeling
- Author
-
Bateman, Ian J., Loomis, John, and Helfand, Gloria
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
59. Discrimination in Organ Donation
- Author
-
Friedman, Eli A. and Friedman, Eli A., editor
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
60. Rethinking the Politics of Race: Participation, Representation and Identity in Birmingham
- Author
-
Solomos, John, Back, Les, Body-Gendrot, Sophie, editor, and Martiniello, Marco, editor
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
61. Involving Men: The Multiple Meanings of Female Genital Mutilation in a Minority Migrant Context
- Author
-
Tobias K. Axelsson and Sofia Strid
- Subjects
Gender Studies ,Intersectionality ,Female circumcision ,Minority community ,Abandonment (emotional) ,Context (language use) ,Gender studies ,Sociology ,Complicity - Abstract
The paper explores the roles of men in the continuation/abandonment of female genital mutilation (FGM) in a migrant minority community in Sweden. The aim is to contribute to the under-researched ar...
- Published
- 2020
62. Perceived Discrimination as Experienced by Muslims in New Zealand Universities
- Author
-
Neda Salahshour and Eric Boamah
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Enthusiasm ,Minority community ,Sociology and Political Science ,Anthropology ,Political science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Political Science and International Relations ,Gender studies ,media_common - Abstract
Since the March 15 attacks in Christchurch, there has been raised awareness and new and strong enthusiasm to understand the experiences of the Muslim minority community. This exploratory paper inve...
- Published
- 2020
63. Non-governmental organizations and the sexual and gender minority community in North Macedonia: narratives about community practice and building
- Author
-
Antonio Mihajlov, Viktorija Bondikjova, Elizabeth J. King, and Kristefer Stojanovski
- Subjects
030505 public health ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,05 social sciences ,Gender studies ,Development ,050906 social work ,Sexual minority ,03 medical and health sciences ,Minority community ,Needs assessment ,Community practice ,Narrative ,Sociology ,0509 other social sciences ,0305 other medical science ,Social movement - Abstract
Sexual and gender minorities (SGM) community practice efforts vary globally. In North Macedonia, we conducted a needs assessment with 71 SGM community members and 11 non-governmental organization (...
- Published
- 2020
64. Reverberating Disquietude: A response to Shalini Masih’s 'A Sustained Note of Disquiet'
- Author
-
Jyoti M. Rao
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Intersectionality ,Oppression ,Health (social science) ,Psychoanalysis ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,Persecution of Christians ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Colonialism ,Minority community ,Cultural studies ,Sociology ,Psychoanalytic theory ,Applied Psychology ,Prejudice (legal term) ,media_common - Abstract
This discussion is a response to a paper concerning the oppression of the Christian religious minority community in present-day India. I explore several themes presented by Masih through a psychoanalytic consideration of individual experience, marginalization, theories of prejudice, individual and social trauma, post-colonial critiques, and intersectionality. Links are made between the trauma of colonialism and the present day persecution of Christians in India.
- Published
- 2020
65. Neighborhood characteristics and effects on physical activity in an urban minority community – application of Health Belief Model to findings from Creighton University Center for Promoting Health and Health Equity (CPHHE-REACH) initiative
- Author
-
Garrick I. Hayashi, Aminatu Issaka, Omofolasade Kosoko-Lasaki, Olúgbémiga T. Ekúndayò, John R. Stone, Raheem Sanders, and Jeffrey M. Smith
- Subjects
Gerontology ,0303 health sciences ,030309 nutrition & dietetics ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Physical activity ,Health outcomes ,Mental health ,Health equity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Minority community ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health belief model ,Center (algebra and category theory) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Psychology - Abstract
Physical activity has been strongly associated with better physical and mental health outcomes. However, physical activity for better health outcomes depends on many factors, including the nature o...
- Published
- 2020
66. Herramientas de comunicación alternativa en la comunidad menonita de Chihuahua, México
- Author
-
Ledezma López, Sarahí Vanessa, Aguaded, José Ignacio, Mancinas Chávez, Rosalba, and Universidad de Huelva. Departamento de Educación
- Subjects
58 Pedagogía ,Alternative communication ,Mennonites ,Identity ,Comunidad minoritaria ,Medios de comunicación social ,Comunicación alternativa ,Identidad ,Menonitas ,Minority community - Abstract
La presente investigación se centra en la comunidad menonita asentada en el noroeste de México. Un grupo minoritario conservador que se ha caracterizado por poseer una identidad muy consolidada respecto a su vestimenta, lengua, religión y parámetros sociales. El objetivo de este trabajo es identificar las herramientas de comunicación alternativa que surgen al interior de la comunidad menonita y determinar el impacto que tienen éstas en su vida cotidiana y la perpetuidad de su identidad. El primer acercamiento que se tuvo con la comunidad para llevar a cabo el estudio, fue una entrevista realizada a Abraham Siemens, un líder menonita, reconocido por su altruismo pero también por su trabajo en los medios. En dicha entrevista se identificó que existen tres medios de comunicación en la comunidad menonita: un periódico, una revista y una radiodifusora manejados en alemán bajo o Plautdiescht. Todos fundados con el propósito de brindar un espacio para transmitir ideas alejadas de los medios masivos de comunicación y tener una comunicación fluida en su idioma y bajo sus propios preceptos. Una vez identificados estos medios, se seleccionaron los de formato escrito, determinando una muestra de publicaciones correspondiente a enero – diciembre 2019. Dicha muestra se tradujo al español para realizar un análisis de contenidos a través del cual se indaga en las estrategias que los menonitas usan para mantener su identidad consolidada; encontrando con ello una vinculación amplia entre todo el contenido publicado en los medios y la vida cotidiana de los menonitas. Una de las principales conclusiones que se obtiene con este trabajo es que los medios alternativos de comunicación dentro de la comunidad menonita, funcionan como una herramienta educadora que transmite ideas propias de su idiosincrasia, que si bien hace que los menonitas se alejen de los medios masivos de comunicación, también hace que los miembros de esta cultura adquieran preceptos religiosos, educativos y culturales. A pesar de estar en contacto con otras culturas y estar expuestos a la modernidad, los menonitas han conservado su identidad apoyándose de herramientas como lo son estos medios alternativos de comunicación. Lo interesante de un estudio como este, es que se trabaja con un grupo altamente conservador que decidió acercarse a la tecnología en busca de estrategias que les permitan mantener firme su identidad. Es importante mencionar que las estrategias y herramientas comunicativas encontradas en esta investigación son aplicables a los menonitas, pero también abren la pauta para nuevos escenarios en comunidades minoritarias del resto del país que hasta el momento no han podido encontrar una alternativa que les permita conservar su identidad y por ende se encuentran en peligro de desaparecer. A través de este análisis se reconoce el trabajo de los menonitas en ese sentido y se encuentran futuras líneas de trabajo que podrían ser útiles y aplicables en otras comunidades minoritarias., This research focuses on the Mennonite community in northwestern Mexico. A conservative minority group that has been characterized by having a very consolidated identity with respect to its dress code, language, religion and social parameters. The objective of this work is to identify the alternative communication tools that emerge within the Mennonite community and to determine the impact that these tools have on their daily life and the perpetuity of their identity. The first approach we had with the community to carry out the study was an interview with Abraham Siemens, a Mennonite leader, recognized for his altruism but also for his work in the media. In this interview, it was identified that there are three media outlets in the Mennonite community: a newspaper, a magazine and a radio station operated in Low German or Plautdiescht. All of them were founded with the purpose of providing a space to transmit ideas far from the mass media and to have a fluid communication in their own language and under their own precepts. Once these media were identified, the written media were selected, determining a sample of publications from January to December 2019. This sample was translated into Spanish to carry out a content analysis through which the strategies that Mennonites use to maintain their consolidated identity were investigated, thus finding a broad link between all the content published in the media and the daily life of Mennonites. One of the main conclusions obtained with this work is that the alternative media within the Mennonite community, work as an educational tool that transmits ideas of their idiosyncrasy, which although it makes the Mennonites move away from the mass media, it also makes the members of this culture acquire religious, educational and cultural precepts. Despite being in contact with other cultures and being exposed to modernity, Mennonites have preserved their identity by relying on tools such as these alternative means of communication. The interesting aspect of a research like this is that we are working with a highly conservative group that decided to approach technology in search of strategies that allow them to maintain their identity. It is important to note that the communicative strategies and tools found in this research are applicable to the Mennonites, but also open the door to new scenarios in minority communities in the rest of the country that so far have not been able to find an alternative that allows them to preserve their identity and therefore are in danger of disappearing. Through this analysis, it recognized the work of the Mennonites in this sense and found future lines of work that could be useful and applicable in other minority communities.
- Published
- 2022
67. Minority Rights: Some New Intergovernmental Approaches in Europe
- Author
-
Phillips, Alan and Joly, Danièle
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
68. Ethnic minority community access to popular culture in the context of tourism (case of Thai ethnic group in Lac Village, Mai Chau, Hoa Binh, Vietnam)
- Author
-
Nguyen T. Nam
- Subjects
Ethnic group ,Popular culture ,Context (language use) ,Gender studies ,General Medicine ,ethnic minority community ,JZ2-6530 ,HM401-1281 ,Minority community ,Cultural studies ,tourism ,Social history ,Sociology (General) ,Sociology ,International relations ,popular culture ,Tourism - Abstract
Tourism is a growing service economic sector that creates jobs for many communities in the world. Ethnic minority communities in many countries are also now taking part in tourism activities. Vietnam is a country with great potentials for natural landscapes, historical values, indigenous culture of ethnic groups with habits and lifestyles, rich culinary culture of regions. It is the basis for development of tourism. Through tourism, tourists will understand the daily life of indigenous peoples, but at the same time people in these ethnic minority communities will have the opportunity to access popular cultural phenomena. This thesis discusses the ethnic minority communities’ access to popular culture through tourism such as mass media, popular culinary culture or mass tourism. The case study was conducted in a village of ethnic minorities in Hoa Binh province, North Vietnam which has been undergoing changes under the impact of tourism in recent years.
- Published
- 2019
69. Racialisation of Difference and the Cultural Politics of Teaching
- Author
-
Troyna, Barry, Rizvi, Fazal, Biddle, Bruce J., editor, Good, Thomas L., editor, and Goodson, Ivor F., editor
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
70. The Potentiality for Conflict between National and Minority Cultures
- Author
-
Rex, John and Rex, John
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
71. The Concept of a Multicultural Society
- Author
-
Rex, John and Rex, John
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
72. Communication with cancer survivors: Disparities by education level but not race in a majority-minority community
- Author
-
Sharon Tamashiro, Ryon K. Nakasone, Kristy Fujinaga, Marci Chock, and Jared David Acoba
- Subjects
Minority community ,Race (biology) ,nervous system ,genetic structures ,medicine ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,Psychology ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,psychological phenomena and processes ,Demography - Abstract
Purpose Patient-provider communication (PPC) is an important component of optimal patient care. Many factors influence the quality of PPC among cancer patients, however, there are conflicting data on the impact of patient race and education level on PPC. We sought to assess the effect of race and education level on PPC among a multiracial cohort of cancer survivors. Methods We conducted a survey of 360 cancer survivors. Data were collected on age, race, income, and education level. The survey assessed satisfaction with PPC and follow-up with cancer physician. Questions were answered on a 5-point response scale. We evaluated PPC using nonparametric analyses and built logistic regression models for satisfaction with follow-up care. Results Patients with a high school or lower education consistently rated questions of PPC more poorly than those who attained a higher level of education. No significant associations were detected between PPC and race. Results for perceived quality of care showed a similar disparity by education level. High school educated patients reported significantly lower satisfaction with quality of follow-up care compared with patients who attained Graduate level education (OR 3.50, 95% CI 1.37-8.94). Conclusion Our study demonstrated that education level, but not race, is associated with perception of communication and satisfaction with follow-up care. Patients who attained higher levels of education had higher PPC ratings and satisfaction with follow-up care. Our findings identify an opportunity for improvement in PPC through individualizing the delivery of health-related information with the goal of achieving optimal care of long-term cancer survivors.
- Published
- 2021
73. Understanding Sexual Behaviors and Drug Use among African-Americans : A Case Study of Issues for Survey Research
- Author
-
Fullilove, Mindy Thompson, Fullilove, Robert E., III, Ostrow, David G., editor, Kelly, Jeffrey A., editor, and Kessler, Ronald C., editor
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
74. Police Response
- Author
-
Levin, Jack, McDevitt, Jack, Levin, Jack, and McDevitt, Jack
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
75. Exploring the Role of Community Empowerment in Urban Poverty Eradication in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
- Author
-
Mahaganapathy Dass, Puvaneswaran Kunasekaran, Charanjit Kaur, and Sarjit S. Gill
- Subjects
Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Building and Construction ,urban poverty ,minority community ,empowerment ,community development ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law - Abstract
The main purpose of this study was to holistically understand the role of empowerment in urban poverty eradication of the Indian community in the urban areas of the Klang Valley, Malaysia. The poverty eradication effectiveness was tested by analysing community empowerment domains and MyKasih programme run by a non-governmental organisation. There are numerous studies conducted to understand the issues of poverty in Malaysia. However, few studies have so far focused on the minority community in Malaysia. Moreover, there is no recent study to test the effectiveness of any governmental or NGO’s poverty eradication efforts on this minority community. This study utilised a qualitative approach and an in-depth interview was used to gather the data. The respondents were single mothers living in a poverty-stricken area in the capital city of Malaysia.
- Published
- 2022
76. Cultural maintenance within the Tamil minority in Kuching: spanning three generations.
- Author
-
Alagappar, Ponmalar N., Dealwis, Caesar, and David, Maya Khemlani
- Subjects
CULTURAL maintenance ,TAMIL (Indic people) ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,CULTURAL identity ,ACCULTURATION - Abstract
This paper intends to determine whether the minority Tamil immigrant community in Kuching, Sarawak still maintains its heritage culture or has assimilated it with the dominant cultures in Sarawak. Are the Tamils in Kuching still maintaining their cultural norms? The data comes from a set of questionnaires investigating language, social and cultural identity, and unstructured interviews spanning three generations. The results show that, while some assimilation has occurred, the community has maintained its cultural identity. The most interesting revelation is the growing number of the younger generation who are adapting their heritage and cultural norms, clearly demonstrating Gibson’s accommodation and acculturation without assimilation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
77. Assessing Psychological Effects of Cyberbullying on the Adolescents of a Cosmopolitan City
- Author
-
Ghosh, Shovan, Pramanick , Sucharita, Ghosh, Shovan, and Pramanick , Sucharita
- Abstract
The popularity of computer-mediated communication and cyber technology has created many new vices in society that obstruct the development of adolescents. One such vice is cyberbullying, which is an insidious and covert form of bullying. The present paper opts to scrutinise cyberbullying's psychological effects on the victim teenagers of minority communities of a cosmopolitan city. Confirmatory factor analysis, for testing the Psychological Effect of Cyberbullying Scale (PECS) comprising 24 direct item pool, was employed to unfold Mild Psychological Effect Scale (MPES) and Intense Psychological Effect Scale (IPES). Cross validating the initial factor structure was conducted with the help of developing standardised coefficient for the two factor model for PECS. Cronbach's alpha reliability coefficient values are above 0.09 for the items of both the Mild Psychological Effect Scale (MPES) and Intense Psychological Effect Scale (IPES). Based on purposive sampling, the study found that all the items taken for conducting the survey are highly co-related to the psychological impact of the victim teens of the minority community of the cosmopolitan city. So the PECS developed for measuring the effect has significance. Study results also indicate that the PECS can serve as a valuable tool for measuring the mental impact of cyberbullying among teenagers.
- Published
- 2021
78. Young Muslims’ estrangement from Swedish majority society : Influences from the minority
- Author
-
Roald, Anne Sofie and Roald, Anne Sofie
- Abstract
This study concerns factors which might lead young Muslims in minority communities in Sweden towards a Salafist understanding of the Islamic message. Previous research, particularly in psychology and psychiatry, highlights adolescent-specific factors such as psychological vulnerability with possible depression, including death wishes, as well as social factors such as family dysfunction and discrimination, as being crucial. The aim of this study is to take a minority perspective in discussing possible reasons for, and consequences of, young members of minorities’ self-distancing from the majority society. The theoretical framework employed is identity formation. The study relies on participation in Muslim communities, interviews with Muslims conducted in the south of Sweden from the late 1980 onwards, and literature and newspaper articles written by or about youths with immigrant backgrounds. The results of the study indicate that the non-extremist Muslim parent generation’s relationship with the majority society during their children’s formative years might influence these children’s attitudes towards the majority society as they grow older. Muslim immigrants’ insecurity in the new society is conveyed to and transformed by the next generation, and may play an unintentional role in young Muslims turning to Salafist understandings of the Islamic message. Furthermore, the Swedish policy of ‘diversity’ (‘Mångfald’) tends to create fertile ground for this understanding, as it creates majority acceptance of the Muslim parent generation staying apart from the majority society and raising the next generation with little or no loyalty to the majority society., Wahhabism i Sverige - nätverk, praktiker, mission
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
79. Application and utility of geographic information systems in pharmacy specific health research: A scoping review
- Author
-
Ali Lakhani, Tácio de Mendonça Lima, Paulo Henrique Ribeiro Fernandes Almeida, Aline Aparecida Foppa, and Brígida Dias Fernandes
- Subjects
Pharmacies ,Community pharmacies ,education.field_of_study ,Spatial Analysis ,Geographic information system ,business.industry ,Population ,Scopus ,MEDLINE ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Pharmacy ,Community Pharmacy Services ,United States ,Health data ,Minority community ,Geography ,Pharmacy Research ,Environmental health ,Pharmaceutical Services ,Geographic Information Systems ,Humans ,business ,education - Abstract
Background Geographic Information Systems (GIS) are considered essential tools to analyze spatially referenced health data. Objectives: The purpose of this scoping review is to describe how GIS is used in pharmacy specific health research. Methods: During July 2020, the following databases were searched: EMBASE, MEDLINE (PubMed), Web of Science and Scopus. The search strategy included terms relating to spatial analysis and pharmacy. Studies were considered eligible if they involved the use of GIS and focused on pharmacies. A narrative and tabular synthesis of the results was carried out, structured around the spatial analysis methods utilized across studies, as well as the characteristics of pharmacies evaluated in studies. Results: After a review of 6967 sources, 48 studies were included in this review. Twenty-nine studies were conducted in the United States (60.4%) and thirty-six focused on accessibility (75.0%; n = 36). Twenty-two studies investigated the relationship between sociodemographic aspects of the population and the accessibility and availability of pharmacies (45.8%). Twelve studies (25.0%) performed distance analysis and six studies (12.5%) performed geostatistical analysis. Community pharmacies were the setting evaluated most frequently, with over-the-counter selling products being the most evaluated pharmacy variable (13.3%; n = 6). Population density (58.3%; n = 28), income indicators (43.8%; n = 21) and minority community composition rates (41.7%; n = 20) were the most used population variables. Conclusions: GIS have been increasingly used in pharmacy specific health research. Generally, research has sought to identify potential barriers to access and their effects on the population. Future research may benefit by utilizing robust spatial methods and applications across countries outside of the United States. Doing so could help to confirm the impact of sociodemographic characteristics on the availability and/or accessibility of pharmacies globally.
- Published
- 2021
80. Cultures, Languages, Mediation
- Author
-
Gill, Karamjit S., Gill, Karamjit S., editor, Göranzon, Bo, editor, and Florin, Magnus, editor
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
81. Spatial changes of ethnic communities during tourism development: a case study of Basha Miao minority community
- Author
-
Jing Su and Jiuxia Sun
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Social impact ,Ethnic group ,Transportation ,Space (commercial competition) ,Social constructionism ,Minority community ,Development (topology) ,Tourism, Leisure and Hospitality Management ,Production (economics) ,Economic geography ,Sociology ,Tourism ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Lefebvre’s theory of space production argues space is generated from production activities in human societies, which can be quoted to explore the social impact that tourism has had on the communiti...
- Published
- 2019
82. Is The Minority Community Possible? The Post-Patriarchal Community and The Possibility of Another Life in Antonia’s Line
- Author
-
Kim Eunhye
- Subjects
Minority community ,Gender studies ,Sociology ,Line (text file) ,Feminism - Published
- 2019
83. Fall Risk Reduction Program Paired with a Transportation Program in an Underserved, Urban Minority Community: A Qualitative Evaluation
- Author
-
Diana Noble-Hernandez, Laura L. Durbin, Thelma J. Mielenz, Fern Hertzberg, and Julie A. Sorensen
- Subjects
050210 logistics & transportation ,Medical education ,Article Subject ,education ,05 social sciences ,Minor (academic) ,Fall risk ,lcsh:Geriatrics ,Transportation program ,Focus group ,lcsh:RC952-954.6 ,03 medical and health sciences ,Minority community ,0302 clinical medicine ,0502 economics and business ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Thematic analysis ,Corrigendum ,Psychology ,Curriculum ,Research Article ,Fall prevention - Abstract
This study sought to evaluate A Matter of Balance/Volunteer Lay Leaders (AMOB/VLL) fall prevention curriculum in combination with a “door-through-door” program: Coordinated Older-Adult Senior Transportation Services (COASTS) for older adults living in an urban, underserved community. AMOB/VLL participants were offered eight 2-hour classes as part of the training program. Focus groups were conducted with older adult participants, COASTS mobility facilitators, and AMOB/VLL master trainers. A thematic analysis was conducted, and primary themes relating to curriculum content, cultural relevancy, and outcomes were examined. Older adults and facilitators felt the course was rewarding and led to improvements in mobility and confidence. Master trainers were more critical and recommended simplifying content, with tailored guidance for specific populations. They also recommended increased emphasis on balance and physical activity. Although participants and MoFas felt combining AMOB/VLL and COASTS was rewarding and improved participant mobility, master trainers and participants suggested minor modifications to increase program benefits for urban, underserved communities.
- Published
- 2019
84. Minority Community Students’ Experience of Foreign Language Learning: A Narrative Inquiry
- Author
-
Surya Sigdel
- Subjects
Minority community ,Foreign language learning ,Pedagogy ,Sociology ,Narrative inquiry - Published
- 2019
85. Women and Consistorial Discipline: The Case of Courthézon in the Early Seventeenth Century
- Author
-
Judith P. Meyer
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,History ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Compromise ,Forbearance ,Patriarchy ,Religious studies ,Agency (philosophy) ,Gender studies ,06 humanities and the arts ,Patience ,060202 literary studies ,060104 history ,Negotiation ,Minority community ,Political science ,0602 languages and literature ,0601 history and archaeology ,Period (music) ,media_common - Abstract
This study seeks to contribute to a more nuanced understanding of both the Reformed church consistory and women's experience of the Reformation by examining the interactions between the Reformed church consistory and women in the small French town of Courthézon. For the period from 1617 to 1631, it analyzes how the consistory treated women in its exercise of discipline and how women in turn treated the consistory. It examines in-depth a number of cases of women summoned by the consistory for various offenses, including quarreling, dancing, marital and sexual relations, and absence from services. The interactions were complex and suggest that both male patriarchy and female agency were at work. Yet the consistory also treated the two sexes similarly in certain instances. Women demonstrated a remarkable capacity to ignore, negotiate with, and on occasion defy the consistory. One extraordinary woman rejected the consistory's authority altogether when pressed to reconcile. The cases also indicate that the process of consistorial discipline aided women by providing opportunities for them to represent and act for themselves. The consistory was guided by a desire to keep its minority community intact: it showed remarkable patience, forbearance, and a willingness to compromise in its efforts, and it consequently was usually successful.
- Published
- 2019
86. The Influence of 'The Belfast Group' on the Emergence of Seamus Heaney's Poetry
- Author
-
Juan José Cogolludo Díaz
- Subjects
Reino unido ,Politics ,Enthusiasm ,Minority community ,Poetry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Criticism ,General Medicine ,Art ,Northern ireland ,Humanities ,media_common - Abstract
espanolEste articulo demostrara que el taller de escritura de Philip Hobsbaum, a modo y semejanza de un grupo similar en el Reino Unido, ensalzo a Seamus Heaney como poeta. Su resena sobre ‘A Group Anthology’ desperto en el un interes por contar con un grupo de escritores que actuarian de estimulo y critica constructiva. Entre estos aspirantes a escritores destacaba el joven Seamus Heaney, que habia publicado algunos poemas en revistas universitarias y diarios locales bajo el seudonimo de Incertus. Desde el principio, el se unio al entorno del llamado ‘Belfast Group’, y su participacion en las reuniones del taller, asi como las ensenanzas y los continuos estimulos de Hobsbaum, tuvieron una enorme influencia en sus inicios como poeta. El origen campesino de Heaney, su educacion catolica y su pertenencia a una comunidad minoritaria y discriminada, son factores que, unidos al contexto politico y social en Irlanda del Norte en esa epoca, incidieron decisivamente en su creacion artistica EnglishThis article will demonstrate how Philip Hobsbaum’s Belfast writing group, modelled on a similar group in the UK, defined Seamus Heaney as a poet. His review of ‘A Group Anthology’ in 1963 sparked in him an enthusiasm for a writers’ group which would provide encouragement and critical criticism from fellow writers. The young Seamus Heaney stood out among these aspiring writers in the Belfast Group; he had published a few poems in student magazines and local newspapers under the pseudonym Incertus. From the outset, his participation in the workshop sessions, along with Hobsbaum’s teachings and continuous encouragement, were enormously influential in his emergence as a poet. Heaney’s rural origins, his Catholic education and his belonging to a minority community which was being discriminated against, were factors that, together with the political and social context of Northern Ireland at that time, exercised a significant impact on his artistic creation
- Published
- 2019
87. The AKP’s de-securitization and re-securitization of a minority community: the Alevi opening and closing
- Author
-
James Barry and Ihsan Yilmaz
- Subjects
History ,Turkish ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Closing (real estate) ,0507 social and economic geography ,Context (language use) ,050701 cultural studies ,language.human_language ,0506 political science ,Minority community ,State (polity) ,Political economy ,Political science ,Political Science and International Relations ,050602 political science & public administration ,language ,Securitization ,media_common - Abstract
This article evaluates the Turkish state’s relations with the Alevi community through a securitization theory framework. It first examines the issue in its historical context, comparing Kemalist an...
- Published
- 2019
88. Becoming American by becoming Muslim: strategic assimilation among second-generation Muslim American parents
- Author
-
Rebecca A. Karam
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Sociology and Political Science ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,0507 social and economic geography ,Assimilation (biology) ,Public relations ,0506 political science ,Minority community ,Anthropology ,050602 political science & public administration ,Boundary-work ,Sociology ,business ,050703 geography - Abstract
Strategic assimilation describes how individuals use boundary work to construct identities which allow them to selectively maintain ties to a minority community while assimilating into the mainstre...
- Published
- 2019
89. Gender Identity Construction among Transgender People in South Korea: Community Dynamics and Reproduction of the Gender Binary
- Author
-
Inseo Son
- Subjects
Gender binary ,Sexual minority ,Minority community ,Gender identity ,Transgender people ,Community dynamics ,Reproduction (economics) ,Transgender ,Gender studies ,Sociology - Published
- 2018
90. Young Muslims’ estrangement from Swedish majority society
- Author
-
Anne Sofie Roald
- Subjects
Islamism ,criminality ,minority community ,Religionsvetenskap ,Young Muslims ,Religious Studies - Abstract
This study concerns factors which might lead young Muslims in minority communities in Sweden towards a Salafist understanding of the Islamic message. Previous research, particularly in psychology and psychiatry, highlights adolescent-specific factors such as psychological vulnerability with possible depression, including death wishes, as well as social factors such as family dysfunction and discrimination, as being crucial. The aim of this study is to take a minority perspective in discussing possible reasons for, and consequences of, young members of minorities’ self-distancing from the majority society. The theoretical framework employed is identity formation. The study relies on participation in Muslim communities, interviews with Muslims conducted in the south of Sweden from the late 1980 onwards, and literature and newspaper articles written by or about youths with immigrant backgrounds. The results of the study indicate that the non-extremist Muslim parent generation’s relationship with the majority society during their children’s formative years might influence these children’s attitudes towards the majority society as they grow older. Muslim immigrants’ insecurity in the new society is conveyed to and transformed by the next generation, and may play an unintentional role in young Muslims turning to Salafist understandings of the Islamic message. Furthermore, the Swedish policy of ‘diversity’ (‘Mångfald’) tends to create fertile ground for this understanding, as it creates majority acceptance of the Muslim parent generation staying apart from the majority society and raising the next generation with little or no loyalty to the majority society. Wahhabism i Sverige - nätverk, praktiker, mission
- Published
- 2021
91. How Fair is Fairness-aware Representative Ranking?
- Author
-
Mykola Pechenizkiy, Akrati Saxena, and George H. L. Fletcher
- Subjects
Minority community ,Ideal (set theory) ,Information retrieval ,Group (mathematics) ,Computer science ,Representation (politics) ,Ranking (information retrieval) - Abstract
It has been observed in several works that the ranking of candidates based on their score can be biased for candidates belonging to the minority community. In recent works, the fairness-aware representative ranking was proposed for computing fairness-aware re-ranking of results. The proposed algorithm achieves the desired distribution of top-ranked results with respect to one or more protected attributes. In this work, we highlight the bias in fairness-aware representative ranking for an individual and for a group if the group is sub-active on the platform. We define individual unfairness and group unfairness from two different perspectives. We further propose methods to generate ideal individual and group fair representative ranking if the universal representation ratio is known. The paper is concluded with open challenges and further directions.
- Published
- 2021
92. Diseño lingüístico de un barrio ecuatoriano en Queens, Nueva York
- Author
-
Gubitosi, Patricia, Puma, Christian, Narváez, Daniela, Gubitosi, Patricia, Puma, Christian, and Narváez, Daniela
- Abstract
Diaspora studies on migration communities have shown how these transnational groups appropriate the new space in the receptive country through a process of deterritorialization and reterritorialization. These processes involve a reinterpretation and reconceptualization of the linguistic relationship between the language of the diaspora group and those spoken in the new home. One of the most visible places where this contextual relation must be negotiated is in the public sphere, where language, culture and identity are inevitably interwoven (Blackwood, Lanza & Woldemariam, 2016). Using a multimodal approach and using both qualitative and quantitative methodologies, this article analyzes how an Ecuadorian-American community in Queens transformed the linguistic landscape of their surroundings to make it similar to what this community had in their home country., Estudos da diáspora sobre comunidades migrantes mostram que esses grupos transnacionais se apropriam do novo espaço no país receptor através de um processo de desterritorialização e reterritorialização. Esses processos envolvem uma reinterpretação e uma nova conceituação da relação linguística entre a língua do grupo diaspórico e a do país de origem. Um dos lugares mais visíveis onde essa relação deve ser negociada é na esfera pública, onde língua, cultura e identidade estão intimamente relacionadas (Blackwood et al. 2016). Por uma perspectiva multimodal e levando em conta metodologias qualitativas e quantitativas, este artigo analisa como a comunidade equatoriano-americana que vive em Queens, Nova York, transformou o cenário linguístico de seu ambiente para transformá-lo em um semelhante ao que tinham em seu país de origem., Los estudios de diáspora sobre las comunidades migrantes muestran que estos grupos transnacionales se apropian del nuevo espacio en el país receptor a través de un proceso de deterritorialización y reterritorialización. Estos procesos involucran una reinterpretación y una nueva conceptualización de la relación lingüística entre la lengua del grupo diaspórico y aquella del país de origen. Uno de los lugares más visibles donde esta relación debe negociarse es en la esfera pública, donde la lengua, la cultura y la identidad están estrechamente interrelacionadas (Blackwood, Lanza & Woldemariam, 2016). A través de una perspectiva multimodal y tomando en consideración metodologías cualitativas y cuantitativas, este artículo analiza cómo la comunidad ecuatoriana-estadounidense que vive en Queens, ciudad de Nueva York, transformó el paisaje lingüístico de su entorno para convertirlo en uno semejante al que tenían en su país de origen.
- Published
- 2020
93. Diseño lingüístico de un barrio ecuatoriano en Queens, Nueva York
- Author
-
Gubitosi, Patricia Claudia, Puma, Christian, Narváez, Daniela, Gubitosi, Patricia Claudia, Puma, Christian, and Narváez, Daniela
- Abstract
Diaspora studies on migration communities have shown how these transnational groups appropriate the new space in the receptive country through a process of deterritorialization and reterritorialization. These processes involve a reinterpretation and reconceptualization of the linguistic relationship between the language of the diaspora group and those spoken in the new home. One of the most visible places where this contextual relation must be negotiated is in the public sphere, where language, culture and identity are inevitably interwoven (Blackwood, Lanza & Woldemariam, 2016). Using a multimodal approach and using both qualitative and quantitative methodologies, this article analyzes how an Ecuadorian-American community in Queens transformed the linguistic landscape of their surroundings to make it similar to what this community had in their home country., Estudos da diáspora sobre comunidades migrantes mostram que esses grupos transnacionais se apropriam do novo espaço no país receptor através de um processo de desterritorialização e reterritorialização. Esses processos envolvem uma reinterpretação e uma nova conceituação da relação linguística entre a língua do grupo diaspórico e a do país de origem. Um dos lugares mais visíveis onde essa relação deve ser negociada é na esfera pública, onde língua, cultura e identidade estão intimamente relacionadas (Blackwood et al. 2016). Por uma perspectiva multimodal e levando em conta metodologias qualitativas e quantitativas, este artigo analisa como a comunidade equatoriano-americana que vive em Queens, Nova York, transformou o cenário linguístico de seu ambiente para transformá-lo em um semelhante ao que tinham em seu país de origem., Los estudios de diáspora sobre las comunidades migrantes muestran que estos grupos transnacionales se apropian del nuevo espacio en el país receptor a través de un proceso de deterritorialización y reterritorialización. Estos procesos involucran una reinterpretación y una nueva conceptualización de la relación lingüística entre la lengua del grupo diaspórico y aquella del país de origen. Uno de los lugares más visibles donde esta relación debe negociarse es en la esfera pública, donde la lengua, la cultura y la identidad están estrechamente interrelacionadas (Blackwood, Lanza & Woldemariam, 2016). A través de una perspectiva multimodal y tomando en consideración metodologías cualitativas y cuantitativas, este artículo analiza cómo la comunidad ecuatoriana-estadounidense que vive en Queens, ciudad de Nueva York, transformó el paisaje lingüístico de su entorno para convertirlo en uno semejante al que tenían en su país de origen.
- Published
- 2020
94. Mixed Methods Review of A Home-Grown School Feeding Pilot in A Poor Ethnic Minority Community in Vietnam
- Author
-
Dai Dinh, Demi Reurings, Sabina Di Prima, Dirk R Essink, E. Pamela Wright, and Jacqueline E. W. Broerse
- Subjects
Minority community ,Geography ,Ethnic group ,Socioeconomics ,School feeding - Abstract
Background Undernutrition threatens the health and future of preschool children in disadvantaged ethnic minority communities. Home-grown school feeding (HGSF) in nursery schools could have a positive impact on children’s nutrition while creating multiple benefits for the community and local food system. Evidence is lacking on the implementation and sustainability of HGSF as part of multi-sectoral programs in remote areas. This study assessed a HGSF pilot intervention, implemented within a four-year nutrition-sensitive agriculture (NSA) program, in five nursery schools in a mountain ethnic minority community in Vietnam. It aimed to gain insights into the diversity and cost of school meals, food sources, effects on children’s nutritional status and on process aspects related to implementation and sustainability, especially HGSF synergy with other NSA program components. Methods Mixed-methods assessment covered school meal diversity and cost; food sources; anthropometric data; and the process, including changes triggered by HGSF, perceived barriers and facilitators to implementation, and prospects for sustainability. Data came from participants selected by purposive sampling for semi-structured interviews (n = 30) and seven focus group discussions (n = 76), and from field observations and transect walks. Results School meals increased daily dietary diversity; meals cost USD 0.65/child/day. About 44% of the foods used were home-grown. There was an indicative reduction in underweight children, an increase in school attendance, and improvements in food preferences and WASH practices. Parents’ caring and feeding practices improved and their willingness to pay for school meals increased. At community level, local food systems became less cash crop-oriented and more self-reliant in production of nutrient-rich foods, contributing to household food security and income generation. Social capital increased. Positive changes were attributed to HGSF and to synergy among NSA program components. Enhanced confidence and motivation, stimulated by role models and change agents, facilitated the process. Socio-economic conditions of poor households and limited resilience to external shocks were barriers that threatened sustainability. Conclusions This study showed that implementing HGSF in a mountain ethnic minority area with a high prevalence of undernutrition benefitted children and their communities, when integrated in a multi-sectoral program that mobilises all stakeholders and stimulates both supply and demand of nutritious food.
- Published
- 2021
95. Formulating Germanness in the Banat : ‘minority making’ among the Swabians from Dualist Hungary to interwar Romania
- Author
-
Samuel Foster and Christopher Wendt
- Subjects
History ,Minority community ,Political science ,Long period ,05 social sciences ,National identity ,050602 political science & public administration ,0507 social and economic geography ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Ethnology ,050703 geography ,0506 political science ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Published online: 01 Mar 2021 This article examines the shaping of a dominant discourse on Germanness among the Banat Swabians, a German-speaking minority community, over a long period of upheaval. Particularly following WWI, debates over what it meant to be German gained significance as a means of political contestation and a way of mobilizing the Swabian community vis-à-vis the Romanian state. While appeals to belonging within a broader German nation were popularized, the symbols developed to convey this affiliation showed particular local and regional understandings of Banat Swabian Germanness—a trend that only began to change in the 1930s, as these symbols were appropriated by new challengers.
- Published
- 2021
96. Some Challenges in Sri Lankan Muslim Education Today
- Author
-
Slm Rifai
- Subjects
Economic growth ,Minority community ,Politics ,Field (Bourdieu) ,Political science ,Muslim community ,Sri lanka ,Lagging ,Backwardness - Abstract
The primary objective of this short article is to highlight some important challenges and problems that the minority Muslim community in Sri Lanka encounters in the field of education today. It has been acknowledged by policy makers in education that the Muslim minority community is lagging far behind other two communities in the field of education. Many socio-religious and political factors contributed to this sluggishness in education. What are main problems and challenges that the Muslim community in Sri Lanka encounter today in the field of educations. Why cannot Sri Lankan Muslim community catch up other communities in the field of education? It is my intention to highlight some of those problems in this article. This paper does not discuss the pedagogical and methodological challenges in learning and teaching attitudes in Muslim schools in Sri Lanka rather this paper explores some socio-economic and political issues that have contributed to the backwardness of Muslim education in Sri Lanka.
- Published
- 2021
97. Chasm in Hegemony: Explaining and Reproducing Disparities in Homophilous Networks
- Author
-
Jessy Xinyi Han, Augustin Chaintreau, Priyanjana Bengani, Ilica Mahajan, and Yiguang Zhang
- Subjects
FOS: Computer and information sciences ,Hegemony ,Computer science ,Computer Networks and Communications ,050204 development studies ,02 engineering and technology ,Homophily ,020204 information systems ,Phenomenon ,0502 economics and business ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Computer Science (miscellaneous) ,Sociology ,050207 economics ,Positive economics ,Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality ,Empirical evidence ,Social and Information Networks (cs.SI) ,Hierarchy ,Potential impact ,05 social sciences ,Representation (systemics) ,Computer Science - Social and Information Networks ,Minority community ,Hardware and Architecture ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,Software - Abstract
In networks with a minority and a majority community, it is well-studied that minorities are under-represented at the top of the social hierarchy. However, researchers are less clear about the representation of minorities from the lower levels of the hierarchy, where other disadvantages or vulnerabilities may exist. We offer a more complete picture of social disparities at each social level with empirical evidence that the minority representation exhibits two opposite phases: at the higher rungs of the social ladder, the representation of the minority community decreases; but, lower in the ladder, which is more populous, as you ascend, the representation of the minority community improves. We refer to this opposing phenomenon between the upper-level and lower-level as the chasm effect. Previous models of network growth with homophily fail to detect and explain the presence of this chasm effect. We analyze the interactions among a few well-observed network-growing mechanisms with a simple model to reveal the sufficient and necessary conditions for both phases in the chasm effect to occur. By generalizing the simple model naturally, we present a complete bi-affiliation bipartite network-growth model that could successfully capture disparities at all social levels and reproduce real social networks. Finally, we illustrate that addressing the chasm effect can create fairer systems with two applications in advertisement and fact-checks, thereby demonstrating the potential impact of the chasm effect on the future research of minority-majority disparities and fair algorithms.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
98. A functionalist view of community policing in the minority community.
- Author
-
Williams, Francis M.
- Subjects
COMMUNITY policing ,MINORITIES ,CRIMINAL justice personnel ,CRIME ,CRIMINAL justice system - Abstract
This paper integrates Durkheim's functionalist paradigm of society to make some observations and analysis as it pertains to the phenomenon of the relationship between the police and the community and the minority community in particular. Inherent in this discussion is Durkheim's notion of what holds society together. Recent analyses of community policing initiatives suggests that the role that police play in community based policing strategies depends heavily on relations between police and actors in the community - merchants and residents. One question is do these actors share common beliefs and sentiments that help to strengthen social cohesion? Why would one community's beliefs and sentiments be different form another's when overall there exists a generalized fear of crime in society? Minority communities views differ because community cohesion exists within a different paradigm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
99. Impact of a changing climate on an ethnic minority community in a remote mountainous region of Viet Nam
- Author
-
Phuong Ha Pham and Donna L. Doane
- Subjects
Minority community ,Geography ,Viet nam ,Ethnic group ,Socioeconomics - Published
- 2020
100. Introduction
- Author
-
Donna L. Doane and Phuong Ha Pham
- Subjects
Minority community ,Political science ,Ethnic group ,Climate change ,Socioeconomics - Published
- 2020
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.