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“We Feel Like We’re Home”: The Resettlement and Integration of Syrian Refugees in Smaller and Rural Canadian Communities | Stacey Haugen (https://openalex.org/A5000444111) | 2,019 | Despite the media attention to Syrian refugee families being welcomed, finding work, and feeling at home in small towns across Canada, little is known about resettlement integration smaller rural communities. Addressing this knowledge gap, study visited four communities provinces an effort highlight experiences of refugees living there. Based on interviews conversations with sponsors community members, refugees, service providers, findings tell a story welcomed into coming together support newcomers find solutions challenges. The article concludes that places can have lot offer some whom settle permanently these areas, their should be included as part larger narrative Canada. | article | en | Refugee|Feeling|Narrative|Syrian refugees|Rural area|Political science|Work (physics)|Economic growth|Sociology|Psychology|Social psychology|Law|Mechanical engineering|Linguistics|Philosophy|Economics|Engineering | https://doi.org/10.7202/1064819ar | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2979467973', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.7202/1064819ar', 'mag': '2979467973'} | Syria | C144024400|C3018716944 | Sociology|Syrian refugees | Refuge: Canada's Journal on Refugees|Érudit (Université de Montréal) |
“We Have No Time to Wallow”: Death and Other Timely Diversions | Allan Punzalan Isaac (https://openalex.org/A5042685568) | 2,021 | The chapter takes up affective diversions as explored in a musical, <italic>Care Divas</italic>, staged Manila about queer Filipino caregivers Israel. musical brings global migration and the regional politics of Palestinian-Israeli conflict into spaces, times, communities. While death is always possibility war within contract labor’s precarious condition zone, by performance makes visible lifeways networks. plot’s ‘“refusal to wallow,” per director, face tragedies generates emergence other ways form communalities, even life amid annihilation. work, along with its source material, plays stopping, extending, disembodying, retelling, making impossible time(s) protagonists. Refusing hero/victim binary sought nationalist fantasies, looks at non-state-sanctioned relationships show how family nation fictions give way temporary collectivities that find musical’s virtual time place. | chapter | en | Musical|Nationalism|Politics|Queer|Face (sociological concept)|Sociology|HERO|State (computer science)|History|Gender studies|Aesthetics|Art|Political science|Literature|Law|Social science|Algorithm|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.5422/fordham/9780823298525.003.0005 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4285334080', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.5422/fordham/9780823298525.003.0005'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | |
“We Have Nothing to Lose but Our Bodies”: Politics of Self-Destruction in the BioSovereign Assemblage | Asli Calkivik (https://openalex.org/A5063288214) | 2,020 | "We Have Nothing to Lose but Our Bodies":Politics of Self-Destruction in the BioSovereign Assemblage Asli Calkivik (bio) Starve and Immolate: The Politics Human Weapons By Banu Bargu Columbia University Press, 2014 "In a political present dominated by values self-interest, instrumental calculation, well-being, security" (xii), what are possibilities for transformative politics, alternative subjectivities that defy such forms thought action? This question is central Bargu's gripping, haunting, elegantly written, rigorously documented, forcefully argued book charts ethnography one most painful chapters Turkish history—a chapter opened with launch hunger strike leftist prisoners between 2000 2007 protest introduction high-security prisons. Taking its theoretical cues from building upon Michel Foucault's prescient analysis transformation power rule modernity, Immolate provides an in-depth insight into this episode, little known beyond immediate geography, makes important contribution thinking about resistance contemporary era. From widely cases strikes Irish prisons self-immolation strategies anticolonial struggles, resorting corporeal destruction as strategy action not novel phenomenon. What striking our current predicament extent which becoming widespread across globe—from detainees Guantánamo Bay asylum seekers [End Page 188] immigrants camps; only instances Tamil, Palestinian, or Iraqi suicide bombers also at moments when ordinary citizens, Mohamed Bouazizi, self-immolate act revolt against existing order things. explores prevalence form era probes it tells us nature modern well resisting contextualizing discussion within specific historical, sociopolitical context Turkey.1 author does explicitly engage long history weaponization life, putting particular case Turkey conversation other historical instances. She notes "the emergence human weapons new mode agency on scene politics" (347) (emphasis added) without fully clarifying ways articulation indicative development contextualized longer modernity. constitute theme noted be longest deadly (Anderson 2004). They were organized effort prevent replacement ward system F-type foreseen Anti-Terror Law 1991. law affirmed status distinct those guilty offenses (renaming them "prisoners terrorism") stipulated establishment special penal institutions. Following up earlier legislation, move toward was undertaken general Turkey's bid become member European Union. Officially candidate 1999 fueled state's interest adopting reform measures included policies concerning prison conditions. Designing after their Euro-American counterparts, officials claimed F-types would establish discipline provide inmates "better, healthier conditions, both physically psychologically, greater opportunities self-betterment" (130). opens account contingent encounters led funeral death faster, ceremony taking place downtrodden neighborhood Istanbul scattered houses. These houses where members extra-parliamentary groups waited turn die fast proposed reforms system. In 189] individuals who prioritizing identity, convictions, commitments, belief collective struggle over physical impulse biological survival. actors who, repeating... | article | en | Politics|Nothing|Power (physics)|Sociology|Transformative learning|Global politics|Law|Aesthetics|Political science|Media studies|Epistemology|Art|Philosophy|Pedagogy|Physics|Quantum mechanics | https://doi.org/10.5749/culturalcritique.108.2020.0188 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3141609368', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.5749/culturalcritique.108.2020.0188', 'mag': '3141609368'} | Iraq|Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Cultural Critique |
“We Have Supped So Deep in Horrors”: Understanding Colonialist Emotionality and British Responses to Female Circumcision in Northern Sudan | Rogaia Mustafa Abusharaf (https://openalex.org/A5038526583) | 2,006 | When the British colonized Sudan, they were horrified by practice of female circumcision. Unable to comprehend meanings this ritual adherents, interpreted it as irrational, immoral and uncivilized. officials conducted a propaganda campaign against practice, induced clerics condemn un‐Islamic passed stringent, albeit ineffective, law forbidding infibulation in 1946. In process, turned circumcision into site contest over Sudanese autonomy. Analyzing colonialists’ responses embodied states knowing enacted repressive measures illuminates collision culturally constructed emotions colonial context. | article | en | CONTEST|Colonialism|Context (archaeology)|Autonomy|Gender studies|Emotionality|History|Sociology|Islam|Ethnology|Political science|Psychology|Law|Social psychology|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1080/02757200600813908 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1989488906', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/02757200600813908', 'mag': '1989488906'} | Sudan | C144024400 | Sociology | History and Anthropology |
“We Have to Find a Better Way to Send a Message”: The CIA’s Counterterrorism Center, from the Eagle Program to the Predator Drone, 1986–2001 | Chris R. Fuller (https://openalex.org/A5020890401) | 2,017 | This chapter explores how the CIA's Counterterrorist Center (CTC) was established to function as a war room against terrorists, under leadership of its first director, Duane Clarridge. Though consequences Iran-Contra affair initially tempered CTC's aggression, foundations agency's post-9/11 role in War on Terror were laid during this time, and aggressive pursuit al-Qaeda today owes much approach Clarridge sought instill his new department. The origins involvement with drones tools counterterrorism are also traced back period—as early 1986. Through classified Eagle program, CIA explored concept using unmanned aircraft for both intelligence gathering conduct lethal precision strikes targets such Libyan dictator state sponsor terror, Mu'ammar Gaddafi. | chapter | en | Eagle|Drone|Agency (philosophy)|Al qaeda|Terrorism|Dictator|State (computer science)|Political science|Law|Criminology|Aggression|Management|Sociology|Psychology|Politics|Social psychology|Computer science|Paleontology|Social science|Genetics|Algorithm|Economics|Biology | https://doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300218541.003.0005 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4248821857', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300218541.003.0005'} | Iran|Libya | C144024400|C203133693 | Sociology|Terrorism | Yale University Press eBooks |
“We Know Well, but All the Same . . . ” | Nadia Abu El‐Haj (https://openalex.org/A5004200909) | 2,023 | Abstract In 1984, Edward Said argued that Palestinians had not yet gained “permission to narrate,” is, a Palestinian national narrative of exile and colonization remained unintelligible in the Euro-American world. Forty years hence, much has changed. And yet, this essay asks, with what political consequences? What if epistemological-qua-political ground changed such narrate” turns out be far less consequential than once believed? Tracing shift Israeli historical scholarship, among public, vis-à-vis expulsion during war 1948, queries long-standing anti- post-colonial commitment salience counter-histories, revisiting archive. Other forms (epistemological) power have emerged they do require kinds ideological closures (denial, official or unofficial censorship) were central Said’s analysis. settler-nationhood no longer depends on suppression trace, state secret—on denial. It can just as easily operate through embrace more brazen explicit seizure power: I know very well, but nevertheless. | article | en | Politics|Denial|Scholarship|Ideology|Narrative|Power (physics)|History|Law|Censorship|Political science|TRACE (psycholinguistics)|State (computer science)|Sociology|Media studies|Literature|Philosophy|Art|Psychoanalysis|Psychology|Linguistics|Physics|Algorithm|Quantum mechanics|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1215/21599785-10630149 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4388197084', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1215/21599785-10630149'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | History of the present |
“We Need to Worship Outside of Conventional Boundaries”: Jewish Orthodox Women Negotiating Time, Space and Halachic Hegemony Through New Ritual | Rivka Neriya-Ben Shahar (https://openalex.org/A5010209659) | 2,019 | This article focuses on the experiences, practices and perceptions of women who participate in amen meal ritual. The primary goal is to determine what we might learn from them about mechanisms social processes contemporary Israeli religious communities. practiced by a broad spectrum Jewish communities Ultra-Orthodox secular. It has ritualistic-religious intention maximizing number blessings recited participants thereby “amens” responded. I conducted qualitative-ethnographic-feminist study using in-depth interviews participant observations. central insight that ritual quietly undermines gender regime. toward meals enable us reach new understanding terms “time” “space” halachic hegemony. These relatively rituals reconstruct these heretofore clearly defined hierarchic terms, transforming into un-defined non-hierarchic ones. Moreover, participants’ very perceptive critiques rabbinic/halachic attitudes indicate they also perturb underpinnings fundamental Orthodox rules male hegemony throughout their daily practice. | article | en | Hegemony|Amen|Sociology|Sociology of religion|Judaism|Worship|Gender studies|Negotiation|Ethnography|Perception|Social science|Epistemology|Politics|Anthropology|Theology|Law|Political science|Philosophy|Animal science|Broiler|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1007/s12397-019-09295-1 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2981562816', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1007/s12397-019-09295-1', 'mag': '2981562816'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Contemporary Jewry|Humanities Commons CORE (Modern Language Association / Columbia University) |
“We Palestinian Refugees” | Beverley Butler (https://openalex.org/A5020826666)|Fatima Al-Nammari (https://openalex.org/A5091837245) | 2,017 | Our joint research addresses the complex role of heritage in selected Palestinian refugee camps Jordan. Informed by ‘We Refugee’ theses Arendt (1943) and Agamben (1995) we see these ‘heritage ethnographies’ as a means to explore paradoxes confronted refugees subject both ‘bio-political rites passage’ that consigns them ‘spaces exception’ ‘homo sacre’ ‘bare life’ simultaneously obligated imperative being ‘vanguard their people’. interest is ‘lived experiences’ communities vis-à-vis perspectives reflections on which argue characterise potent ‘popular rites’. We rites’ activated forms powerful ritual acts communion, magical thinking wish-fulfilment create new ‘factness’ ‘realities’ ground. Thus articulated through objects (domestic-personal mementoes souvenirs) connecting people ‘lost homeland’ cosmic centre/axis mundi, or via public art/ murals sensoriums synonymous with preparation ingestion traditional food. how not only performances dabke dancing but media rap film-making form fundamental part this context. The voices cited paper ‘thobe’ - embroidered dress best encompassing understanding heritage, similarly ‘we/us’, critics contemporary archaeologists, should embrace paradigm shift re-situates within theory subjectivity recognise efficacy popular ‘clothe’ thus empower persons just future present, thereby take complexities human especially conditions extremis. | article | en | Refugee|Homeland|Subjectivity|Context (archaeology)|Aesthetics|Sociology|Subject (documents)|Palestinian refugees|Cultural heritage management|Cultural heritage|Politics|Media studies|History|Gender studies|Art|Political science|Archaeology|Law|Epistemology|Philosophy|Library science|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1558/jca.31821 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2735442267', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1558/jca.31821', 'mag': '2735442267'} | Jordan | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Contemporary Archaeology |
“We Rule the Base Because We’re Few” | Orlee Hauser (https://openalex.org/A5043575665) | 2,011 | Informed by gendered organizational theory, I discuss “lone girls” in Israel’s Defense Forces (IDF), that is, women serving bases where the majority of soldiers are men. argue IDF’s military structure pushes these token into traditional behavior. Contrary to basic tenets logic, many find doing gender ways is empowering. They manipulate and femininity their advantage as IDF soldiers, a means attaining sense belonging when other paths blocked. Thus, lone girls benefit from army experiences on an individual level. On collective level, though, presence male-dominated does little strengthen position Israeli society general. Rather, it serves reinforce expectations for men women. | article | en | Gender studies|Social psychology|Sociology|Position (finance)|Femininity|Psychology|Finance|Economics | https://doi.org/10.1177/0891241611412959 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2163275762', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/0891241611412959', 'mag': '2163275762'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Contemporary Ethnography |
“We Shall Have Our Manhood”: Black Macho, the Black Cultural Pathology Paradigm, and the Million Man March | Nikol G. Alexander‐Floyd (https://openalex.org/A5003018564) | 2,007 | Michele Wallace’s Black Macho and the Myth of Superwoman was released in 1978 amidst a storm controversy. Academics, political commentators, feminists non-feminists, even Faith Ringold, author’s mother, criticized it.1 Darryl E. Pinckney’s review Village Voice is suggestive tenor most commentators on book. While Pinckney credited Wallace with bringing sexism to light community broadest sense, he nevertheless dubbed “an elusive work … [whose] pages offer autobiography, historical information, sociology, mere opinion dressed up resemble analysis. It polemic, seriously felt, sometimes scathing, often repetitious. ”2 criticized, not only Voice, but also New York Times, Freedomways, Scholar, other leading public forums.3 In 1979, fact, The Scholar dedicated an entire issue discussion Ntozake Shange’s choreopoem, for colored girls who have considered suicide when rainbow enuf, that featured over twenty prominent African American scholars, activists, including June Jordan, Maulauna Karenga, Audre Lorde, Julianne Malveaux, Alvin Poussaint, Robert Staples, Kalamu ya Salaam, among others.4 | review | en | Politics|Mythology|Biography|Faith|History|Gender studies|Sociology|Art history|Law|Political science|Classics|Philosophy|Theology | https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230605589_3 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2503554915', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230605589_3', 'mag': '2503554915'} | Jordan | C144024400 | Sociology | Palgrave Macmillan US eBooks |
“We Speak the Truth!” | Sārī Ḥanafī (https://openalex.org/A5043715091) | 2,019 | This study investigates the preachers and their Friday sermons in Lebanon, raising following questions: What are profiles of Lebanon academic qualifications? topics evoked sermons? In instances where they diagnosis analyze political social, what kind arguments used to persuade audiences? contact do have with social sciences? It draws on forty-two semi-structured interviews content analysis 210 preachers’ sermons, all conducted between 2012 2015 among Sunni Shia mosques. Drawing from Max Weber’s typology, shows that most represent both saint traditional, but rarely scholar. While dealing extensively phenomena, knowledge science | article | en | Typology|Politics|SAINT|Sociology|Raising (metalworking)|Content analysis|Social science|Media studies|Social psychology|Psychology|Law|Political science|History|Anthropology|Art history|Geometry|Mathematics | https://doi.org/10.1525/caa.2019.122003 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2948437099', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1525/caa.2019.122003', 'mag': '2948437099'} | Lebanon | C144024400 | Sociology | Contemporary Arab Affairs |
“We Swallowed the State as the State Swallowed Us”: The Genesis, Genealogies, and Geographies of Genocides in Somalia | Mohamed Haji Ingiriis (https://openalex.org/A5033133967) | 2,016 | ABSTRACTThis article theorizes both the causes and consequences of state-sponsored genocidal campaigns leveled at Isaaq clan-group, which can be considered as a case “forgotten genocide.” Little is academically known about various uses political violence by Somali State with regard to suppressing armed oppositions its repercussions. The assesses central significance militarized state power reveal ways in Mohamed Siad Barre military regime (1969–1991) unleashed terror on civilians argues that legacy left behind created unforgivable memories for those who were terrorized during terror. By transecting internal external dimensions, explains roots predatory selective genocides culminated communal clan convulsions 1990s how North led victims resort secession Somaliland. Using intell... | article | en | State (computer science)|State of exception|Political science|Criminology|Political economy|Law|Sociology|Politics|Algorithm|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1080/19392206.2016.1208475 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2465397182', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/19392206.2016.1208475', 'mag': '2465397182'} | Somalia | C144024400 | Sociology | African Security |
“We Take Care of the Older Person, Who Takes Care of Us?” Professionals Working with Older Persons in a Shared War Reality | Tova Band‐Winterstein (https://openalex.org/A5051958081)|Chaya Koren (https://openalex.org/A5032632242) | 2,009 | The aim of this article is to describe and analyze how professional gerontological workers (PGWs) from northern Israel experienced a shared reality during the Second Lebanon War: they perceived clients’ needs their own needs, older clients functioned crisis, what could be learned about experience by exploring PGWs’ perspective. Data were based on materials collected four PGW focus groups held simultaneously after war, using phenomenological perspective content expressed individuals, not group dynamics. Findings presented three identified themes: being caught between personal life obligations, acting out resilience growth versus vulnerability despair, integrating past present experiences learn for future events. discussion uses phenomenology reexamine coexistence in two populations that share mutual experiences. Further studies intervention implications are suggested. | article | en | Perspective (graphical)|Phenomenology (philosophy)|Vulnerability (computing)|Psychological resilience|Focus group|Psychology|Hermeneutic phenomenology|Older people|Lived experience|Social psychology|Interpretative phenomenological analysis|Gerontology|Sociology|Medicine|Qualitative research|Psychotherapist|Social science|Epistemology|Computer science|Philosophy|Computer security|Artificial intelligence|Anthropology | https://doi.org/10.1177/0733464809357427 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1986527782', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/0733464809357427', 'mag': '1986527782'} | Israel|Lebanon | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Applied Gerontology |
“We Try to Fix Things Quietly, and We Do Not Take Revenge”: Christian Arab Teachers’ Experiences Coping with Child Sexual Abuse Among Their Pupils in Israel | Laura I. Sigad (https://openalex.org/A5082489110)|Kathrin Shehadeh (https://openalex.org/A5093295505)|Efrat Lusky‐Weisrose (https://openalex.org/A5086457705)|Dafna Tener (https://openalex.org/A5069799837) | 2,023 | Teachers are at the frontlines of fight to identify and cope with child sexual abuse (CSA) among their pupils. Their methods coping CSA cases, both personally professionally, strongly influenced by socio-cultural contexts religious beliefs. The purpose present study was investigate experiences Christian Arab teachers in Israel Twelve elementary school were recruited for study. Semi-structured interviews conducted, a qualitative thematic analysis employed based on descriptive phenomenological-psychological approach. Two key themes emerged from analysis: (a) teachers’ intense emotional reactions regarding students empowerment some found handling such difficult situations, (b) beliefs identity affected understanding approach intervention. findings indicated dialectical position religio-cultural context, particularly duality value forgiveness, powerful resource coping, yet adverse implications children’s vulnerability. This unique risk should inform training matters. must also have systems that support them allow reflectively examine styles. | article | en | Coping (psychology)|Psychology|Thematic analysis|Empowerment|Child sexual abuse|Sexual abuse|Qualitative research|Social psychology|Developmental psychology|Poison control|Suicide prevention|Medicine|Clinical psychology|Sociology|Social science|Environmental health|Political science|Law | https://doi.org/10.1177/08862605231212419 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4388827368', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/08862605231212419', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37982392'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Interpersonal Violence|PubMed |
“We Turks are No Germans”: Assimilation Discourses and the Dialectical Construction of Identities in Germany | Patricia Ehrkamp (https://openalex.org/A5046471607) | 2,006 | In this paper I examine the ways in which politicians, media, and native residents formulate assimilation discourses—that is, expectations for immigrants to adapt prevailing norms cultures—and effects that such discourses have on social relations immigrant-receiving societies. Archival ethnographic research Germany illustrates are central dialectical process of identity construction native-born Germans from Turkey construct their respective ‘other’, thereby themselves. pay particular attention negotiations over belonging culture at multiple scales Germany—from national neighborhood level. Space figures prominently these negotiations, as spaces occupy create often become focus debates about difference, otherness, unassimilability migrants Germany. | article | en | Immigration|Negotiation|Dialectic|Assimilation (phonology)|Cultural assimilation|Ethnography|Sociology|Gender studies|Identity (music)|National identity|Political science|Social science|Anthropology|Aesthetics|Politics|Epistemology|Law|Linguistics|Philosophy | https://doi.org/10.1068/a38148 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1997167833', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1068/a38148', 'mag': '1997167833'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space |
“We Use English But Not Like All the Time Like”—Discourse Marker Like in UAE English | Eliane Lorenz (https://openalex.org/A5069408604) | 2,022 | The United Arab Emirates (UAE) is characterized by extensive language contact. Although Arabic the official language, practically all communication in general as well higher education, particular, takes place English. current study reports from larger project Language, Attitudes, and Repertoires (LARES, 2019–2021) investigates use of English a lingua franca (ELF) among university students Sharjah, one seven sovereign emirates UAE. A spoken corpus based on 58 semi-structured interviews used to examine discourse marker like . It has been shown be ubiquitous feature no longer confined American occurs frequently corpus. doubtlessly prominent type heterogeneous group multicultural considered here. large individual variation with respect normalized frequencies can observed, none social variables (i.e., gender, citizenship, L1, year birth, number languages, college, self-assessed proficiency English, usage score) included analysis account for this variability. Instead, I argue that part repertoire appears even more than other varieties. This supports previous research arguing an intensification change ELF contexts high characteristic multilingual users. | article | en | English as a lingua franca|World Englishes|Linguistics|Variation (astronomy)|Multiculturalism|Lingua franca|Repertoire|Psychology|Sociology|Political science|Pedagogy|Literature|Art|Philosophy|Physics|Astrophysics | https://doi.org/10.3389/fcomm.2022.778036 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4211203599', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.3389/fcomm.2022.778036'} | United Arab Emirates | C144024400 | Sociology | Frontiers in Communication|DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals)|Duo Research Archive (University of Oslo) |
“We Used to Have Four Seasons, but Now There Is Only One”: Perceptions Concerning the Changing Climate and Environment in a Diverse Sample of Israeli Older Persons | Liat Ayalon (https://openalex.org/A5003494397)|Natalie Ulitsa (https://openalex.org/A5058042700)|Hanan AboJabel (https://openalex.org/A5028562165)|Shelly Engdau‐Vanda (https://openalex.org/A5013779328) | 2,023 | Solastalgia is the pain caused by loss of solace and isolation from one’s environment. contrasted with nostalgia, which defined as melancholy characterized homesickness or distance home. The present study examines two concepts solastalgia nostalgia in context climate change among diverse populations older Israelis. In total, 50 persons four different population groups (e.g., veteran Israeli Jews, Arabs, immigrants former Soviet Union, Ethiopian immigrants) were interviewed. All interviews transcribed analyzed thematically. Members all expressed emotional distress grief associated changing climate, increased environmental pollution, disappearance nature. Perceptions around undesirability these changes quite unanimous, thus leading us to conclude that outcomes are similar despite etiological explanations. | article | en | Immigration|Perception|Distress|Context (archaeology)|Grief|Social isolation|Psychology|Population|Social psychology|Demography|Geography|Gerontology|Sociology|Clinical psychology|Medicine|Psychiatry|Archaeology|Neuroscience | https://doi.org/10.1177/07334648231212279 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4389613907', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/07334648231212279', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38085273'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Applied Gerontology|PubMed |
“We Want to be Remembered as Strong Women, Not as Shepherds” | Karin Mlodoch (https://openalex.org/A5023159538) | 2,012 | This article focuses on Kurdish women in Iraq who survived the Iraqi army’s Anfal operations against areas 1988. It investigates women’s psychosocial situation and strategies for coping with violence loss aftermath of operations. These are largely shaped by social economic factors gender relations traditional patriarchal context rural society. The further explores transformation narratives through recent political changes shows conflict between their memories, narratives, agency, one hand, hegemonic discourse victimhood Kurdistan-Iraq today, other, as well interweaving individual institutional processes dealing past Kurdistan Iraq. Thus paper contributes to socially politically contextualized gender-sensitive trauma research, larger sociological debate reconciliation after war conflict. | article | en | Narrative|Hegemony|Politics|Coping (psychology)|Gender studies|Agency (philosophy)|Sociology|Political economy|Political science|Social science|Psychology|Law|Philosophy|Linguistics|Psychiatry | https://doi.org/10.2979/jmiddeastwomstud.8.1.63 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2126299469', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.2979/jmiddeastwomstud.8.1.63', 'mag': '2126299469'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Middle East Women's Studies |
“We Were Here First”: Guiding Jewish Israeli Pupils at Christian Sites | Orit Ramon (https://openalex.org/A5009537313)|Ines Gabél (https://openalex.org/A5021101332)|Varda Wasserman (https://openalex.org/A5040583269) | 2,017 | The article examines the image of Christianity and Christians as expressed in narratives used to guide Israeli pupils at Christian sites Jerusalem. Based on an analysis tour observations interviews with guides those who prepare itineraries, it explores how presentation serves a means constructing modern identity. It argues that despite power Jews state, there is growing sense victimhood society, one leads introduction Jewish-Christian polemics into Zionist narrative, transformation tours—ostensibly designed expose students cultural/religious pluralism—into perpetuating notion hostile “others”. | article | en | Judaism|Jewish Christian|Religious studies|History|Sociology|Ancient history|Philosophy|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.2979/israelstudies.22.3.04 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2727598821', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.2979/israelstudies.22.3.04', 'mag': '2727598821'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Israel Studies |
“We Were as Dreamers:” Prayer as the Royal Road to the Unconscious in Hasidism | Elly Moseson (https://openalex.org/A5043540196) | 2,022 | Abstract This study explores the Hasidic psychologization of Jewish mysticism by focusing on problem distracting thoughts that arise during prayer, and attitudes responses to them can be found in literature. Two different theories origins such thoughts, both attributed Israel Ba’al Shem Tov, along with various techniques for engaging them, are described. It is argued these reflect two distinct paradigms, which exhibit significant similarities dynamic unconscious psychoanalysis. In addition tracing reception Israel’s ideas within movement without, connects his activities as a folk healer particular concern treating mental illness. | article | en | Prayer|Unconscious mind|Mysticism|Judaism|Psychoanalysis|Religious studies|Parapsychology|Sociology|Philosophy|Psychology|Theology|Medicine|Alternative medicine|Pathology | https://doi.org/10.1163/15685276-12341665 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4294219333', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1163/15685276-12341665'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Numen |
“We Will Honour Our Good Name”: The Trudeau Government, Arms Exports, and Human Rights | Jennifer Pedersen (https://openalex.org/A5074023595) | 2,018 | This chapter examines the political debate surrounding Canadian arms exports to Saudi Arabia over first two years of Trudeau government. It focuses on how critics, particularly New Democratic Party, challenged Liberal government’s narrative in House Commons and unsuccessfully tried improve parliamentary oversight exports. The discusses troubling reports misuse against civilians Yemen, problems with proposed legislation accede Arms Trade Treaty (ATT). argument is that there a gap between rhetoric human rights its actions regard Arabia. overall picture reveals confused, inconsistent, disappointing policy exports, amounting failure Trudeau’s foreign policy. | chapter | en | Human rights|Political science|Treaty|Honour|Government (linguistics)|Foreign policy|House of Commons|Liberalism|Politics|Democracy|Argument (complex analysis)|Political economy|Law|Sociology|Parliament|Philosophy|Linguistics|Biochemistry|Chemistry | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-73860-4_11 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2802708667', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-73860-4_11', 'mag': '2802708667'} | Saudi Arabia|Yemen | C144024400|C169437150 | Human rights|Sociology | Canada and international affairs |
“We Will Take Revenge”: A Word on ISIS | 2,017 | Osama bin Laden has been replaced by ISIS in today's headlines. And although the Iraqi branch of al-Qaeda was precursor to Islamic State Iraq and Syria (ISIS, formed 2013) – also known as Levant (ISIL), Daesh (an Arabic acronym), or simply (IS) dissimilarities between central are profound. For example, ISIS, which disowned under leadership Ayman al-Zawahiri, attempted establish a caliphal state apparatus; while Laden's generally eschewed videotaped executions (instead opting for sensational terrorist attacks), some time at least, seemed be using entice potential recruits project an aura strength; “face” al-Qaeda, Laden, recorded published numerous statements, self-proclaimed caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi (né Ibrahim Awwad al-Badri), has, this writing, quieter. | chapter | en | Islam|Al qaeda|Terrorism|State (computer science)|Caliphate|History|Middle East|Law|Political science|Ancient history|Media studies|Sociology|Computer science|Archaeology|Algorithm | https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108377263.008 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4211058430', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108377263.008'} | Iraq|Syria | C144024400|C203133693 | Sociology|Terrorism | Cambridge University Press eBooks |
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“We Woke Up and Everything Had Gone to Qadhafi” | Jessica Carlisle (https://openalex.org/A5026057570) | 2,014 | Since the 2011 revolution claimants in Libya have been lobbying to demand reinstatement of property confiscated from their families by Qadhafi under Law 4/1978. During this campaign they forcefully argued that impoverished and sidelined as victims corruption. In particular, highlight how enriched empowered regime’s corrupt elites it was redistributed a form state controlled ‘rent’. However, making argument tried limit retrospective evaluations rights period, preventing investigation own families’ accumulation Italian occupation or monarchy. Property claimants’ preferred solution is for democratically elected government enforce restitution allocate funds compensation housing construction. The prospects are not good. post-revolutionary powerful militia made land grabs, other accused engaging corruption, continuing threat future political economic status. | article | en | Property (philosophy)|Language change|Politics|Property rights|Restitution|State (computer science)|Argument (complex analysis)|Law|Settlement (finance)|Political science|Government (linguistics)|Property law|Law and economics|Sociology|Economics|Finance|Art|Philosophy|Biochemistry|Chemistry|Linguistics|Literature|Epistemology|Algorithm|Computer science|Payment | https://doi.org/10.1163/18763375-00602002 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2322573693', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1163/18763375-00602002', 'mag': '2322573693'} | Libya | C144024400 | Sociology | Middle East Law and Governance |
“We Yearn for the Sun Like a Baby Yearns for Its Mother's Milk”: An Ecocritical Reading of Iraqi Literature of Exiles | Hilla Peled-Shapira (https://openalex.org/A5051820284) | 2,021 | Ghaʾib Ṭuʿma Farmān’s novel al-Murtajā wa-l-muʾajjal (The Yearned for and the Postponed, 1986) depicts lives of Iraqi exiles in Russia. By using a new ecocritical analytical approach – combination Georg Lukács’s theory (1974) regarding connection between longing form, Mas‛ud Hamdan’s description art as means expressing complexities human life (2009), Theodor Adorno’s view exile mutilating experience (2000) this article aims to explore how Farmān uses ecological landscapes reflect exilic experience. The analysis, coupling environmental studies with migration contributing both, shows that not only is relevant depiction current-day it was at time when published, but through it, informs existing knowledge historical events by artistically documenting horrific chapters political history from victims’ point view, way transcends scope abovementioned theories. | article | en | Depiction|Reading (process)|Scope (computer science)|Politics|Literature|Point (geometry)|History|Aesthetics|Sociology|Epistemology|Philosophy|Art|Law|Computer science|Political science|Linguistics|Geometry|Mathematics|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.26351/jimes/7-2/1 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4205148510', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.26351/jimes/7-2/1'} | Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | The journal for interdisciplinary middle eastern studies |
“We agree more than disagree”: Exploring conflict in Alevi-Sunni intermarriages in Turkey | Sedef Tulum-Akbulut (https://openalex.org/A5001597029)|Gül Özateşler-Ülkücan (https://openalex.org/A5026111066)|Özge Erarslan-İngeç (https://openalex.org/A5003662775)|Abbas Türnüklü (https://openalex.org/A5073740277) | 2,023 | The present study aimed to discover the content of conflicts in intermarriages, uncover any conflict resolution patterns used by couples these marriages, and understand how cultural differences influence experiences Turkey. Semi-structured, in-depth interviews were conducted with 43 Alevi-Sunni intermarried individuals (18 7 individuals). Data analyzed using analysis. findings revealed that report various common emotional practical problems without making unique references their differences. Also, they are largely successful managing effectively. Most do not identify as causing crucial marital problems, whereas only a minority them face some further challenges due orientations. This provides step toward understanding intermarriages Furthermore, our add growing body literature on positive couple functioning intermarriages. | article | en | Psychology|Face (sociological concept)|Social psychology|Conflict resolution|Political science|Sociology|Social science|Law | https://doi.org/10.22541/au.167598543.34880047/v1 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4319660749', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.22541/au.167598543.34880047/v1'} | Turkey | C144024400|C21711469 | Conflict resolution|Sociology | Authorea (Authorea) |
“We agree more than disagree”: Exploring conflict in Alevi-Sunni intermarriages in Turkey | Sedef Tulum-Akbulut (https://openalex.org/A5001597029)|Gül Özateşler-Ülkücan (https://openalex.org/A5026111066)|Özge Erarslan-İngeç (https://openalex.org/A5003662775)|Abbas Türnüklü (https://openalex.org/A5073740277) | 2,023 | The present study aimed to understand how cultural differences affect conflict experiences in intermarriages, uncover any resolution patterns used by couples these marriages, and explore protective dynamics that prevent differences-related conflicts Turkey. Semi-structured, in-depth interviews were conducted with 43 Alevi-Sunni intermarried individuals (18 7 individuals). Data analyzed using content analysis. Most did not identify as causing crucial marital problems, whereas only a minority of them faced some further challenges due orientations. Disapproval the other’s traditions/values, prejudices discrimination, intergroup competition emerged themes conflicts. Four strategies identified: sensitivity one another’s differences, avoidance, building “we” couple, pressure assimilate. In terms preventing conflicts, secularization, universal/humanistic values, integration, common political view themes. This provides step toward understanding intermarriages Furthermore, our findings add growing body literature on positive couple functioning intermarriages. | article | en | Psychology|Social psychology|Conflict resolution|Competition (biology)|Sociology|Social science|Ecology|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijintrel.2023.101863 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4385888861', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijintrel.2023.101863'} | Turkey | C144024400|C21711469 | Conflict resolution|Sociology | International Journal of Intercultural Relations |
“We all love with the same part of the body, don’t we?”: Iuliia Voznesenskaia’s <i>Zhenskii Dekameron</i>, New Women’s Prose, and French Feminist Theory | Yelena Furman (https://openalex.org/A5019659561) | 2,010 | “We all love with the same part of body, don’t we?”Iuliia Voznesenskaia’s Zhenskii Dekameron, New Women’s Prose, and French Feminist Theory Yelena Furman (bio) Starting out as a poet who eventually turned to fiction, Iuliia Voznesenskaia was also one main figures Soviet feminist movement, fact that makes her biography both unusual courageous. In 1970s, involvement dissident movement in Leningrad resulted several arrests, imprisonment, time camps.1 Although she not initially interested women’s issues, incarceration all-women’s camps prisons convinced “the situation women our country demands special attention” (“Zhenskoe dvizhenie v Rossii” [“The Movement Russia”] 41). Along other dissidents, founded putting samizdat journal Zhenshchina i Rossiia (Woman Russia), which precipitated immediate reprisals from KGB. A club, Mariia, by name followed, did more KGB reprisals. For activity, expelled Union 1980, settling West Germany.2 1985, Germany, wrote first best-known novel, Dekameron (The Decameron). The novel is set maternity ward containing ten new mothers different backgrounds life experiences: Larisa, Emma, Natasha, Nelia, Galina, Valentina are educated have careers except whose occupation, admittedly strange for seems be dissident’s wife; Ol’ga works shipyard; Irishka secretary; Al’bina an Aeroflot flight attendant doubling escort on KGB’s payroll; Zina homeless has served camps; Party worker, whereas Galina community. Quarantined together days because spreading infection inspired Emma’s reading Boccaccio’s Decameron, begin tell each stories pass time. As its title clear, heavily indebted Boccaccio’s, borrowing structure many themes, such emphasis storytelling sexual explicitness. humor poignancy make it highly enjoyable read, focus female sexuality author’s play narrative this apart writers’ works.3 features what surely unique occurrence Russian literature: openly character (Larisa), referred authornarrator “zhenshchinoi vpolne emansipirovannoi, mogushchei ukrasit’ soboi liuboe zapadnoe feministicheskoe obshchestvo” [“a completely emancipated woman, capable [End Page 95] adorning any Western group”] (13), moreover depicted wholly positive light.4 Yet despite enjoying modicum success, including being translated into languages staged play, remains under-read underrated work.5 reasons relative obscurity closely allied political activities 1980s. Exiled abroad politically undesirable authorities, could work published Union; rather, came Israel 1987 (Curtis 186n2).6 lack visibility suffered native changed only (post)glasnost’ period: 1991, Tallinn, 1992, Moscow.7 Despite able published, however, made strong impact either readers or critics, there does appear discussion Soviet/ literary journals. likewise suffers familiarity West. interest generated among European American feminists early 1980s activism Union, preceded writing. modest readers; scholars, too, discuss occasionally. most comprehensive treatment date been Jerzy Kolodziej... | article | en | Imprisonment|Feminist movement|Biography|Gender studies|Club|History|Sociology|Abolitionism|Feminism|Law|Political science|Art history|Criminology|Politics|Medicine|Anatomy | https://doi.org/10.1353/itx.0.0003 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1971677561', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1353/itx.0.0003', 'mag': '1971677561'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Intertexts |
“We are Muslims and these diseases don’t happen to us”: A qualitative study of the views of young Somali men and women concerning HPV immunization | Julian Wolfson (https://openalex.org/A5037816406)|Sharon W. Njau (https://openalex.org/A5061576625)|Channelle Ndagire (https://openalex.org/A5016921716)|Nicole Chaisson (https://openalex.org/A5031768780)|Sharondeep Toor (https://openalex.org/A5061147204)|Nimo Ahmed (https://openalex.org/A5067405935)|Saida Mohamed (https://openalex.org/A5004164373)|Jay A Dirks (https://openalex.org/A5013856657) | 2,019 | Minnesota is home to the largest Somali immigrant population in United States. Despite high rates of cervical cancer this population, immunization for human papillomavirus (HPV) are among lowest nation. Targeting young adults catch-up vaccinations may be an important strategy addressing these low rates. This study sought understand views regarding HPV immunization.Four focus groups (N = 34; 21 women) were conducted at urban clinic Minnesota. Two all female, one male, and mixed gender. Participants each group discussed their on general, then immunization.Most participants had prior negative experiences with skeptical concerning its value. In knowledge about HPV, though they expressed interest knowing more. Views influenced by culture, risk perceived as due interpretations religious beliefs expectations around sexual behavior. Low levels trust doctors other healthcare providers participants' perceptions benefits immunization. also valued autonomy highly resented having received required without much choice, such through immigration experience or school authorities. suggested making more opportunities available learning how prevent it, including via web-based platforms.An opportunity exists address American offering vaccination adults, who interested HPV. However, key barriers needs addressed ways that respect need age build providers, which mean avoiding authoritative approaches. | article | en | Somali|Population|Immunization|Focus group|Vaccination|Young adult|Medicine|Immigration|Cervical cancer|Demography|Family medicine|Cancer prevention|Psychology|Gerontology|Cancer|Immunology|Political science|Environmental health|Sociology|Philosophy|Linguistics|Antigen|Anthropology|Internal medicine|Law | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2019.03.006 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2921159859', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2019.03.006', 'mag': '2921159859', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30871929'} | Somalia | C144024400 | Sociology | Vaccine|PubMed |
“We are Talking about Saving Lives”: The Welfare State, Health Care Policy, and Nongovernability—A Case Study of an Israeli Hospital | Nissim Cohen (https://openalex.org/A5011482166) | 2,013 | Literature about welfare states worldwide, and specifically in Israel, emphasizes economic political variables the importance of ideology explaining a given social policy those societies. According to this literature, strategic long-term goals account for waning Israeli state since 1970s. At same time, upwards decade, literature dealing with public has emphasized that society suffers from crisis "nongovernability" culture is characterized by illegality. The author defines nongovernability as inability formulate implement it effectively over time. In such an environment, considerations based on coherent take back seat short-term conduct various players arena. discusses building hospital Ashdod case study nongovernability. hospital's construction was steeped intrigue wholly built either illegality or outright rejection law. This behavior characteristic politicians, bureaucrats, interest groups. maintains creation emblematic health care overall, shaped bottom-up processes whose defining narrow, interests. | article | en | Ideology|Politics|Welfare state|Welfare|Public policy|Social policy|State (computer science)|Public administration|Health care|Political economy|Political culture|Sociology|Political science|Law|Algorithm|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1080/19371918.2013.791518 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2001455095', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/19371918.2013.791518', 'mag': '2001455095', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23944172'} | Israel | C100243477|C129603779|C144024400|C160735492|C19159745 | Health care|Social policy|Sociology|Welfare|Welfare state | Social Work in Public Health|PubMed |
“We are all Hizbullah now”: narrating the Party of God | Abir Hamdar (https://openalex.org/A5071331154) | 2,013 | This essay is the first examination of literary output Lebanese political party and militia Hizbullah. It examines a series little-known fiction non-fiction texts including novels, memoirs autobiographies by Hizbullah fighters, supporters sympathisers. At same time, it seeks to place such narratives within context not only Party’s media strategy but publishing industry in Lebanon more widely. The also argues that consistently explore cluster key themes Karbala tragedy, Anti-Zionism and, particular, “infitah” or “Lebanonisation” Party. In conclusion, reflect own gradual evolution over its 30-year existence from purely sectarian group broader resistance movement attracts support across religious spectrum. | article | en | Narrative|Politics|Memoir|Context (archaeology)|Resistance (ecology)|Publishing|Key (lock)|Sociology|Law|Media studies|Political science|Literature|History|Art|Ecology|Archaeology|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1080/14797585.2013.851852 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1985723182', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14797585.2013.851852', 'mag': '1985723182'} | Lebanon | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal for Cultural Research|Durham Research Online (Durham University)|Durham Research Online (Durham University) |
“We are all Khaled Said”: Visual Injustice Symbols in the Egyptian Revolution, 2010–2011 | Thomas Olesen (https://openalex.org/A5023636493) | 2,013 | This chapter offers a symbolic perspective on the Egyptian Revolution. It does so by analyzing transformation of Khaled Said, 28-year-old man beaten to death police June 6, 2010, into key visual injustice symbol. Activists were motivated horrifying cell phone photograph Said taken his family at morgue and uploaded web. Although postmortem had powerful emotional impact in itself, from local/particular incident symbol with society-wide repercussions cannot be explained its mere availability public sphere. The required intervention appropriation activists who creatively strategically universalized case, linking it existing frames Egypt. analyzes this interplay between photographs, activism, society two steps. first provides an analysis genesis identifies three levels agency formation. second step process through which was infused meanings activists. Providing systematic social movement perspective, draws several data sources that are subjected interpretive analysis: material available internet, Facebook pages, interviews accounts And calls for more attention photographs symbols activism points historical present cases relevance such approach. | chapter | en | Injustice|Symbol (formal)|Appropriation|Media studies|Public sphere|Agency (philosophy)|Sociology|Political science|Social science|Law|Politics|Epistemology|Linguistics|Philosophy | https://doi.org/10.1108/s0163-786x(2013)0000035005 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2489512768', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1108/s0163-786x(2013)0000035005', 'mag': '2489512768'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change |
“We are all ready to fall”: creation of the norm of acceptance and restrained mourning in <i>Davar</i> during the Great Arab Revolt (1936-1939) | Devorah Giladi (https://openalex.org/A5069584087)|Y. Goldstein (https://openalex.org/A5045456245) | 2,023 | The period of the Arab Revolt in Palestine (1936–1939) marked a turning point Yishuv’s attitude toward fatalities its struggle with Palestinians. This article examines this change as reflected newspapers Yishuv. If 1920s casualties were viewed disappointment dream safe haven, during emphasis was placed on notion that reality fate which it necessary to completely come terms. press coverage ceased emphasizing atrocities and instead highlighted honor respect paid dead. result new culture mass funerals, became one most prominent Zionist displays period. rituals emerged around violent death major attribute Israeli bereavement. | article | en | Disappointment|Period (music)|Fall of man|Honor|Ancient history|History|Newspaper|Law|Sociology|Economic history|Politics|Political science|Psychology|Art|Aesthetics|Social psychology|Computer science|Operating system | https://doi.org/10.1080/13531042.2023.2275412 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4388088010', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/13531042.2023.2275412'} | Israel|Palestine | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Israeli History |
“We are born in each others' houses”: communal and patrilineal ideologies in Druze Village religion and social structure | Jonathan W. S. Oppenheimer (https://openalex.org/A5016251789) | 1,980 | Druze religion establishes an ideological representation of social reproduction in terms unity, religious initiation, the differential statuses young men and old women, also a doctrine transmigration souls. This ideology is contradicted by political conflict which has its own patrilineal particularism. The paper considers competition between these ideologies at level village relationship people Israeli state. [Middle East religions, structure, ethnicity, religion, Palestinians, age gender roles] | article | en | Ideology|Sociology|Gender studies|Ethnic group|Representation (politics)|Politics|State (computer science)|Social conflict|Islam|Doctrine|Political science|Anthropology|Law|Geography|Archaeology|Algorithm|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1525/ae.1980.7.4.02a00020 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2110002158', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1525/ae.1980.7.4.02a00020', 'mag': '2110002158'} | Israel | C144024400|C98528937 | Social conflict|Sociology | American Ethnologist |
“We are in the Battlefield”: "Bereaved Mothers and Widows: Navigating Multigenerational Conflicts. | Einav Segev (https://openalex.org/A5083196266) | 2,024 | Although the loss of a close family member affects relationship, most studies have focused on coping individuals with and only minority examined system mutual influence members their adjustment to loss. Less is known about intergenerational relations in context The aim this article discusses conflicts relationships between Israeli widows bereaved mothers after death husband son. Methods: Semi-structured in-depth interviews were conducted two groups participants: ten (from different families) whose sons or spouses died while serving military, police, security forces. data analyzed using thematic analysis. Results: following conflictual issues identified: (1) Fighting over memory deceased; (2) Tensions around relationship children/grandchildren; (3) Offensive communication patterns. Discussion: These are discussed context. grieving rituals honor bestowed upon soldiers other forces families paradoxically served silence issue. At same time, findings literature suggest an urgent need for professional intervention help avoid disconnection, aggression even violence those vulnerable maintain them | article | en | Context (archaeology)|Psychology|Thematic analysis|Honor|Silence|Aggression|Intimate partner|Intervention (counseling)|Coping (psychology)|Social psychology|Domestic violence|Suicide prevention|Qualitative research|Poison control|Sociology|Medicine|Psychiatry|Paleontology|Social science|Philosophy|Environmental health|Aesthetics|Computer science|Biology|Operating system | https://doi.org/10.47722/imrj.2001.22 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4390902040', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.47722/imrj.2001.22'} | Israel | C144024400|C542059537 | Domestic violence|Sociology | International Multidisciplinary Research Journal |
“We are like a family!”: Flexibility and Intention to Stay in Boutique Hotels in Turkey | Banu S. Ünsal-Akbıyık (https://openalex.org/A5055161187)|Işık U. Zeytinoglu (https://openalex.org/A5046557722) | 2,018 | This study focuses on a unique type of small business—boutiquehotels in Istanbul, Turkey—, and aims to understand whetheremployers’ use internal flexibility strategies is associatedwith boutique hotel employees’ intention stay theirorganization. Internal refer shiftwork, longworkweeks, unpaid overtime, working preferred hours. Our the experience employees hotels Turkey, which one largest economies globally with its hospitality sector being eighth world (Zeytinoglu et al. , 2012a 2012b). We test conceptual model using data from 20 interviews 122 surveys 32 hotels. As our qualitative quantitative shows, shiftwork decreasesboutique stay, but long workweeksand overtime do not affect stay.Furthermore, as close family-like workenvironments that exist contribute theemployees’ stay. respondents said thequalitative part study: “‘We’re like afamily!’ cannot leave ‘home’!”, despitenot liking shiftwork. By examining relationships between tostay workplaces such hotels, contributesto both academic literature labour tothe For practitioners, this providesevidence flexibilitystrategies used contributing understandingof how can be successful retaining valuable staff. | article | en | Overtime|Flexibility (engineering)|Hospitality|Affect (linguistics)|Business|Hospitality industry|Marketing|Conceptual model|Qualitative research|Psychology|Management|Sociology|Labour economics|Economics|Geography|Tourism|Computer science|Social science|Archaeology|Communication|Database | https://doi.org/10.7202/1048573ar | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2810302332', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.7202/1048573ar', 'mag': '2810302332'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Relations industrielles |
“We are married, but we do not live together”: The lived experiences of married people during the “Aghd” period | Maryam Falahatpishe Baboli (https://openalex.org/A5031883029)|Fereshte Mootabi (https://openalex.org/A5024430621)|Mohammadali Mazaheri Therani (https://openalex.org/A5067060274)|Leili Panaghi (https://openalex.org/A5084974503)|Mohammad Heydari (https://openalex.org/A5005036740) | 2,021 | The “Aghd” period is one of the first stages life cycle Iranian families. Since a when people are married but have not yet started living together under roof, it seems necessary to pay attention this as stage marriage. purpose study was investigate lived experiences during period. present study, which conducted in 1399, qualitative 13 participants (based on principle data saturation) were selected by purposive sampling method from population, included who Tehran, and with In-depth semi-structured interviews identify their experiences. Finally, analyzed thematic analysis topics such challenges developmental tasks extracted. Challenges related family origin spouse's family, well between spouses. According participants, divided into three categories: couple, families towards individual tasks. can be concluded that results similar studies used designing premarital education packages based | article | en | Period (music)|Spouse|Nonprobability sampling|Psychology|Population|Developmental psychology|Qualitative research|Thematic analysis|Demography|Sociology|Social science|Physics|Anthropology|Acoustics | https://doi.org/10.22054/qccpc.2021.60370.2683 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3198170650', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.22054/qccpc.2021.60370.2683', 'mag': '3198170650'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | |
“We are much closer here”: exploring the use of WhatsApp as a learning environment in a secondary school mathematics class | Ahmet Durgungoz (https://openalex.org/A5056928504)|Fatma Canan Durgungoz (https://openalex.org/A5071944540) | 2,021 | In this study, we examined a mathematics teacher's communicative acts on an instant messaging tool, WhatsApp, and its role in creating sustained learning environment between secondary-school students teacher Turkey. The interactions of his (n = 38) over two years were explored. WhatsApp group increased interaction out-of-school hours. Analysis the was leading force that encouraged to continue interact. portrayed informal sincere presentation himself social media. A constructive communication style fostered by connecting through hours, when have facilitated their learning. | article | en | Sociology of Education|Style (visual arts)|Class (philosophy)|Presentation (obstetrics)|Constructive|Mathematics education|Pedagogy|Educational technology|Psychology|Computer science|Medicine|Archaeology|Radiology|Process (computing)|Artificial intelligence|History|Operating system | https://doi.org/10.1007/s10984-021-09371-0 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3167866036', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1007/s10984-021-09371-0', 'mag': '3167866036', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34121920', 'pmcid': 'https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/8182735'} | Turkey | C145472048 | Sociology of Education | Learning Environments Research|PubMed Central|PubMed |
“We are not terrorists!” UK‐based Iranians, consumption practices and the “torn self” | Aliakbar Jafari (https://openalex.org/A5032393893)|Christina Goulding (https://openalex.org/A5067842534) | 2,008 | This paper presents an exploratory study of the consumption practices UK‐based young Iranians. Based on a series in‐depth interviews and participatory observation we provide insight into identity‐constituting meanings associated with practices. We illustrate how individuals use discourses to tackle ideological tensions in their sociocultural settings, both Iran UK. describe theocratic state commodified cultural symbolic mediators construct reaffirm sense self identity also covertly resist dominant order. discuss consumer's paradoxes dilemmas when confronted complex set clashes between restricting political/institutional dynamics emancipatory forces Western consumption. conclude by discussing these contradictions strategies lead form “torn” self. | article | en | Commodification|Consumption (sociology)|Sociology|Identity (music)|Ideology|Citizen journalism|Construct (python library)|Politics|Allegiance|Exploratory research|State (computer science)|Social psychology|Gender studies|Political science|Aesthetics|Psychology|Law|Social science|Philosophy|Algorithm|Economics|Computer science|Market economy|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1080/10253860802033605 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2139376386', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/10253860802033605', 'mag': '2139376386'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | Consumption Markets & Culture |
“We are really starving for respect and support,” the struggle of Iranian nurses in adhering to professional values: A qualitative study | Sima Kazemi (https://openalex.org/A5084561141)|Naser Parizad (https://openalex.org/A5057119620)|Hossein Habibzadeh (https://openalex.org/A5035344087) | 2,023 | Abstract Aims To investigate nurses' experiences of adhering to professional values in clinical settings. Design A qualitative study with a conventional content analysis approach. Methods This was conducted from January 2021 March 2022. Semi‐structured interviews were 12 nurses working different wards five public and private hospitals West Azerbaijan Iran. Data analysed using the approach proposed by Graneheim Lundman (Nurse education today, 24, 2004, 105) Results “Barriers values” emerged as main category Iranian values. Three subcategories barriers revealed: “nurses' challenges,” “professional suppressors” “poor conditions.” Conclusion Barriers settings can overshadow performance disrupt their adherence Nursing managers must pay attention challenges, suppressors poor condition help them promote Thus, nursing should not neglect continuous assist increasing skills holding practical theoretical workshops. Improving conditions atmosphere recruiting capable workforce applying psychological financial support for are essential increase quality care. | article | en | Workforce|Nursing|Neglect|Content analysis|Qualitative research|Professional development|Quality (philosophy)|Medicine|Curriculum|Psychology|Medical education|Pedagogy|Sociology|Political science|Social science|Philosophy|Epistemology|Law | https://doi.org/10.1002/nop2.1595 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4318591554', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1002/nop2.1595', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36718126'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | Nursing open|PubMed Central|PubMed |
“We are still here”: the stories of Syrian academics in exile | Tom Parkinson (https://openalex.org/A5033617912)|Tarek Zoubir (https://openalex.org/A5070837192)|Shaher Abdullateef (https://openalex.org/A5042577245)|Musallam Abedtalas (https://openalex.org/A5029058507)|Ghana Alyamani (https://openalex.org/A5001891635)|Ziad Al Ibrahim (https://openalex.org/A5062560614)|Majdi Al Husni (https://openalex.org/A5017737903)|Fuad Alhaj Omar (https://openalex.org/A5070994158)|Hamoud Hajhamoud (https://openalex.org/A5041672601)|Fadi Iboor (https://openalex.org/A5044046805)|Husam Allito (https://openalex.org/A5048887743)|M. L. Jenkins (https://openalex.org/A5033551058)|Abdulkader Rashwani (https://openalex.org/A5078718346)|Adnan Sennou (https://openalex.org/A5063221298)|Fateh Shaban (https://openalex.org/A5019687219) | 2,018 | Purpose The purpose of this paper is twofold: first, to generate insight into the experiences Syrian academics in exile Turkey; and second, explore approaches collaboration community building among with counterparts international academic community. Design/methodology/approach study employs a hybrid visual-autobiographical narrative methodology, embedded within large group process (LGP) design. Findings are presented two phases: first phase presents thematic analysis data, revealing common divergent 12 exiled academics. second reflective evaluation undertaking LGP its implications for sustaining academia exile. Research limitations/implications While qualitative small participant group, therefore does not provide basis statistical generalisation, it offers rich academics’ lived exile, strategies implemented support Practical has practical development contexts conflict exile; dispersed communities; educational interventions by NGOs community; Originality/value makes an original contribution limited literature on post-2011 higher education giving voice academics, critically evaluating strategic initiative supporting academia. This represents significant, transferable comparable contexts. | article | en | Originality|Narrative|Thematic analysis|Sociology|Value (mathematics)|Qualitative research|Process (computing)|Pedagogy|Social science|Literature|Art|Computer science|Machine learning|Operating system | https://doi.org/10.1108/ijced-06-2018-0013 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2903343404', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1108/ijced-06-2018-0013', 'mag': '2903343404'} | Syria|Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | International journal of comparative education and development|Kent Academic Repository (University of Kent) |
“We are trained to be married!” Elite formation and ideology in the “girls’ battalion” of the Sudan People's Liberation Army | Clémence Pinaud (https://openalex.org/A5041160611) | 2,015 | Women have supported, willingly or not, the Sudan People's Liberation Army's (SPLA) struggle of 22 years that led to country's independence in 2011 as part 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement. This article explains movement's relationship women by contrasting it with other examples guerilla armies sub-Saharan Africa at time. It highlights lack ideological depth movement from its inception, and dissects many roots behind rank-and-file population's hostility toward women's fighting. analyzes reasons creation only “Girls' battalion”, Ketiba Banat, which became an incubator for a new female elite fulfilled political social functions during struggle. also depicts groups who joined SPLA were militarily trained outside Banat. Women's engagement was socially stratified war membership Banat engine increased differentiation even more so afterwards. The battalions but found themselves excluded post-war neo-patrimonial networks, share same frustrations than African post-conflict contexts. | article | en | Elite|Ideology|Liberation movement|Politics|Gender studies|Independence (probability theory)|Population|Sociology|Political science|Law|Demography|Statistics|Mathematics | https://doi.org/10.1080/17531055.2015.1091638 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2287869967', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/17531055.2015.1091638', 'mag': '2287869967'} | Sudan | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Eastern African Studies |
“We are women and men now”: Intimate spaces and coping labour for Syrian women refugees in Jordan | Karen Culcasi (https://openalex.org/A5062983535) | 2,019 | War affects women from the bedroom to battlefield, but for most war is experienced within intimate spaces. Intimate spaces are rarely focus of mainstream academic research or media reporting; thus women's experiences with and displacement often concealed. Building literature in feminist geopolitics that helps our attention toward everyday geopolitics, I conducted in‐depth interviews Syrian refugees Jordan order examine how they coping. Of many ways they've learned cope, these asserted earning an income adjusting altered gender performances relations have been both dire formative. Many become providers first time their lives. Some families’ sole providers, other now heads households as well. Bringing geography, transnational migration studies, critical home studies together offer ideas coping labour a framework displacement. highlight paid work understudied such renders important insights into shapes reshaping gendered relations. In this paper, show taken on traditionally masculine practices, while shift, simultaneously entrenched ideals appropriate feminine recreated. Though multiple creating numerous demands challenges refugees, also experiencing increased sense strength, confidence respect result shifting performances. | article | en | Gender studies|Geopolitics|Refugee|Mainstream|Sociology|Coping (psychology)|Displaced person|Focus group|Political science|Politics|Psychology|Psychiatry|Anthropology|Law | https://doi.org/10.1111/tran.12292 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2918769250', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/tran.12292', 'mag': '2918769250'} | Jordan|Syria | C144024400 | Sociology | Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers|The Research Repository @ WVU (West Virginia University) |
“We brought our culture here with us”: A qualitative study of perceptions of HPV vaccine and vaccine uptake among East African immigrant mothers | Linda K. Ko (https://openalex.org/A5014856769)|Victoria M. Taylor (https://openalex.org/A5012109848)|Farah Mohamed (https://openalex.org/A5091020647)|H. Hoai (https://openalex.org/A5044587806)|Fanaye A. Gebeyaw (https://openalex.org/A5088913339)|Anisa Ibrahim (https://openalex.org/A5046481652)|Ahmed Ali (https://openalex.org/A5006397674)|Rachel L. Winer (https://openalex.org/A5091113735) | 2,019 | HPV vaccine studies in East African communities are few and focus mainly on Somali women girls. We examined how perceptions uptake shaped among Somali, Ethiopian, Eritrean mothers.We convened three groups Amharic, Tigrinya with mothers of 11-17 year old children. The Socio-Context Framework (social, cultural, religious factors) Andersen's Behavioral Model (predisposing, enabling, need for care informed question development.Negative perceptions, lack knowledge, concerns about side effects emerged as predisposing factors. Having a provider who engages parents vaccination takes responsibility vaccine-related risks enabling Availability information resources (e.g., person-to-person, word mouth education parents) were also Need factors included having comprehensive information, strong recommendation from doctor, validation co-ethnic medical professional. Women exerted social influence (social), had pork gelatin vaccines (religious), felt discussions sex children culturally unacceptable (cultural).Strategies immigrants to address that shape adolescents, caregivers, providers. | article | en | Somali|Medicine|Focus group|Vaccination|Ethnic group|Context (archaeology)|Immigration|Family medicine|Qualitative research|Immunology|Political science|Sociology|Geography|Social science|Philosophy|Linguistics|Anthropology|Law|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pvr.2018.12.003 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2907774657', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pvr.2018.12.003', 'mag': '2907774657', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30594650', 'pmcid': 'https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/6319298'} | Somalia | C144024400 | Sociology | Papillomavirus Research|DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals)|Europe PMC (PubMed Central)|PubMed Central|PubMed |
“We cannot stop smoking”: Female university students' experiences and perceptions | Ahlam Al‐Natour (https://openalex.org/A5065563332)|Gordon Lee Gillespie (https://openalex.org/A5017611805)|Fatmeh Alzoubi (https://openalex.org/A5074877926) | 2,021 | While findings are available about smoking in young females, there is a dearth of research reporting this problem among Jordanian particularly university students. Also, lack studies that describe the daily experience and causative factors for female students.The purpose study to as perceived by In addition, aimed predisposing initiating feelings toward experience.A descriptive qualitative was employed. A purposive sample 12 students who smoke cigarettes were asked participate study. semi-structured, face-to-face interviews conducted.Five themes included: (1) living enjoying with other (2) hazardous effect smoking, (3) our culture stigmatizing (4) why we don't stop (5) strategies combat females.Female disclosed peer pressure stress intensifying smoking. Also they unable quit because attached addicted cigarettes.The have several implications nursing education, policymaking, practice. An important target would be motivate smokers attempt cessation leveraging cultural leaders role models. Policy makers also should revise policies related importing taxation essential. policy enforce legislation fee areas prevention closed areas. | article | en | Feeling|Legislation|Psychology|Qualitative research|Peer pressure|Smoking cessation|Perception|Medicine|Social psychology|Political science|Sociology|Social science|Pathology|Neuroscience|Law | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apnr.2021.151477 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3183165802', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apnr.2021.151477', 'mag': '3183165802', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34544576'} | Jordan | C144024400 | Sociology | Applied Nursing Research|PubMed |
“We didn’t kill ’em, we didn’t cut their head off” | Sherene H. Razack (https://openalex.org/A5040733559) | 2,012 | This chapter examines popular cultural narratives about Abu Ghraib, and especially the responses of those who are critical what happened at penal compound. Taking Obama administration's “post-torture” official position as starting point, it considers images torture inflicted on Iraqi detainees Ghraib. It puts Michael Omi Howard Winant in dialogue with anthropologist Taussig to discuss manner which tortured colonial body serves concretize empire's superiority. also draws concept colonialism alongside racial formation theory explore ways that category “Muslim/Arab” becomes a race object terror. In order fully confront argues we must consider how political military leaders well large numbers American soldiers (not just few bad apples) came regard prisoners Ghraib less than human. | chapter | en | Torture|Colonialism|Empire|Narrative|Politics|Object (grammar)|Order (exchange)|Law|Political science|Criminology|Sociology|History|Human rights|Art|Literature|Philosophy|Linguistics|Finance|Economics | https://doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520273436.003.0011 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2523137416', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520273436.003.0011', 'mag': '2523137416'} | Iraq | C144024400|C169437150 | Human rights|Sociology | University of California Press eBooks |
“We didn’t learn grammar, we learned Hebrew: Divisions and displacement in the language classroom” | Avital Feuer (https://openalex.org/A5063083817) | 1,944 | The author explored her personal history of feeling stranded in anomie and displacement between two languages, cultures, identities through ethnographic research on the subject a university modern Hebrew language class Canada. She discoverd clashing divide community sub-groups “Canadian” “Israeli” students who based their stereotypes Othering definitions relationships to as primarily literary text-based or oral speech-based. As roots this in-group Othering, she ultimately came terms with own feelings | article | en | Hebrew|Feeling|Grammar|Linguistics|Ethnography|Displacement (psychology)|Sociology|Subject (documents)|Literacy|Psychology|Pedagogy|Social psychology|Anthropology|Philosophy|Psychoanalysis|Computer science|Library science | https://doi.org/10.20360/g27c73 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1601127874', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.20360/g27c73', 'mag': '1601127874'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Language and Literacy|DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals) |
“We don’t do that in Germany!” A critical race theory examination of Turkish heritage young adults’ school experiences | Ursula Moffitt (https://openalex.org/A5087793582)|Linda P. Juang (https://openalex.org/A5050790538)|Moin Syed (https://openalex.org/A5089185897) | 2,018 | Turkish heritage students are underrepresented at university-track secondary schools in Germany, yet the institutional discrimination contributing to this ongoing disparity often remains unquestioned, situated within inequitable norms of belonging. Drawing on critical race theory and a risk resilience framework, current study investigated interplay between interpersonal relation exclusionary enacted schools. Using thematic analysis, interviews with eight German young adults from multiple regions Germany were analyzed, highlighting need for culturally responsive teaching, more teacher reflexivity regarding bias, greater focus equity, direct discussions racism its impact. | article | en | Turkish|Racism|Critical race theory|German|Sociology|Gender studies|Race (biology)|Equity (law)|Thematic analysis|Reflexivity|Intersectionality|Critical theory|Pedagogy|Social psychology|Psychology|Qualitative research|Political science|Social science|Geography|Philosophy|Linguistics|Law|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1177/1468796818788596 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2884475292', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/1468796818788596', 'mag': '2884475292'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Ethnicities |
“We don’t have to talk about how I feel”: emotionality as a tool of resistance in political discourse among Israeli students – a gendered socio-linguistic perspective | Yael Ben David (https://openalex.org/A5049109292)|Orly Idan (https://openalex.org/A5022145424) | 2,018 | This article demonstrates how the gendered patriarchal mechanisms that exclude women from political sphere are being produced, re-produced, and challenged in interpersonal conversations by concentrating on discursive construct way young Israeli men talk about politics. The research is based a yearlong intra-group dialog process. group met for weekly sessions during two semesters, which members discussed expressed their thoughts feelings regarding Israeli–Palestinian conflict. Critical discourse analysis (CDA) demonstrated space marked, defined delimited through practices. We present different roles participants take group, particular strategies use face of disciplinary mechanisms. process revealed development discussion was strongly intertwined with change positioning female participants. In particular, we found deployed emotionality as tool resistance challenges gender binaries masculine dominance. Our conclusion highlights importance daily interactions creating, sustaining changing society | article | en | Politics|Resistance (ecology)|Sociology|Gender studies|Interpersonal communication|Perspective (graphical)|Construct (python library)|Discourse analysis|Social psychology|Psychology|Political science|Linguistics|Social science|Ecology|Philosophy|Artificial intelligence|Computer science|Law|Biology|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1080/14616742.2018.1497450 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2886615717', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14616742.2018.1497450', 'mag': '2886615717'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | International Feminist Journal of Politics |
“We don’t have up to date knowledge about the disease” Practical challenges encountered in delivery of cervical cancer screening in Iraq | Suhailah Ali (https://openalex.org/A5051556763)|Maria Clark (https://openalex.org/A5045706101)|Ayla Khedher Ghalib (https://openalex.org/A5013420206)|Heather Skirton (https://openalex.org/A5023670574)|Craig Donaldson (https://openalex.org/A5069233723) | 2,021 | This qualitative study aimed to explore the lived experience of medical doctors in delivering cervical cancer screening a city Iraq. Methods: An applied grounded theory approach explored reported experiences field. A purposive sample 12 gynaecologists and one general practitioner (GP) working two main hospitals participated: Semi-structured interviews took place from June September 2015. Thematic coding data was peer reviewed included participant reading transcripts translations Arabic English. Theory generation involved synthesis prior literature review interview findings. Results: Gynaecologist GP showed overwhelming gaps screening. Iraqi women mainly presented for help with late-stage cancer. Practical barriers cultural stigma, low priority women's health needs, lack knowledgeable leadership perceived shortage adequately trained staff. Conclusion: There is an urgent need culturally appropriate prevention policies strategies Iraq, focused on evidence-based population-based identify prevent advanced among women. Regional educational initiatives should be encouraged primary healthcare systems supported undertake | review | en | Medicine|Cervical cancer|Thematic analysis|Qualitative research|Family medicine|Population|Grounded theory|Nursing|Health care|Cervical screening|Cancer|Internal medicine|Social science|Environmental health|Sociology|Economics|Economic growth | https://doi.org/10.1111/ecc.13457 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3157136299', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1111/ecc.13457', 'mag': '3157136299', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33932055'} | Iraq | C144024400|C160735492 | Health care|Sociology | European Journal of Cancer Care|BCU Open Access Repository (Birmingham City University) |
“We don’t want school bags” | Ghada Barsoum (https://openalex.org/A5014220118)|Sara Refaat (https://openalex.org/A5059377859) | 2,015 | Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to highlight the competing and overlapping discourses on corporate social responsibility (CSR) in Egypt, a setting with serious knowledge gap CSR. Design/methodology/approach This study based semi-structured in-depth interviews key players field CSR Egypt conducted fall 2013 early 2014. Informants included were staff members at major multinational enterprises (MNEs) operating partner non-governmental organizations (NGOs) CSR, media public relations agents that are partners MNEs launching campaigns about activities. Findings identifies three themes discourse among some including practitioners MNEs, NGOs specialists. First, seen as western version long standing philanthropic tradition, rooted religion. comparison between indigenous religious practices discredits vulgarized form giving seeks take more than give. Second, surmount challenges poverty unemployment place heightened expectations seriously address these challenges. It view accused doing “bad” development, which third theme identified data. Research limitations/implications There dearth research largely remains less explored terms problematizes connection development. also highlights importance studying different contexts. Practical implications findings relevant for design programs contexts countries south. Social normative practice, understanding views its criticisms central development maturity. Originality/value Paper builds original data collected by authors. addresses lacuna Middle East region, particularly Egypt. | article | en | Corporate social responsibility|Multinational corporation|Poverty|Public relations|Field (mathematics)|Unemployment|Indigenous|Theme (computing)|Political science|Business|Sociology|Economic growth|Economics|Law|Ecology|Mathematics|Pure mathematics|Biology|Computer science|Operating system | https://doi.org/10.1108/ijssp-07-2014-0054 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1801197901', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1108/ijssp-07-2014-0054', 'mag': '1801197901'} | Egypt | C144024400|C189326681 | Poverty|Sociology | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy |
“We find what we look for, and we look for what we know”: factors interacting with a mental health training program to influence its expected outcomes in Tunisia | Jessica Spagnolo (https://openalex.org/A5014904595)|François Champagne (https://openalex.org/A5027190234)|Nicole Leduc (https://openalex.org/A5084123141)|W. Melki (https://openalex.org/A5063774886)|Myra Piat (https://openalex.org/A5091464821)|Marc Laporta (https://openalex.org/A5050047229)|N. Bram (https://openalex.org/A5077705165)|Imen Guesmi (https://openalex.org/A5010107864)|Fatma Charfi (https://openalex.org/A5078238196) | 2,018 | Primary care physicians (PCPs) working in mental health Tunisia often lack knowledge and skills needed to adequately address health-related issues. To these lacunas, a training based on the Mental Health Gap Action Programme (mhGAP) Intervention Guide (IG) was offered PCPs Greater Tunis area between February April 2016. While mhGAP-IG has been used extensively low- middle-income countries (LMICs) help build non-specialists' capacity, little research focused how contextual factors interact with implemented program influence its expected outcomes. This paper's objective is fill that lack.We conducted case study purposeful sample of 18 trained PCPs. Data collected by semi-structured interviews March Qualitative data analyzed using thematic analysis.Participants identified more barriers than facilitators when describing influencing mhGAP-based training's Barriers were regrouped into five categories: structural (e.g., policies, social context, local workforce development, physical aspects environment), organizational logistical issues for provision collaboration within across healthcare organizations), provider previous experience personal characteristics), patient beliefs about system professionals, motivation seek care), innovation characteristics). These interacted pharmacological treatments symptoms illness, confidence providing treatment, negative certain conditions, understanding role delivery. In addition, post-training, participants still felt uncomfortable treatment management some conditions.Findings highlight complexity implementing given interaction attainment Results may be tailor structural, organizational, provider, patient, prior future implementations Tunisia. Findings also decision-makers interested other LMICs. | article | en | Mental health|Workforce|Medicine|Thematic analysis|Context (archaeology)|Health care|Nursing|Public health|Workforce development|Qualitative research|Psychiatry|Paleontology|Social science|Sociology|Economics|Biology|Economic growth | https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-018-6261-4 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2904201987', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-018-6261-4', 'mag': '2904201987', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30572941', 'pmcid': 'https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/6302293'} | Tunisia | C134362201|C138816342|C144024400|C160735492|C2779968149 | Health care|Mental health|Public health|Sociology|Workforce development | BMC Public Health|DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals)|Europe PMC (PubMed Central)|PubMed Central|PubMed |
“We had a toilet!” The modernisation of the countryside as perceived by the inhabitants, the public spaces and the presence of politics in the new settlements in Italy and colonial Libya (1932-1939). | Vittoria Capresi (https://openalex.org/A5044334366) | 2,019 | The foundation of the new settlements, both in Italy and colonial Libya, was a step to achieving project internal colonisation launched by Mussolini. modernisation countryside promulgated Fascist propaganda, which presented only misleading impression how life was. What happens if - as an additional level interpretation we add narratives inhabitants who lived these moments? This paper presents this original methodical approach, introducing settlers relation presence politics daily during era. | article | en | Modernization theory|Human settlement|Politics|Colonialism|Rural area|Narrative|Political science|Rural settlement|Interpretation (philosophy)|Sociology|Economy|History|Archaeology|Law|Art|Economics|Literature|Computer science|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/20196309002 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2937617603', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/20196309002', 'mag': '2937617603'} | Libya | C144024400 | Sociology | SHS web of conferences |
“We have come from the well of Ibhet”: Ethnogenesis of the Medjay | Kate Liszka (https://openalex.org/A5034006778) | 2,011 | Abstract Our current understanding of the ancient Nubian people called Medjay has been informed by textual and artistic representations created Egyptians. By studying these sources, Egyptologists have argued that were an ethnic group living in Eastern Desert near Second Cataract. Yet studies exhibit Egyptocentric bias, which Egyptian sources interpreted literally. This paper reexamines references to before New Kingdom demonstrates how Egyptians conceptualized fostered creation a ethnicity. The perceived Lower Nubia as one unified group. not politically did identify themselves until middle Twelfth Dynasty. Increased interaction between caused certain pastoral nomads adopt term “Medjay.” Whatever role ethnicity may played their society previously, ethnogenesis “Medjay” began towards | article | en | Ethnogenesis|Ethnic group|Desert (philosophy)|Ancient history|History|Ethnology|Middle East|Geography|Anthropology|Sociology|Archaeology|Political science|Law | https://doi.org/10.1163/187416611x612132 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2021513966', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1163/187416611x612132', 'mag': '2021513966'} | Egypt | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Egyptian History |
“We have no rights, see? That´s what I´ve learned from this.” | Linda Vanina Ducca Cisneros (https://openalex.org/A5051901919) | 2,019 | This narrative essay tells the story of a group worker and her struggle to achieve social justice goals with young Moroccan men who came Spain as unaccompanied minors lived in shelter for homeless people. | article | en | Narrative|Social work|Social justice|Economic Justice|Gender studies|Criminology|Sociology|Psychology|Social psychology|Political science|Law|Art|Literature | https://doi.org/10.1080/01609513.2019.1638640 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2962024881', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/01609513.2019.1638640', 'mag': '2962024881'} | Morocco | C139621336|C144024400|C2982832299 | Economic Justice|Social justice|Sociology | Social Work With Groups |
“We have to separate so we can be together again”: Eritrean mothers’ gendered racialisation and family separation within the Israeli and UK asylum regimes | Laurie Lijnders (https://openalex.org/A5086624025) | 2,022 | This article explores how two asylum-seeking women from Eritrea attempt to secure safety and legal status for their children – born unborn themselves by leaving them behind in the settler colonial state of Israel taking on forged Ethiopian Israeli identities travel UK facilitate a process family reunification. Situating asylum regime drawing multi-sited ethnographic research collected between 2016–2018 UK, argues that engaging acts refusing militarised border regimes, migration enforcement, racialised orderings, shape future children. The then sheds light women’s experience waiting while faced with protracted uncertainty separation It also analyses gendered precarity motherhood are experienced. | article | en | Refugee|Gender studies|Ethnography|Precarity|Family reunification|Colonialism|State (computer science)|Sociology|Political science|Criminology|Immigration|Law|Anthropology|Computer science|Algorithm | https://doi.org/10.1080/01419870.2022.2099748 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4286716267', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/01419870.2022.2099748'} | Israel | C144024400|C2778071103 | Precarity|Sociology | Ethnic and Racial Studies|Center for International and Regional Studies (Georgetown University) |
“We know you’re not Somalia”: Radical Performance and Canadian-American Exile in Ali & Ali and the aXes of Evil | Jerry Wasserman (https://openalex.org/A5021998774) | 2,009 | “Are you ready Mogadishu? Butt out your cigars and wipe the buckets of sweat from really black brows, put stumps prostheses together give a GREA1’ BIG CLASH OF CIVILIZATIONS WELCOME TO ALI AND ALI!” (Youssef, Verdecchia Chai: 11-12). The opening lines Adventures Ali & aXes Evil by Canadians Marcus Youssef, Guillermo Verdecchia, Camyar Chai neatly package grotesque orientalist images third-world abjection suffering with rhetoric War on Terror clichés cornmodified Western pop culture. A brutally funny metatheatrical satire, play ridicules in equal measure American response to 9/11 Canada’s own hypocritical embeddedness ideology misadventures new imperium. But play’s setting is not Mogadishu. “We know you’re Somalia”, Middle Eastern exiles admit audience. where we are” (12). Where they are within “utopian cartographies” Gômez-Pena’s Fourth World, “a conceptual place indigenous inhabitants Americas meet deterritorialized peoples, immigrants, exiles” (Gômez-Pena 1996: 6, 245). It at one same time Canadian theatre, refugee camp — ” vaguely tent-like structure [… with] laundry (socks, some underwear) drying set” 11) that border zone margins imperial power politics theatre always already engaged. | chapter | en | Adventure|Politics|Ideology|Art|History|Hollywood|Art history|Racism|Gender studies|Law|Sociology|Political science | https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230250703_11 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2490507539', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230250703_11', 'mag': '2490507539'} | Somalia | C144024400 | Sociology | Palgrave Macmillan UK eBooks |
“We must cooperate with one another against the Enemy”: Agency and activism in school-aged children as protective factors against ongoing war trauma and political violence in the Gaza Strip | Guido Veronese (https://openalex.org/A5089648325)|Alessandro Pepe (https://openalex.org/A5036180739)|Alaa Jaradah (https://openalex.org/A5087348893)|Feda Murannak (https://openalex.org/A5082308333)|Housam Hamdouna (https://openalex.org/A5067693157) | 2,017 | This exploratory qualitative study investigated self-perceived risk and protection factors that may reinforce the ability of children living in refugee camps on Gaza Strip to adjust a traumatic risky life context characterized by loss dispossession. The sample comprised 200 Palestinian recruited at primary schools four following Israeli military operation “Pillar Defence” 2012. Thematic content analysis was applied written materials narratives produced children. Environment, friends, emotions, family, play, self, sociality, health, school, spirituality were dimensions emerged from narrative texts. children’s psychological adaptability reposition themselves along continuum between ease disease is underpinned constant political agency activism – dimension guides sense-making activities traumatizing environment marked continuous uncertainty, bereavement. We therefore recommend politically-informed focus, both when assessing designing intervention for them contexts chronic violence war. | article | en | Political violence|Refugee|Narrative|Agency (philosophy)|Thematic analysis|Context (archaeology)|Psychology|Politics|Poison control|Social psychology|Sociology|Gender studies|Criminology|Developmental psychology|Qualitative research|Medicine|Political science|Law|Environmental health|History|Social science|Philosophy|Linguistics|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chiabu.2017.06.027 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2741408318', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chiabu.2017.06.027', 'mag': '2741408318', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28743067'} | Gaza|Gaza Strip|Israel | C144024400|C2777162435 | Political violence|Sociology | Child Abuse & Neglect|PubMed |
“We must do something instead of just watch”: The First Medical Interpreter Training Course for Eritrean Asylum Seekers in Israel | Galia Sabar (https://openalex.org/A5075379799)|Shiri Tenenboim (https://openalex.org/A5059073750) | 2,018 | This article analyzes the outcomes of first medical interpreter vocational training course for Eritrean asylum seekers in Israel. Our study draws on work Phyllis Butow et al. interpreters’ perceptions their role, including challenges they face; Elena Ragazzi’s call a flexible evaluation outcomes; and Pierre Bourdieu’s concept “cultural capital” as an empowering tool change. The was initiated 2013 response to difficulties experienced by personnel regarding provision health services refugees. led four main conclusions: (1) it positive learning endeavor that graduates better jobs; (2) experience enabled care themselves loved ones, enhanced understanding rights seekers; (3) perceived project inclusion created safe reassuring environment within otherwise hostile reality state-orchestrated exclusion, yet also induced sense frustration had no impact unjust social structure which live; (4) helpful developing graduates’ complex role interpreters. | article | en | Refugee|Interpreter|Vocational education|Inclusion (mineral)|Medical education|Psychology|Cultural capital|Sociology|Political science|Pedagogy|Medicine|Law|Social psychology|Computer science|Programming language | https://doi.org/10.1080/10848770.2018.1499206 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2883573900', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/10848770.2018.1499206', 'mag': '2883573900'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | The European Legacy |
“We must find a solution now”: The Ethiopian community-police relationships in Israel | Liat Yakhnich (https://openalex.org/A5016372187) | 2,023 | Members of the Ethiopian community in Israel are over-represented police statistics, and their relations with characterized by low levels satisfaction. This phenomenological study aimed to explore relationships between Israeli-Ethiopian police, through eyes young adults officers. The data was collected in-depth interviews 25 participants: 13 12 analysis yielded five themes: personal experiences community-police encounters, youngsters’ officers’ mutual perceptions, discrimination youth, relations, allocating responsibility for changing situation. findings interpreted terms Social Identity Theory Contact Hypothesis illustrate how interplay conflicting groups’ identities contact a specific socio-political context shapes members’ perceptions affects future encounters. Implications promoting positive intergroup discussed. | article | en | Perception|Identity (music)|Context (archaeology)|Community policing|Social identity theory|Social psychology|Interpretative phenomenological analysis|Politics|Psychology|Criminology|Sociology|Political science|Geography|Social group|Qualitative research|Social science|Law|Physics|Archaeology|Neuroscience|Acoustics | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijintrel.2022.101752 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4315433580', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijintrel.2022.101752'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | International Journal of Intercultural Relations |
“We need a fence!” The spectacle of border militarization in Israel and in the USA | Damien Simonneau (https://openalex.org/A5026811987) | 2,022 | Abstract. This article presents an analysis of the contemporary phenomenon commonly referred to as “multiplication walls”, namely militarization borderlands. It considers border enforcement a policy solution about mobility portrayed “undesirable”, propounded by politicians, security professionals and citizens’ groups for their own political benefit interest. The “wall” is thus apprehended through spectacle intended fenced-in citizens. To dissect wall spectacle, resorts international comparison in two different geopolitical cases. specifically focuses on mobilizations favor “border/security fences” Israel from 2001 Arizona (USA) 2010. identifies three analogous operations led these actors (problematization mobility, securitization into military response publicization pro-fence narratives), characterizes manufacture bottom-up perspective, while illustrating national variations. | article | en | Militarization|Fence (mathematics)|Spectacle|Politics|Securitization|Political science|Geopolitics|National security|Border Security|Political economy|Enforcement|Sociology|Public administration|Law|Engineering|Economics|Structural engineering|Financial system | https://doi.org/10.1590/1980-85852503880006409 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4280561783', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1590/1980-85852503880006409'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | REMHU |
“We need good nutrition but we have no money to buy food”: sociocultural context, care experiences, and newborn health in two UNHCR-supported camps in South Sudan | Stephanie Gee (https://openalex.org/A5055673846)|Josep Vargas (https://openalex.org/A5091270179)|Angel M. Foster (https://openalex.org/A5058858458) | 2,018 | Determinants of newborn health and survival exist across the reproductive life cycle, with many sociocultural contextual factors influencing outcomes beyond availability of, access to, quality services. In order to better understand key needs opportunities improve in refugee camp settings, we conducted a multi-methods qualitative study status maternal camps Upper Nile state, South Sudan.In 2016, 18 informant interviews service managers front-line providers 13 focus group discussions two Sudanese Maban County, Sudan. Our comprised 147 participants including groups mothers, fathers, grandmothers, traditional birth attendants, community workers, midwives. We analysed our data for content themes using inductive deductive techniques.We found both positive practices barriers throughout lifecycle. Environmental such as poor nutrition, lack livelihood opportunities, insecurity presented general self-care during pregnancy. that receipt material incentives is one leading drivers utilization antenatal care facility-based childbirth Barriers included transportation specifically night; insecurity; being accustomed home delivery; fears an unfamiliar environment, caesarean section, encountering male childbirth. Use potentially harmful are commonplace mixed feeding, use herbal infusions treat illnesses, application ash oil newborn's umbilicus.Numerous impact this setting. Improving nutritional support pregnancy, strengthening community-based women labour, allowing companion be present delivery, addressing home-based feeding foreign substances umbilicus, optimizing networks workers attendants potential ways outcomes. | article | en | Focus group|Medicine|Refugee|Context (archaeology)|Nursing|Health facility|Reproductive health|Health care|Qualitative research|Childbirth|Population|Environmental health|Business|Economic growth|Pregnancy|Political science|Sociology|Geography|Health services|Social science|Archaeology|Marketing|Biology|Economics|Law|Genetics | https://doi.org/10.1186/s12914-018-0181-3 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2900451159', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1186/s12914-018-0181-3', 'mag': '2900451159', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30419924', 'pmcid': 'https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/6233510'} | Sudan | C144024400|C160735492|C2986740045 | Health care|Health services|Sociology | BMC International Health and Human Rights|Europe PMC (PubMed Central)|PubMed Central|PubMed |
“We should keep what makes us different”: youth reflections on Turkish maintenance in Australia | Zeynep F. Beykont (https://openalex.org/A5064576305) | 2,010 | This article reports on a study of Turkish immigrants, group that has resisted the rapid shift to English throughout their four decades in Australia. The sought identify unique set sociohistorical reasons for continued use and youth perspectives vitality. Study participants were students graduates secondary programs state Victoria (n = 16). Information language biographies, bilingual achievements, orientations collected large-scale surveys 858) follow-up interviews 177). Participating expressed an overwhelmingly positive attitude toward maintenance yet not confident skills. They recognized future depended commitment learn pass it next generation. Young people's assessment available revealed additional support is needed sustain bilingualism beyond second generation, including relevant coherent curriculum teach as language, well-prepared teachers, classes universities upgrade teachers' | article | en | Turkish|Curriculum|Neuroscience of multilingualism|Sociology|Pedagogy|Psychology|Mathematics education|Linguistics|Philosophy|Neuroscience | https://doi.org/10.1515/ijsl.2010.050 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2323618090', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1515/ijsl.2010.050', 'mag': '2323618090'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | International Journal of the Sociology of Language |
“We the People of Israel”: Covenant, Constitution, and the Supposed Biblical Origins of Modern Democratic Political Thought | Sophia Johnson (https://openalex.org/A5066793147) | 2,021 | Abstract As an originally political term, study of the concept “covenant” has long demonstrated intersection biblical studies and theory. In recent decades, association between covenant constitution come to forefront modern thought in attempts find origins certain democratic ideals descriptions Israel, order garner either religious or cultural authority. This is exemplified claims Daniel J. Elazar that first conceptual seeds American federalism are found covenants Hebrew Bible. Taking Elazar’s work as a starting end point, this paper applies contemporary scholarship his definition reveal influences own environment interpreters he dependent upon. The notion its interpretation remains monolithic static overturned by survey diverse receptions history from late 19th 20th centuries, contrasting German interpretive trends. such, I aim highlight reciprocal relationship religion politics, academic both, challenge claim can be traced back conceptions. | article | en | Covenant|Politics|Constitution|Scholarship|Hebrew Bible|Democracy|Biblical studies|Law|Interpretation (philosophy)|Sociology|Political science|Philosophy|Theology|Linguistics | https://doi.org/10.1515/jbr-2021-0005 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3206164796', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1515/jbr-2021-0005', 'mag': '3206164796'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of the bible and its reception |
“We think this way as a society!”: Community-level science literacy among ultra-Orthodox Jews | Lea Taragin‐Zeller (https://openalex.org/A5039895768)|Yael Rozenblum (https://openalex.org/A5039527096)|Ayelet Baram‐Tsabari (https://openalex.org/A5015778881) | 2,022 | Despite growing interest in community-level science literacy, most studies focus on communities of who come together through particular science, environmental or health-related goals. We examine a pre-existing community—ultra-Orthodox Jews Israel—with history and politics vis-à-vis technology, medicine. First, we show how Haredi cosmologies culture to critique as an epistemology while engaging with technology. Then, demonstrate community-based medical experts serve both science-related knowledge mediators gatekeepers. Whereas are constantly critiqued for their low levels individual secular education, these webs seemingly position individuals that surpasses the average “secular” Israeli. This case study develops unique analytical tools field pushing forward conversations about self-ascribed experts, gatekeeping, socio-political contexts group critiques science. | article | en | Gatekeeping|Sociology|Scientific literacy|Literacy|Science communication|Science, technology, society and environment education|Science education|Politics|Social science education|Social science|Environmental ethics|Media studies|Political science|Pedagogy|Law|Philosophy | https://doi.org/10.1177/09636625221110106 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4289224451', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/09636625221110106', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35912952'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Public Understanding of Science|PubMed Central|PubMed |
“We want empowerment for our women”: Transnational Feminism, Neoliberal Citizenship, and the Gendering of Women’s Political Subjectivity in Postconflict South Sudan | Jennifer Erickson (https://openalex.org/A5000545292)|Caroline Faria (https://openalex.org/A5038294890) | 2,011 | Following the signing of a 2005 peace agreement, connections between South Sudanese women in diaspora and at “home” reveal new gendered forms female political subjectivity, citizenship, activism. This article explores emergence transnational women’s organizing efforts through focus on 2008 conference held Juba, Sudan, hosted by U.S.-based Sudan Women’s Empowerment Network (SSWEN). We describe membership, mission, goals SSWEN, focusing challenges opportunities as across lines class-, faith-, ethnic-regional-, diaspora/home-based differences. highlight emphasis spiritual notions self-empowerment feminized for activism SSWEN’s work, which are prioritized way to gain wider inclusion recognition society promote grassroots care community. suggest that these emphases may be viewed potentially liberatory, offering engagement deeply strained politically fragile period. However, we also point some limits this approach, highlighting ways an self spaces home body divert responsibility from state postconflict reconstruction, care, dismantling patriarchal systems. Our work seeks move beyond conceptualizations refugee disengaged nation-building process, instead dynamic, overt, yet contested gender equality Sudan. | article | en | Grassroots|Gender studies|Diaspora|Citizenship|Empowerment|Politics|Sociology|Subjectivity|Care work|Political subjectivity|Feminism|Refugee|Transnationalism|Political science|Work (physics)|Law|Philosophy|Epistemology|Mechanical engineering|Engineering | https://doi.org/10.1086/657494 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2076984244', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1086/657494', 'mag': '2076984244'} | Sudan | C144024400 | Sociology | Signs |
“We want integration but such that shows our part”: Ethnic activism among immigrants’ political-social leadership | Rachel Sharaby (https://openalex.org/A5014101901) | 2,018 | This paper discusses the bi-polar identity of young leaders immigrant groups from Morocco and Kurdistan in Israel, who led struggle for legitimization their culture redefinition Israeli cultural space. They were, fact, ‘cultural entrepreneurs’, initiated headed a revival, acted as pivotal change agents dynamics continuing ethnic tradition, while selectively returning to origins. The syncretism that they adopted renewal celebrations facilitated an inter-generational, diachronic dialog well with ‘other’ outside group. | article | en | Dialog box|Ethnic group|Immigration|Politics|Gender studies|Sociology|Identity (music)|Political science|Anthropology|Law|Aesthetics|Philosophy|World Wide Web|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.14738/assrj.512.5756 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2908447704', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.14738/assrj.512.5756', 'mag': '2908447704'} | Israel|Morocco | C144024400 | Sociology | Advances in Social Sciences Research Journal |
“We want to go, but there are no options”: Exploring barriers and facilitators of transportation among diverse older adults | Holly Dabelko‐Schoeny (https://openalex.org/A5007754925)|Arati Maleku (https://openalex.org/A5067212558)|Qiuchang Cao (https://openalex.org/A5024088481)|Katie White (https://openalex.org/A5019878156)|Basar Ozbilen (https://openalex.org/A5062367130) | 2,021 | Transportation plays an important role in the social connectedness and quality of life among older adults (Black et al., 2015). Despite increasing number culturally linguistically diverse U.S. (Scommegna, 2016), studies that comprehensively investigate factors influencing their transportation use are sparse fragmented. Guided by socio-ecological lens, we explored multi-level barriers facilitators with a specific focus on immigrants refugees living Midwestern metropolitan city. The research team conducted eight 90-min groups six languages (English, Nepali, Khmer, Somali, Russian Mandarin) volunteers N = 70 (Male 40%, Women 60%). mean age participants was 76.81 (SD 8.51). Data analysis followed Rapid Rigorous Qualitative Analysis (RADaR) technique (Watkins, 2017) thematic (Nowell interactive approach. Four major determinants emerged: (1) service: affordability, accessibility, availability acceptability, lack options, service coordination; (2) built environment: safety walkability; (3) language information; (4) individual attributes: being able to drive, walk, “ask someone for ride”. interconnectedness provides implications systematic approach improving services supporting more age-friendly community. | article | en | Focus group|Thematic analysis|Walkability|Gerontology|Public transport|Metropolitan area|Nepali|Psychology|Built environment|Destinations|Qualitative research|Business|Medicine|Sociology|Geography|Transport engineering|Marketing|Engineering|Tourism|Social science|Civil engineering|Pathology|Art|Literature|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jth.2020.100994 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3116595349', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jth.2020.100994', 'mag': '3116595349'} | Somalia | C144024400 | Sociology | |
“We were cocked & loaded to retaliate” | Mohammad Makki (https://openalex.org/A5050509772)|Andrew S. Ross (https://openalex.org/A5034162785) | 2,021 | Abstract The diplomatic relationship between the USA and Iran has long been fraught is characterised by various conflicts implementation of economic sanctions. It can be argued that became even more hostile after Donald Trump was elected president US. Trump’s sentiments towards were made public through his behavior on Twitter, both before he took over Presidency. These have a mix negative sometimes positive views opinions. This study uses corpus tweets explicitly mention ‘Iran’ as basis linguistic analysis applies to it analytical framework appraisal from Systemic Functional Linguistics. More specifically, this focuses how established an Us vs. Them dichotomy. While shows generally portrayed negatively Trump, there several where Iranian government appraised positively, too. interestingly, in those tweets, seemed target Obama democrats represent them while assessed terms. | article | en | Presidency|Sanctions|Government (linguistics)|Economic sanctions|Political science|Political economy|Sociology|Law|Linguistics|Politics|Philosophy | https://doi.org/10.1075/jlac.00069.mak | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3197255318', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1075/jlac.00069.mak', 'mag': '3197255318'} | Iran | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of language aggression and conflict |
“We will take money from anywhere to support our work”: industry funding of humanitarian assistance in crises | Jihad Makhoul (https://openalex.org/A5003282282)|C El-Ashkar (https://openalex.org/A5021710170)|Rima Nakkash (https://openalex.org/A5025685233) | 2,022 | Abstract Background Corporate funding has been described to be beneficial for humanitarian assistance in times of shrinking financial resources globally. Despite the growing global research on commercial determinants and their impact population health, evaluations corporate partnerships with organizations victims multiple crises are rare. Conflicts interest interference public health policy practice well-documented. Health-harming industries currently large scale projects refugees eastern Mediterranean region which witnessed from armed conflicts. For example, food beverage corporations tobacco have funded integrate migrants host countries, offered educational scholarships refugee children Europe beyond. Methods This presents experiences agencies Lebanon corporations, perceived influences populations served over a two-year period coinciding long-lasting crisis, COVID-19 pandemic, an epic economic collapse devastation part Beirut cataclysmic explosion its port. The study used qualitative in-depth interviews representatives non-governmental working Lebanese refugees. Results Funding starts two-way communication process between recently started initiated by themselves after blast. tobacco, is reported come conditions enhance visibility, yet as necessary, helps disadvantaged communities sustains organizations’ operations. Other results relating availability guidelines detecting managing COI discussed. | article | en | Refugee|Economic growth|Humanitarian aid|Humanitarian crisis|Population|Disadvantaged|Business|Political science|General partnership|Public relations|Economics|Medicine|Finance|Environmental health|Law | https://doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckac129.089 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4307244599', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckac129.089'} | Lebanon | C2777742874 | Humanitarian crisis | European Journal of Public Health|PubMed Central |
“We would never forget who we are”: resettlement, cultural negotiation, and family relationships among Somali Bantu refugees | Rochelle L. Frounfelker (https://openalex.org/A5029528620)|Mehret T. Assefa (https://openalex.org/A5070222637)|Ellie Smith (https://openalex.org/A5052633520)|Aweis Hussein (https://openalex.org/A5052645665)|Theresa S. Betancourt (https://openalex.org/A5032064441) | 2,017 | Somali refugees are resettling in large numbers the US, but little is known about Bantu, an ethnic minority within this population. Refugee youth mental health linked to functioning of larger family unit. Understanding how process culturally adjusting life after resettlement relates can help identify what kind interventions might strengthen families and lead better outcomes for youth. This paper seeks address following research questions: (1) How do different groups Bantu describe their experiences adapting US?; (2) How, if at all, processes cultural adaptation a new country affect functioning? We conducted 14 focus with total 81 New England. Authors analyzed using principles thematic analysis develop codes overarching theoretical model relationship between adaptation, parent-child relationships, functioning. Views expectations relationships were compared adults. Cultural negotiation was dependent upon broader sociocultural contexts United States that most salient experience individual. Adult participants had conflicting views around negotiating culture, which often led strained relationships. In contrast, sibling strengthened, as they turned each other support navigating adaptation. | article | en | Somali|Bantu languages|Refugee|Sociology|Ethnic group|Mental health|Gender studies|Negotiation|Population|Psychology|Political science|Anthropology|Social science|Demography|Psychiatry|Philosophy|Linguistics|Law | https://doi.org/10.1007/s00787-017-0991-1 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2610458239', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1007/s00787-017-0991-1', 'mag': '2610458239', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28474153', 'pmcid': 'https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/5740486'} | Somalia | C134362201|C144024400 | Mental health|Sociology | European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry|Europe PMC (PubMed Central)|PubMed Central|PubMed |
“We're potentially worsening health inequalities”: Evaluating how delivery of the 2022 London polio booster campaign was tailored to Orthodox Jewish families to reduce transmission vulnerability | Ben Kasstan (https://openalex.org/A5000490519)|Sandra Mounier-Jack (https://openalex.org/A5074597625)|Ana Zuriaga-Alvaro (https://openalex.org/A5031216870)|Leonora G Weil (https://openalex.org/A5017091046)|Tracey Chantler (https://openalex.org/A5090676346) | 2,023 | A polio booster campaign targeting all children aged 1–9 was implemented across London between August–December 2022 as part of a national enhanced poliovirus incident response. Orthodox Jewish (OJ) were particularly vulnerable to transmission due disparities in childhood vaccination coverage and the transnational spread affecting linked populations New York Israel. This study aimed evaluate how tailored increase uptake enable access for OJ families northeast north central boroughs, impact on local-level vaccine inequities. Semi-structured in-depth interviews (n = 36) conducted with participants involved implementation delivery campaign, mothers. Site visits 5) at clinics, rapid 26) held explore parental perceptions immunisations. Enablers during included production targeted printed communications offering flexible clinic times primary care settings or complementary pathways embedded family-friendly spaces. Barriers digital booking systems. Mothers reported being aware incident, but majority those interviewed did not feel their risk contracting polio. Healthcare provider raised concerns that response had limited reducing uptake. While recognised priority public health engagement response, this evaluation identified limitations vulnerability campaign. Lessons future include effectively conveying urgency vaccinate. Priorities mitigating inequities develop messaging strategies strengthening capacity serve higher-than-average numbers children. | article | en | Poliomyelitis|Poliovirus|Medicine|Booster (rocketry)|Polio vaccine|Vaccination|Inequality|Public health|Vulnerability (computing)|Environmental health|Family medicine|Pediatrics|Nursing|Virology|Engineering|Mathematical analysis|Virus|Mathematics|Computer security|Computer science|Aerospace engineering | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssmqr.2023.100365 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4388210454', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssmqr.2023.100365', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38169919'} | Israel | C138816342|C45555294 | Inequality|Public health | SSM - Qualitative Research in Health|PubMed |
“We're talking about black men here, there's a difference”; cultural differences in socialised knowledge of prostate cancer risk: A qualitative research study | Sarah Fry (https://openalex.org/A5018635587)|Jane B. Hopkinson (https://openalex.org/A5010066805)|Daniel Kelly (https://openalex.org/A5084590643) | 2,022 | To detail social knowledge of prostate cancer risk amongst cultural groups. Prostate is the most common in men, and black men are at highest risk. Despite this, least likely to be diagnosed early with cancer. It important understand why this so that these can receive access effective treatment support.A constructivist grounded theory methodology was used. Data were collected between December 2015 October 2017; seventeen interviewed, eighteen took part focus groups.There differences way constructed their understanding risks for The construction mediated by socialised accept Somali African Caribbean placed importance on healthy body, whereas white working class seemed find value through unwell body. This research proposes constructions mediate perceive cancer.Understanding socially-derived may acceptance factors relating help health providers third sector organisations produce targeted health-related information. Health practitioners also benefit from how socially ideas body could influence respond conversations about tailored culturally appropriate support offered. | article | en | Prostate cancer|Body of knowledge|Grounded theory|Medicine|Qualitative research|Social constructivism|Social constructionism|Focus group|Cancer|Psychology|Gerontology|Sociology|Social science|Pedagogy|Internal medicine|Political science|Anthropology|Law | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejon.2021.102080 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3216578138', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejon.2021.102080', 'mag': '3216578138', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34915423'} | Somalia | C144024400 | Sociology | European Journal of Oncology Nursing|ORCA Online Research @Cardiff (Cardiff University)|PubMed |
“We've all got the virus inside us now”: Disaggregating public health relations and responsibilities for health protection in pandemic London | Ben Kasstan (https://openalex.org/A5000490519)|Sandra Mounier-Jack (https://openalex.org/A5074597625)|Katherine M Gaskell (https://openalex.org/A5026315971)|Rosalind M Eggo (https://openalex.org/A5040703559)|Michael Marks (https://openalex.org/A5049028027)|Tracey Chantler (https://openalex.org/A5090676346) | 2,022 | The COVID-19 pandemic has disproportionately impacted ethnic minorities in the global north, evidenced by higher rates of transmission, morbidity, and mortality relative to population sizes. Orthodox Jewish neighbourhoods London had extremely high SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence rates, reflecting patterns Israel US. aim this paper is examine how responsibilities over health protection are conveyed, what extent responsibility sought by, shared between, state services, 'community' stakeholders or representative groups, families public emergencies. study investigates statutory services stakeholders, communal custodians households enact during first year (March 2020-March 2021). Twenty-eight semi-structured interviews were conducted across these cohorts. Findings demonstrate that institutional relations - both their formation at times fragmentation directly shaped issues surrounding control measures. Exchanges around protective interventions (whether measures, contact tracing technologies, vaccines) reveal diverse diverging attributions authority. develops a framework understand negotiations between minority groups responsiveness accountability protection. Disaggregating can help social scientists critique who characterises relationships with ideas projected differently-positioned | article | en | Public health|Population|Statutory law|Accountability|Ethnic group|Sociology|Political science|Public relations|Medicine|Environmental health|Law|Nursing | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.115237 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4291819023', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.115237', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35964473'} | Israel | C138816342|C144024400 | Public health|Sociology | Bristol Research (University of Bristol)|Bristol Research (University of Bristol)|LSHTM Research Online (London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine)|PubMed Central|PubMed|Social Science & Medicine|Bristol Research (University of Bristol)|Bristol Research (University of Bristol)|LSHTM Research Online (London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine)|PubMed Central|PubMed |
“We, three brothers have always known everything of each other”: A Cross-cultural Study of Sharing Digital Devices and Online Accounts | Mahdi Nasrullah Al-Ameen (https://openalex.org/A5041581450)|Huzeyfe Kocabas (https://openalex.org/A5083886793)|Swapnil Nandy (https://openalex.org/A5019950211)|Tanjina Tamanna (https://openalex.org/A5018160665) | 2,021 | Abstract Although many technologies assume that a device or an account would be used by single user, prior research has found this assumption may not hold true in everyday life. Most studies conducted to date focused on sharing with the members household. However, there is dearth existing literature understand contexts of devices and accounts, which extend wide range personal, social, professional settings. Further, people’s behavior could impacted their social background. To end, our paper presents qualitative study 59 participants from three different countries: Bangladesh, Turkey, USA, where we investigated digital (e.g., computer, mobile phone) online particular, financial identity accounts email, networking) various contexts, entities - limited Our reveals users’ perceptions risks while account, access control strategies protect privacy security. Based analysis, shed light interplay between demographics, background, cultural values. Taken together, findings have broad implications advance PETS community’s situated understanding accounts. | article | en | Internet privacy|Phone|Situated|Perception|Mobile phone|Qualitative research|Identity (music)|Mobile device|World Wide Web|Computer science|Business|Psychology|Sociology|Telecommunications|Social science|Philosophy|Linguistics|Physics|Neuroscience|Artificial intelligence|Acoustics | https://doi.org/10.2478/popets-2021-0067 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3183740021', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.2478/popets-2021-0067', 'mag': '3183740021'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Proceedings on Privacy Enhancing Technologies|DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals) |
“We,” Palestinians and Jewish Israelis: The Right Not to Be a Perpetrator | Ariella Azoulay (https://openalex.org/A5008404264) | 2,015 | Assuming that the BDS is largest civil movement today claiming to change Israeli political regime, what type of “we” does it enable? In this essay, I try answer question, based on premise response Jewish citizens crimes and abuses perpetrated by their own regime cannot be external solidarity. Israelis are governed alongside Palestinians, they subjects same regime. Their citizenship a constitutive element differentiations hierarchy in which privileged group. Not being able endorse boycott from outside, can—and should—participate it; participation turns movement's call into campaign redefine as co-citizenship right not perpetrator. | article | en | Boycott|Judaism|Citizenship|Politics|Solidarity|Political science|Law|Anti-Zionism|Element (criminal law)|Hierarchy|Sociology|Jewish studies|Philosophy|Theology | https://doi.org/10.1215/00382876-3130844 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2345909267', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1215/00382876-3130844', 'mag': '2345909267'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | South Atlantic Quarterly |
“Webside” healthcare from medical interns' perspective: Telemedicine implementation and need for training | Dalia Y. M. El Kheir (https://openalex.org/A5078646664)|Razan A Alshamsi (https://openalex.org/A5063163185)|Sukainah Alalwi (https://openalex.org/A5019003302)|Razan Z AlShammari (https://openalex.org/A5017188503) | 2,022 | Telemedicine involves the use of electronic communication and technology to remotely deliver clinical services patients. With increase in adoption telemedicine healthcare delivery, "webside healthcare" is becoming virtual analog bedside care. The Ministry Health Saudi Arabia has recently established telemedicine, including social media (SM) medical applications (Apps) enhance quality accessibility patients providers. In present study, we evaluated interns' perception SM, Apps patient care, their awareness related guidelines find out if targeted training needed.A qualitative study recruited interviewed, through semi-structured key informant (KI) interviews focus group discussions (FGD), a total 24 male female interns. Interns were purposefully sampled from all Arabia's 5 main geographical regions until data saturation was observed. transcripts five KI 6 FGDs done thematically analyzed are presented as themes subthemes.Medical interns discussed advantages disadvantages services. Overall, interviewees appreciated role play for such particular specialties family medicine (tele-) psychiatry. However, believed that on technical operational aspects different modalities with an emphasis education ethical legal regulating vital.Most interviewed had positive willing it daily practice. there some challenges its successful implementation prompt proper clear guidance. | article | en | Telemedicine|Health care|Medicine|Medical education|Focus group|Qualitative research|Nursing|Modalities|Perception|Psychology|Social science|Business|Marketing|Sociology|Economics|Economic growth|Neuroscience | https://doi.org/10.4103/jfcm.jfcm_105_22 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4283644728', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.4103/jfcm.jfcm_105_22', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35754750'} | Saudi Arabia | C144024400|C160735492 | Health care|Sociology | Journal of Family and Community Medicine|PubMed Central|PubMed |
“Weekend-Families” of Migrant Domestic Workers in Lebanon | Amrita Pande (https://openalex.org/A5060165293) | 2,015 | Tripoli, Lebanon, June 2010: It is a typical Sunday afternoon at the Tripoli mall in North Lebanon. Most shops are closed, except for few odd cafés where one can buy coffee and surf on Internet. What curious complete absence of Lebanese shoppers. All see Filipino women, dressed up their best. Some smoking, others sipping exchanging photographs children. corners mall, stairways corridors filled with laughter, smoke conversation. This women’s usual hangout “weekend-families”. There little activity streets outside mall. The hot sultry time most to take siesta. But story somewhat different balconies above street. Women — Black African women sweeping banging dust out carpets. Each takes pause between cleaning, lean over railings converse other neighboring buildings. These These, what I have termed, weekend-families, forged by not consanguinal but based shared occupation, sense isolation sometimes, common nationality, ethnicity place residence. families very often temporal nature; structure shaped mobility migrant workers, maintenance dependent sporadic meetings weekends. Yet, as this chapter demonstrates, these familial ties vital life work domestic workers. | chapter | en | Nationality|Residence|Gender studies|Geography|Immigration|Advertising|History|Sociology|Demography|Business|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137323552_15 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2470211462', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137323552_15', 'mag': '2470211462'} | Lebanon | C144024400 | Sociology | Palgrave Macmillan UK eBooks |
“Wege” und “Ziele”: Starke Metaphern der Pädagogik | Jürgen Oelkers (https://openalex.org/A5017690445) | 2,001 | In 1960 Israel Scheffler analyzed “The Language of Education”. Since then not very much is written concerning this subject, especially in the field history education. But first all “education” a historical language that used popular and scientific contexts. The article tries to analyze some basic terms notion “education”–educare–itself sort frozen metaphor too often supposed be “real” or “immediate” experience education can only communicated by use | article | en | Field (mathematics)|Metaphor|Sociology|Education theory|Pedagogy|Language education|History of education|sort|Subject (documents)|Epistemology|Higher education|Linguistics|Philosophy|Literature|Political science|Art|Law|Computer science|Mathematics|Pure mathematics|Library science|Information retrieval | https://doi.org/10.1080/0030923010370301 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W1979368759', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/0030923010370301', 'mag': '1979368759'} | Israel | C144024400|C2779561538|C38014559 | Education theory|History of education|Sociology | Paedagogica Historica |
“Welcome to Divinity College” | Mahshid Zandi (https://openalex.org/A5075007541) | 2,020 | “Welcome to Divinity College,” reads a welcome sign the state-sponsored fieldtrips of Iran-Iraq War (1980–1988) battlefields in Iran. Rahian-e Noor battlefield tours follow model Shia pilgrimage and commemorative rituals, while also tapping into nationalist discourses country as an ancient homeland. I ask whether these trips are means disseminating knowledge, what forms ignorance assumed prevail among visitors that this “Divinity College” seeks eliminate? Even more importantly, since state-sponsored, ignorances rendered possible, if not encouraged, at cost selective knowledge dissemination? Drawing on fieldwork, argue provide space encounter with is presupposed visitors’ already acquired knowledge. On RN tours, both co-constitutive transformative power pilgrimage, where ultimate interpreted putting already-known-words deeds. | article | en | Divinity|Pilgrimage|Ignorance|Indoctrination|State (computer science)|Nationalism|Sociology|Power (physics)|History|Media studies|Political science|Law|Ideology|Ancient history|Politics|Physics|Algorithm|Quantum mechanics|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.3167/jys.2020.210105 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3041243564', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.3167/jys.2020.210105', 'mag': '3041243564'} | Iran|Iraq | C144024400 | Sociology | Journeys |
“Welcome to the Club”: Palestinian-Israeli Teachers in Bilingual Integrated and in Hebrew Speaking Schools | Wurud Jayusi (https://openalex.org/A5073010985)|Zvi Bekerman (https://openalex.org/A5059247093) | 2,023 | Abstract This chapter contributes to a better understanding of how minority teachers in majority schools experience their work and participation such educational contexts helps shape sense ethno-cultural belonging self-efficacy. Through comparative work, we gain insights into the context-specific conditions which might help support or undermine teachers’ inclusion. To do this compared reported experiences Palestinian Israeli working two somewhat different contexts; Hebrew speaking serve regular Jewish population bilingual integrated offer opportunity for populations study under one roof society are mostly segregated. Both these include faculty. Our findings point at similarities way but also some notable differences have been exposed. groups express satisfaction regarding schools. They satisfied with feel they belong very special ‘club’ metaphor that affords them strong positive positioning within school context. | chapter | en | Hebrew|Club|Context (archaeology)|Pedagogy|Work (physics)|Inclusion (mineral)|Population|Metaphor|Psychology|Sociology|Political science|Mathematics education|Social psychology|Medicine|Geography|Linguistics|Engineering|Mechanical engineering|Philosophy|Demography|Archaeology|Anatomy | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-25584-7_11 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4367021029', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-25584-7_11'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Springer eBooks |
“Welcome to the world” | Iris F. Litt (https://openalex.org/A5025851696) | 2,002 | This is being written on March 11, 2002, the six-month anniversary of terrorist attacks World Trade Center and Pentagon. The media are busy helping us relive tragedy those horrific (a word I don’t remember ever using before that day!) events. In commemoration this demi-anniversary and, in reflection many assaults mental health adolescents, issue Journal Adolescent Health features relevant thought-provoking manuscripts. It patently clear we a changed nation people now. horrendous sequelae obvious will continue to unfold as days pass. Throughout history, however, examples challenges leading opportunity. Can it be anything positive might come out one? am already seeing evidence may. Out our shaken sense security born isolation may emerge greater commitment world community. What experienced by women Afghanistan under Taliban, for example, can no longer ignored because read about daily. Having journalists living, reporting, sadly even, case Daniel Pearl, dying thousands miles from shores invites identification with whom previously knew little. No they “other”—we now share their sorrow, struggle, pain. Watching anti-American demonstrations Iran Saudi Arabia, realize “other” all too vulnerable. For professionals United States, events September 11 anthrax scare followed have had some unexpected outcomes. Because threat bioterrorism, country has been alerted gross inadequacies communications capabilities public system. This, recognition need develop better systems surveillance capacity respond such potential threats, led appropriation significant funding health. benefits strengthening system inevitably accrue all, regardless its intended goal. receiving award Outstanding Achievement Society at recent meeting, Dr. Christina Berg-Kelly Sweden invited membership visit her other members international message took away was “Welcome World.” It, reminds world’s teens must concern together find ways ensure not only survive, but thrive, focused war revenge, antithesis | article | en | Sorrow|Tragedy (event)|Isolation (microbiology)|Terrorism|Media studies|History|World trade center|Criminology|Law|Political science|Sociology|Medicine|Psychology|Psychiatry|Social psychology|Microbiology|Biology | https://doi.org/10.1016/s1054-139x(02)00383-x | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2158227925', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/s1054-139x(02)00383-x', 'mag': '2158227925'} | Iran|Saudi Arabia | C144024400|C203133693 | Sociology|Terrorism | Journal of Adolescent Health |
“Well, Yair? When will you be prime minister?” | Pnina Shukrun-Nagar (https://openalex.org/A5037611130) | 2,019 | The chapter examines readers’ comments on a Facebook post in which the Israeli politician Yair Lapid positions himself as an ordinary person. Based Sacks (1984), it is argued that such positioning characterized by themes, perspectives, and communicative patterns typical of people, rather than political-public authorities.An examination 141 relevant shows that, Bakhtin’s terms, there are three main readings voice: A single-voiced reading, views voice legitimate, authentic, independent; double-voiced authentic but partial; polyphonic fictitious, illegitimate, designated to promote political agenda. paper discusses each category comparison those original post, effect these both his readers. | chapter | en | Reading (process)|Polyphony|Prime minister|Politics|Prime (order theory)|Ordinary language philosophy|Linguistics|Sociology|Psychology|Political science|Law|Mathematics|Philosophy|Pedagogy|Combinatorics|Philosophy of sport | https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.307.05shu | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2993103501', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.307.05shu', 'mag': '2993103501'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Pragmatics & beyond |
“Were you treated differently because you wore the hijab?”: Everyday Islamophobia, racialization and young Turks in Britain | M. Devrim Babacan (https://openalex.org/A5050880094) | 2,022 | Numerous studies suggest that British society is becoming more Islamophobic, and Muslims, especially youth, in Britain have been its victims. But while there growing evidence of how they targets explicit severe instances Islamophobia, less attention has focused on are also subtle implicit forms. The purpose this paper to examine Islamophobia manifests everyday interactions Muslims racialized from the perspective one supposed victims so far under-researched, i.e., young Turks Britain. Turks’ accounts about themselves their immediate circle relatives revealed UK experience but it often enacted during mundane without ever explicit. Visible Turkish-Muslim women, however, target than Turkish men secular both whom do not display any religious signifiers public places. They face at intersection gender religion. Many women through hijab which interpreted described ways draw upon a set symbolic meanings associations. In addition, contrary what discussed Islamophobic experiences Muslim previously conducted studies, research shows appeared visible frequently mundane, way. | article | en | Islamophobia|Racialization|Turkish|Gender studies|Sociology|Racism|Everyday life|Politics|Political science|Race (biology)|Law|Linguistics|Philosophy | https://doi.org/10.1177/14687968221126196 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4298144394', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1177/14687968221126196'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Ethnicities |
“Western Women Writing” | Ann Ronald (https://openalex.org/A5015821431) | 1,979 | Essay Reviews 171 “WESTERN WOMEN WRITING”* Since feminism has become fashionable, more and readers have come to recognize the value of non-fiction writing by women. In particular, those us interested in Western literature discovered worth books written women about their experiences as they helped settle American West. These first-person accounts, many ways, tell real spirit West— strike-it-rich optimism mingled with haunting spectre failure — than we can learn from tra ditional sources. Many presses currently are publishing such but among best University Nebraska Press. A sampling offerings reveals both a panoramic coverage pattern commitment. The first Bison book, chronologically, is Sarah Royce’s Frontier Lady, which documents her 1849 trek California covered wagon. Written thirty years later for son, Harvard philosopher-historian Josiah Royce, Lady recounts physical hardships abiding faith. Royces started late, dissension marred journey, inexperience caused mistakes, even maps were faulty. Yet Mrs. Royce was able maintain positive outlook because she saw natural phenomena signs God’s presence along way. Scenery, symbol, kept going. latter part book finds journey completed living temporarily various northern mining camps cities. Although moral vision sometimes intrudes when herself civilized surroundings, remains observant all that sees. Her description Sacramento under flood waters gripping narra tion encounter tarantula. Part too, comes editing. Excerpts writings matched throughout comparable observations his mother’s, so *The reviewed this essay include: Bride Goes By Nannie T. Alderson Helena Huntington Smith. (Lincoln: Press, 1969. 273 pages, $3.25 paperback.) Lady: Recollections Gold Rush Early California. Royce. 1977. 144 $8.95 cloth, $2.45 Home Below Hell’s Canyon. Grace Jordan. 1962. 243 $11.95 $2.95 Lady’s Experiences Wild West 1883. Rose Prender. Uni versity 1978. 134 $8.50 cloth.) Letters Woman Homesteader. Elinore Pruitt Stewart. 1961. 282 Mollie: Journal Mollie Dorsey Sanford Colorado Territories, 1857-1866. Sanford. 1976. 199 No Life For Lady. Agnes Morley Cleaveland. 356 $3.95 172 Literature anyone son see genesis ideas. indeed simple tale forty-niner days; rather, it somewhat philosophical, always vivid, look into life courageous cultivated pioneer. Mollie, Colo rado 1857-1866 differs tone content. Originally composed private diary, then recopied 1895 grandson, hopes fears, expectations disappointments young woman who settled parents journeyed bride. Mollie’s filled crop misdirected business ventures, enthusiasm carries over rough spots. frontier vision, its willingness try anything new might spell suc cess, sees through storms, floods, loneliness, lost causes. very titles clue essential difference between these two books. sound earthy less ethereal Royce’srecollections tranquility. sees... | review | en | Frontier|Faith|History|Publishing|Value (mathematics)|Symbol (formal)|Feminism|Art history|Sociology|Literature|Gender studies|Art|Philosophy|Theology|Archaeology|Linguistics|Machine learning|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1353/wal.1979.0104 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2762889711', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1353/wal.1979.0104', 'mag': '2762889711'} | Jordan | C144024400 | Sociology | Western American Literature |
“Westernisation against the West”: Cultural Politics in the Early Turkish Republic | Orhan Koçak (https://openalex.org/A5004550807) | 2,010 | ‘European civilisation will have a beneficial effect on us, not only with its science and technology, but also in matters of taste morality. But this influence is permissible to the extent that it helps dismantle Persian one. The moment attempts supplant what destroys, has itself become harmful should be resisted’ (Gökalp, 1995, p. 15). Written at end First World War, these words Ziya Gökalp revealed utmost clarity (too explicitly, perhaps, even for reluctant inheritor defeated empire) ideological psychological mainsprings newborn Turkish nationalism. Today, century’s remove, we hear much same idea reiterated different sectors political cultural elite: part Europe so as Middle East, or, more often, if bogged down East. In long interval, Gökalp’s ideas come define terms relevant debate, providing spiritual core early Republican politics, perhaps significantly, forcing his opponents begin formulation problem hand: how ought long-submerged now re-emerging national identity understood lived relation Ottoman culture one hand, modern, scientific-rational West other? And no agent importance, whether official or oppositional, been able entirely escape call indicated, fantastic, answer: Westernisation defiance West, order freed Arab influences.1 At time, immobilising double-bind involved such stance seems gone largely unnoticed. | chapter | en | Civilization|Turkish|Politics|Ideology|Elite|Westernization|Morality|Nationalism|Political science|Political economy|Aesthetics|Sociology|Law|Modernization theory|Philosophy|Linguistics | https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230277397_16 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2466841060', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230277397_16', 'mag': '2466841060'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Palgrave Macmillan UK eBooks |
“Westoxicated” | Nicholas Danforth (https://openalex.org/A5001940958) | 2,018 | Perin Gürel’s The Limits of Westernization: A Cultural History America in Turkey offers an innovative, compelling, and much needed addition to the literature on cultural politics Turkey. Starting from premise that United States has always served as a model foil Turkish debates over Westernization, Gürel explores contested image past century better understand how citizens, thinkers, politicians have imagined itself. At time when popular even scholarly accounts often depict rise President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan his Islamist allies backlash authoritarian Westernization Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, Gürel's approach provides particularly valuable corrective. Her account shows how, throughout modern history, those seeking define limits criticized rivals for being both “too Western” “not Western enough.” For no less than contemporary critics, figure “hyper-Westernized” or “westoxicated” individual, infatuated with culture supporting political aims, provided crucial object derision. Even at height Atatürk’s reforms, these overly figures bounds appropriate politics. Ironically, current criticism Ataturk’s regime its excessive commitment is only latest iteration discourse Atatürk himself made good use of. | article | en | Westernization|Turkish|Politics|Political science|Authoritarianism|Criticism|Gender studies|Sociology|History|Law|Philosophy|Democracy|Linguistics|Modernization theory | https://doi.org/10.1093/dh/dhy029 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4243653267', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1093/dh/dhy029'} | Turkey | C144024400 | Sociology | Diplomatic History |
“We’re All in the Same Boat” – The Experience of People With Mental Health Conditions and Non-clinical Community Members in Integrated Arts-Based Groups | Aya Nitzan (https://openalex.org/A5073747072)|Hod Orkibi (https://openalex.org/A5060017086) | 2,021 | In recent decades there has been a significant increase in community rehabilitation programs for people with mental health conditions. One such nationwide is Amitim Israel whose mission to foster the psychosocial of conditions community. ’s flagship program consists arts-based groups that integrate participants and non-clinical members. To better understand experiences these groups, five focus were conducted from 15 integrated groups. total, 17 21 members interviewed this qualitative study. Three main themes emerged thematic analysis: creation expression through arts promote well-being, self-disclosure safe space encourages sense belonging, “we are all same boat.” The underscored role facilitating emotional expression, self-discovery, interpersonal communication, spiritual elevation. findings suggest facilitators should instill equality by enabling intergroup acquaintances without labeling participants’ status. Integrated be accompanied professional who can contain work complex situations when needed. Arts therapists specialize both particularly suitable role. Overall, interviewees reported participation positively impacted their personal recovery processes providing corrective experience as well enhancing belonging social relationships. also being empowered final artistic event not only enhanced visibility, competence, aspirations future development personal, interpersonal, realms, but helped combat self- public stigma. | article | en | The arts|Mental health|Psychology|Thematic analysis|Psychosocial|Rehabilitation|Sense of community|Focus group|Social psychology|Qualitative research|Psychotherapist|Sociology|Visual arts|Social science|Art|Neuroscience|Anthropology | https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.661831 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3137163300', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.661831', 'mag': '3137163300', 'pmid': 'https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33815238', 'pmcid': 'https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/8010183'} | Israel | C134362201|C144024400 | Mental health|Sociology | Frontiers in Psychology|PubMed Central |
“We’re not a bank providing support”: Street-level bureaucrats and Syrian refugee youth navigating tensions in higher education scholarship programs in Lebanon | Vidur Chopra (https://openalex.org/A5062838959) | 2,020 | Scholarships are increasingly used to expand higher education access for refugee youth in exile, but less is known about their equity implications. Drawing from scholarship on street-level bureaucrats and Nancy Fraser’s theory of social justice, I identify bureaucrats’ (SLBs) decision-making within education. 62 interviews with Syrian organizations NGOs Lebanon, 24 organizational, scholarship-related documents, elaborate the fundamental (mis)alignments that emerge scholarship-granting organizations’ goals, needs they seek support. Organizations over-emphasize transitions university, overlooking most vulnerable youths’ through university. Though link futures opportunity not geography, SLBs fund willing return Syria engage post-conflict reconstruction. | article | en | Scholarship|Refugee|Sociology|Equity (law)|Criminology|Public relations|Political science|Gender studies|Public administration|Law | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijedudev.2020.102216 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3040923991', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijedudev.2020.102216', 'mag': '3040923991'} | Lebanon|Syria | C144024400 | Sociology | International Journal of Educational Development |
“We’re not that much different from you!”: navigating positions of betweenness to explore solidarity, care and vulnerability in refugee and forced migration research | Rik Huizinga (https://openalex.org/A5088992767) | 2,023 | This paper argues that through reflexive examination of positions betweenness in research relationships, insights are gathered help to understand and address the often-contested spaces refugee forced migration research. Following completion a project with Syrian male refugees Netherlands, I investigate how multiple identities shifting social impact ethical considerations knowledge production. Over time, men occupy various due intersections gender, generation, religion, ethnicity status, emphasis between similarities differences. show focus on within these relationships may lead sites trust solidarity, mutual acts support care, into vulnerability. As result, first highlights as strategy develop practices by speaking wider contexts cultural inequalities momentarily transfer some power process participants. Second, demonstrates novel dynamic messy nature refugees’ everyday lives gained allow both ‘normal’ ‘vulnerable’ surface. | article | en | Betweenness centrality|Refugee|Solidarity|Sociology|Vulnerability (computing)|Reflexivity|Forced migration|Gender studies|Social psychology|Political science|Psychology|Social science|Law|Politics|Computer security|Mathematics|Combinatorics|Centrality|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1080/14649365.2023.2186472 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4328129514', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/14649365.2023.2186472'} | Syria | C144024400 | Sociology | Social & Cultural Geography |
“We’ve Won” | Asher Schechter (https://openalex.org/A5026757999) | 2,017 | The far right in Israel largely celebrated Donald Trump's presidential triumph and believes it now has the latitude to enact some of its more controversial policies. Journalist Asher Schechter examines anti-democratic trends Israel, argues yet offer a cohesive, sustainable blueprint for country's future. | article | en | Blueprint|Democracy|Presidential system|Political science|Political economy|Media studies|Economic history|Law|Sociology|History|Art|Politics|Visual arts | https://doi.org/10.1215/07402775-3903748 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2602924186', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1215/07402775-3903748', 'mag': '2602924186'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | World Policy Journal |
“What Did the Corpse Want?” Torture in Poetry | Sinan Antoon (https://openalex.org/A5071519393) | 2,012 | This chapter provides the first English translations and analyses of poems written by only two Iraqi writers to publish about Abu Ghraib, Saadi Youssef (“The Wretched Heavens”) Sargon Bulus Corpse”). It discusses textual strategies that they employ speak on behalf victims torture without appropriating their suffering or memory for a particular political agenda. argues “The Heavens” employs both Qur’anic Biblical motifs in an effort blur cultural identities religious traditions line with Youssef’s adherence communist vision reclaims agency tortured prisoners. Bulus’s Corpse” describes acts but not pain resulting from them writing perspective corpse whose means communication is gesture undecipherable signs. The fixity its gaze directed at us as well torturers. | chapter | en | Torture|Poetry|Literature|Politics|Art|History|Human rights|Law|Political science | https://doi.org/10.5422/fordham/9780823242245.003.0007 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2496113007', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.5422/fordham/9780823242245.003.0007', 'mag': '2496113007'} | Iraq | C169437150 | Human rights | Fordham University Press eBooks |
“What Do They Want from Us?” | Patricia Layzell Ward (https://openalex.org/A5054810521) | 2,020 | Stakeholders in the transnational aid sector are increasingly calling for more “localization”: relying on local workers to implement projects their respective home countries. This paper asks: What do organizations expect from employees, and how these expectations shape employees’ work routines? Drawing data collected over seven months of fieldwork Jordan, a major global hub, I find that hold cultural assumptions about recruitment employees. Furthermore, much ambivalent conflictual than existing scholarship suggests. Employers want locals who “Westernized professionals”: impartial, objective, transparent, dispassionate workers. But they also employees act “non-Western” ways, as “traditional locals” (reifying orientalist tropes related corruption Arab culture), make work. Echoing Bhabha’s argument colonial subject stereotypes strategically ambivalent—“almost same, but not white”—I show engage specific types extra employers—what call hybridized labor—to try meet conflicting expectations. | article | en | Argument (complex analysis)|Ambivalence|Scholarship|Work (physics)|Subject (documents)|Orientalism|Public relations|Sociology|Language change|Colonialism|Political science|Political economy|Social psychology|Law|Psychology|History|Mechanical engineering|Art|Biochemistry|Chemistry|Literature|Library science|Computer science|Engineering|Archaeology | https://doi.org/10.1525/sod.2020.6.3.318 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3089979730', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1525/sod.2020.6.3.318', 'mag': '3089979730'} | Jordan | C144024400 | Sociology | Sociology of development |
“What Do You Expect?”: A Qualitative Content Analysis Study to Explain the Expectations of the Families of Patients Undergoing Surgery | Fazlollah Ahmadi (https://openalex.org/A5081267094)|Anoshirvan Kazemnejad (https://openalex.org/A5021813860)|Maryam Azizi (https://openalex.org/A5051753632) | 2,023 | Background: Surgery is one of the most frequent healthcare events worldwide. Individuals have different expectations surgery. As adult patients a family member beside them and presence important, this study was aimed to explain families undergoing Methods: This qualitative carried out using conventional content analysis method. A purposive sample members surgery recruited with maximum variation from hospitals in Tehran, Iran, 2019. The sampling method sampling. data were collected through semi-structured interviews. Data collection continued until categories saturated. In total, 29 interviews conducted 25 members, 3 nurses, 1 surgeon. Results: Overall, conducted. total 811 primary codes without overlap, 446 36 subcategories, 11 generic extracted. Finally, four main obtained, named endless confusion, giving share care, exaggerated focus on obvious behaviors, accepting existence family. Conclusions: Families come apart at seams. Their needs might not be met are usually considered unimportant. They need seen, heard, considered, understood, and, importantly, accepted by providers, especially nurses. | article | en | Nonprobability sampling|Confusion|Content analysis|Qualitative research|Data collection|Medicine|Health care|Family medicine|Theoretical sampling|Focus group|Sample (material)|Family member|Psychology|Nursing|Grounded theory|Population|Sociology|Social science|Environmental health|Chemistry|Chromatography|Anthropology|Psychoanalysis|Economics|Economic growth | https://doi.org/10.5812/msnj-135587 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4322212416', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.5812/msnj-135587'} | Iran | C144024400|C160735492 | Health care|Sociology | انعکاس امید |
“What Hinders Us from Safeguarding Maltreated Children?” A Report from Kuwaiti Child Protection Workers | 2,023 | Due to the scarcity of studies on subject workers in field child protection, their professional practices and challenges they face prevent achievement some goals protection process. In addition, Child Protection Law Kuwait is one modern laws that was enacted 2015. Therefore, this study aims reveal facing Kuwait. A qualitative method used address research question. Data were collected using semi-structured interviews from a sample 12 workers. The results related revealed range problems caregivers including training knowledge gaps, limited authority implementation, unrealized expectations. overall conclusion shows despite fact numerous challenges, identified interventions could significantly improve effectiveness. government together with relevant organizations should increase organization workshops courses, working establish rules for managing case so as not disturb families. Keywords : workers, social abuse, professionalism-based authority, proactive parental participation. DOI: https://doi.org/10.55463/hkjss.issn.1021-3619.62.22 | article | en | Child protection|Safeguarding|Government (linguistics)|Child abuse|Social work|Psychological intervention|Child rights|Scarcity|Public relations|Political science|Psychology|Medicine|Nursing|Environmental health|Poison control|Suicide prevention|Human rights|Law|Linguistics|Philosophy|Economics|Microeconomics | https://doi.org/10.55463/hkjss.issn.1021-3619.62.22 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4389428648', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.55463/hkjss.issn.1021-3619.62.22'} | Kuwait | C169437150|C2776743756|C2779415726|C3019907584 | Child protection|Child rights|Human rights|Safeguarding | Hong Kong Journal of Social Sciences |
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“What I Can’t Change I Don’t See”: How Cultural Minorities Perceive Their Media Representations—Immigrants from the Former Soviet Union in Israel as a Case Study | Nissim Katz (https://openalex.org/A5043996040)|Hillel Nossek (https://openalex.org/A5030683373) | 2,021 | This study examines how members of a cultural minority perceive their representations in the mainstream media, using immigrants to Israel from Former Soviet Union (FSU) as case study. The research applies Jaspers’ psychological theory on boundary situations media consumption provide theoretical conceptualization and empirical implementation FSU interpret television. proposes original concept communication contributes understanding regard representations. conclusions aid formulating model for future studies minorities. | article | en | Conceptualization|Mainstream|Immigration|Empirical research|Sociology|Soviet union|Social psychology|Gender studies|Political science|Psychology|Epistemology|Law|Linguistics|Politics|Philosophy | https://doi.org/10.1080/15562948.2021.1985199 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W3205423039', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/15562948.2021.1985199', 'mag': '3205423039'} | Israel | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies |
“What I Saw for Myself”: Collating Polyphonic Voices in Joe Sacco’s Palestine Narratives | Fiona Farnsworth (https://openalex.org/A5033412990) | 2,019 | This piece foregrounds the relevance of question witness in Joe Sacco’s Palestine and Footnotes Gaza , ways which elasticity comics medium lends itself to representation life under occupation. It asks how nature occupation is visible land architecture contested territory explores capacity register—and represent—this. Later, distinctions are drawn between Sacco as character, narrator, author, arguing that inherent polyphony allows a plurality narratives be woven into nuanced portrayal its inhabitants these transcribed through lens trademark self-deprecation consciousness his own biases. are, it concluded, rendering what himself perceives “essential truth,” without assuming false superiority or objectivity. | article | en | Narrative|Witness|Comics|Polyphony|Literature|History|Aesthetics|Objectivity (philosophy)|Palestine|Media studies|Art|Visual arts|Sociology|Law|Philosophy|Political science|Ancient history|Epistemology | https://doi.org/10.1017/pli.2018.50 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2923827584', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1017/pli.2018.50', 'mag': '2923827584'} | Gaza|Palestine | C144024400 | Sociology | Cambridge Journal of Postcolonial Literary Inquiry |
“What ISIS Really Wants” Revisited: Religion Matters in <i>Jihadist</i> Violence, but How? | Simon Cottee (https://openalex.org/A5002333422) | 2,016 | In his influential and provocative article on “What ISIS Really Wants,” published in The Atlantic March 2015, Graeme Wood argued that “the Islamic state is Islamic. Very Islamic.” He also sought to challenge what he diagnosed as a “western bias” among academics policymakers toward religious ideology, whereby doctrines or beliefs are relegated the status of epiphenomena rather than taken seriously causal properties their own right. Wood's sparked wider—and still ongoing—debate over relationship between Islam jihadist violence. For one side this debate, State Iraq Syria (ISIS) inexplicable without reference scripture; indeed, some commentators politicians have even it represents “true” face Islam; for other side, hideous distortion Islam's teachings, wider political circumstances which emerged response. This attempts forge middle way these two polarized viewpoints by arguing any comprehensive account must recognize both its secular theological bases. More specifically, drawing work intellectual historian Quentin Skinner, argues critics, understandable but misplaced eagerness detach from violence, fail accord proper weight legitimizing role revolutionary ideas—and innovating ideologists who develop these—in commission | article | en | Islam|Ideology|State (computer science)|Law|Politics|Sociology|Religious violence|Viewpoints|Sharia|Political science|Criminology|Philosophy|Theology|Art|Algorithm|Visual arts|Computer science | https://doi.org/10.1080/1057610x.2016.1221258 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2486699590', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/1057610x.2016.1221258', 'mag': '2486699590'} | Iraq|Syria | C144024400|C2778116729 | Religious violence|Sociology | Studies in Conflict & Terrorism|Kent Academic Repository (University of Kent) |
“What Is Islamic About Slavery in Muslim Societies?” Cooper, Concubinage and Contemporary Legacies of ‘Islamic Slavery’ in North, West and East Africa | E. Ann McDougall (https://openalex.org/A5017725506) | 2,018 | “What is Islamic about slavery in an society Africa?”, historian Frederick Cooper asked 1981. He explored the answer terms of how Islam acted as a hegemonic ideology nineteenth-century East Africa, drawing both masters and slaves into its legal cultural world view. Almost forty years later, McDougall argues that Cooper’s question still central; we have not yet fully understood role gender played this process. She asks: “How did experience being female, rather than male, shape reality Muslim masters’ slaves’ lives?” had also reminded us was institution shaped by dynamic between owners owned. Since, research variety societies has revealed other networks relationships slaves, freed for example, are ‘gendered’ essence but almost invisible if viewed only through frameworks focused on dichotomies power.McDougall’s exploration these realities based oral histories female masters, concubines from author’s fieldwork Morocco Mauritania, alongside published accounts M.G. Smith (Northern Nigeria) Margaret Strobel (East Africa). Her focus household highlights mistresses managing labour lives their often including intra-slave/freed marriages, habitation, birth rituals, while always necessitating responsibility ensuring early education morality. The controversial notion ‘constructed kin’ invoked context, themselves. concubine elusive element what makes may be large part located core female-slave status—“the most detailed area social life texts” (Cooper). stories reveal differences individual treated legitimate offspring, well ‘customary practices’ inserted themselves locally religion. But importantly, they illuminate widely shared understanding articulated crucial intersection Islam, left living legacy. | chapter | en | Islam|Hegemony|Context (archaeology)|Dichotomy|Ideology|Gender studies|Power (physics)|Morality|Sociology|History|Religious studies|Political science|Law|Politics|Archaeology|Philosophy|Physics|Epistemology|Quantum mechanics | https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-59755-7_2 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2897379379', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-59755-7_2', 'mag': '2897379379'} | Morocco | C144024400 | Sociology | Palgrave Macmillan US eBooks |
“What Is This Palestine, Anyway?”: Two Second-Generation Palestinian American Women Negotiate Roots and Routes | Mai Serhan (https://openalex.org/A5093297388) | 2,023 | This article examines the process of identity formation as it pertains to two Palestinian American women in United States, specifically New York City. It considers answer a characteristically conversational question West: “What is this Palestine, anyway?” through reading Najla Said’s and Suheir Hammad’s memoirs, Looking for Palestine: Growing Up Confused an Arab-American Family (New York: Riverhead Books, 2013) Drops Story Writers & Readers, 1996), respectively. While memoirs are set socioeconomically different parts City, both narrators chronicle their complicated negotiations around issues belonging, integration, self-worth, body shame second-generation States. The paper argues necessity narrate such experiences, or else risk being outwritten by various Others. Given reality “Palestine” geographically politically, literary space can be powerful locating registering imagined postcolonial experience today. coherently articulate broken Self, rehabilitate politics, retrace violently digressive journeys, find meaning confounding kind nationalism, resist dominant hostile ideologies. Indeed, act narration could not only heal fraught relations between Self Others, but allow envisioning from within. | article | en | Memoir|Negotiation|Identity (music)|Narrative|Palestine|Nationalism|Meaning (existential)|Gender studies|Ideology|Politics|History|Political science|Media studies|Aesthetics|Sociology|Law|Ancient history|Art|Literature|Psychology|Psychotherapist | https://doi.org/10.1080/0377919x.2023.2271178 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W4388834370', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/0377919x.2023.2271178'} | Palestine | C144024400 | Sociology | Journal of Palestine Studies |
“What Is Wrong Cannot Be Made Right”? Why Has Media Reform Been Sidelined in the Debate Over “Social Justice” in Israel? | Amit M. Schejter (https://openalex.org/A5068648476)|Noam Tirosh (https://openalex.org/A5090754420) | 2,015 | When hundreds of thousands Israelis took to the streets in summer 2011, protesting high cost living and demanding “social justice,” ills media system including its concentration, growing digital divide, implosion public broadcasting were not made part social movement's agenda. This study employs a justice-based theory for media, analyzing three types “products” movement: unionization workers, establishment alternative reports recommending regulatory/institutional reform. We attempt understand why reform, an essential element without which justice cannot be fully achieved, has been sidelined debate over ways achieve justice” Israel. | article | en | Social justice|Economic Justice|Social media|Sociology|Social movement|Political science|Element (criminal law)|Public relations|Law|Public administration|Criminology|Politics | https://doi.org/10.1080/15295036.2014.998514 | {'openalex': 'https://openalex.org/W2001983072', 'doi': 'https://doi.org/10.1080/15295036.2014.998514', 'mag': '2001983072'} | Israel | C139621336|C144024400|C2982832299 | Economic Justice|Social justice|Sociology | Critical Studies in Media Communication |