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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
91

Les usagers des campus universitaires marseillais face à la délinquance et aux incivilités / University campuses users in Marseille confronting delinquency and incivility

Weiss, Pierre Olivier 03 December 2018 (has links)
La question de la sécurité et du sentiment d’insécurité à Marseille se résume trop souvent à la problématique des « cités » et à l’image des trafics de drogue et des règlements de compte qu’ils évoquent. Ces sujets sont certes réels et importants, mais ils ne doivent pas occulter les problèmes de « délinquance » et d’« incivilités » plus classiques et autrement plus nombreux qui se posent dans toutes les grandes villes, de multiples manières. Les années 1980, sous l’influence des recherches anglo-saxonnes, marquent justement un tournant majeur puisque, conscient des limites de la statistique administrative, on commence à mesurer ces phénomènes sociaux du point de vue de la victime. Alors que des enquêtes en population sont réalisées en France depuis plusieurs années, aucune d’entre elles ne s’intéresse aux usagers des campus universitaires quand bien même les effectifs d’étudiants explosent dans le dernier quart du 20e siècle. En effet, aujourd’hui, l’université représente un passage obligé pour une part importante de la jeunesse.Comment, les campus universitaires, des espaces sociaux similaires au premier regard, laissent-ils apparaître des différences en termes de victimation et de sentiment d’insécurité ? Quelle est le volume des victimations recensées et qui sont les victimes ? Peut-on comprendre l’origine des peurs éventuelles des étudiants et des personnels de l’université ? En quoi l’organisation de la sécurité, les problèmes de délinquance locale ainsi que les représentations sociales forment-ils un ensemble de phénomènes qui s’articulent et s’alimentent ? / The question of security and fear of crime in Marseille is all too often limited to the problem of "cités", the image of drug trafficking and the settling of accounts they evoke. These topics are certainly real and important, but they should not overshadow the more classic and numerous "delinquency" and "incivility" problems that arise in many ways, in all major cities. The 1980s, under the influence of Anglo-Saxon research, mark a turning point. Aware of the limits of administrative statistics, we began to measure these types of social phenomena from the point of view of the victim. While population surveys have been carried out in France for several years, none of them are interested in members of university campuses even though the student population exploded in the last quarter of the 20th century. Indeed, today, the university represents a necessary passage for a substantial part of the youth.How do social spaces, which are similar at first glance, reveal differences in terms of victimization and fear of crime? What is the intensity of victimization and who are the victims? Can we understand the origin of the fears of students and university staff? In what way are the security organizations, the problems of local delinquency as well as the social representations a set of phenomena that articulate and feed each other?This thesis, which is a part of the sociology of delinquency and urban sociology fields, does not resolutely lean towards spectacular crime incidents absent from the campus landscape, but rather, towards everyday life problems of members of 3 main Marseilles’ campuses.
92

L'incivilité en droit privé / Incivility in private law

Tabaraud, Émilie 08 October 2015 (has links)
« Impolitesse », « manque de savoir-vivre », « petits désordres », voire même « infraction pénale », sont autant de qualificatifs utilisés pour dénoncer les effets néfastes de l’incivilité dans les relations sociales. Présentée comme « le » phénomène responsable des maux de la société, les mesures informelles pour endiguer l’incivilité se multiplient. Néanmoins, celles-ci se révélant insuffisantes à contenir son expansion, l’intervention de la matière juridique apparaît inéluctable. En effet, le droit, et plus spécialement le droit privé, qui a pour fonction de réguler les relations entre les particuliers, ne peut ignorer la pression exercée par le groupe social pour contraindre les citoyens à respecter les règles élémentaires de la vie en société. S’il faut alors saluer l’intervention du législateur pour dénoncer et cantonner les dangers de l’incivilité, la méthode utilisée pour ce faire est fortement contestable. Méconnaissant la logique qui préside à l’élaboration de toute règle de droit, il ne s’est effectivement pas interrogé sur ce que recouvre précisément l’incivilité, se contentant de reprendre à son compte les études sociologiques liant « incivilité » et « insécurité ». De la sorte, seul le droit pénal a été utilisé pour traiter un comportement par nature peu attentatoire à l’ordre public. Or, dans une perspective de véritable juridicisation de l’incivilité, cette méprise doit être corrigée. Pour cela, il convient de dégager les contours de la notion d’incivilité juridique, puis de l’assortir d’un régime juridique propre, susceptible de permettre aux citoyens de mieux « vivre ensemble », en préservant les conditions essentielles à une société démocratique. / « Rudeness », « want of mannerliness », « behaviour disturbances » or even « criminal offence » belong to numerous qualifiers used to name the harmful effects of incivility in social relations. Presented as « the » phenomenon responsible for evils afflicting our society, it more and more requires appropriate reprisals in order to avoid overwhelming increase. Nevertheless, as they are appearing insufficient to contain its expansion, the intervention of the lawmaker appears unavoidable. Indeed, the law, particularly private law meant for regulating relations between individuals cannot ignore the pressure exerted by the social group to compel individuals to respect basic rules of social life issues. If lawmaker’s interference has to be welcomed for incivilities containment, the method seems to be highly questionable. Considering the legislator’s lack of knowledge as far as law’s elaboration is concerned, it is advisable to precisely define what encompasses incivility and the borderline between incivility and insecurity. To these days, one has just affected to criminal law in order to cope with definitively barely offensive behaviour to public order. Considering the jurisdictionnal issues linked to incivility, correcting the initial misunderstanding is highly desirable. Henceforth, the concept and limits of incivility have to be properly identified. From which a specific system will be settled allowing citizens to better « living together » and as the same time preserving the essential conditions for a democratic society.
93

Antecedents and outcomes of work-linked couple incivility

Jones, Morgan Dakota January 2014 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / Workplace incivility has been shown to have negative organizational and individual effects on people who experience this low-intensity deviant behavior. Research has recently begun to look at incivility as a form of modern discrimination that may be used to target out-groups within organizations, where out-groups are broadly defined. The first goal of the current study was to examine the impact of incivility on work-linked couples. Second, the present study sought to determine the effect that experiences of WLC incivility had on individual and organizational outcomes: burnout, job satisfaction, and turnover intentions. Finally, although the outcomes of incivility have been well-established, the antecedents of this phenomenon have been examined considerably less. Therefore, the present study sought to examine and explain the relationship between a climate for formality, gender, and WLC incivility. To accomplish these goals a snowball sampling method was used to recruit a total of 86 participants for an online survey. Hierarchal regression and bootstrapping mediation were used to analyze the data. Results showed that WLC incivility was predictive of burnout, job dissatisfaction, and turnover intentions. Furthermore, both burnout and job satisfaction were shown to mediate the relationship between WLC incivility and turnover intentions. The theoretical and practical implications of these results are discussed as well as potential areas for future research.
94

Professional Hurt: The Untold Stories

Brown, Ruby Macksine 02 June 2014 (has links)
No description available.
95

Incivility in social media as agonistic democracy? : a discourse theory analysis of dislocation and repair in select government texts in Kenya

Katiambo, David 07 1900 (has links)
In an era when adversarial politics is condemned for either being archaic or right-wing extremism, proposing that incivility can be used to counter existing hegemonies, despite its potential to incite violence, is proposing an unorthodox project. By rejecting foundationalist approaches to the current incivility crisis, this study sees an opportunity for it to act as a populist rapture that defies simple binary categorisation and deconstructs incivility, at an ontological level, to reveal the deep meanings and concealed causes that contrast the grand narrative of hate speech. After an overview in chapter one, the study continues with a theoretical review of literature on incivility, guided by the works of radical democracy theorists who universalise what seems particular to Kenya. This review is followed by the description of Bakhtin’s concept of carnivalesque as utani, a joking relationship common in East Africa. For its theoretical perspective, the study is guided by Mouffe’s theory of agonistic democracy and a research method developed by transforming Laclau and Mouffe’s (1985) work in Hegemony and Socialist Strategy: Towards a Radical Democratic, into a method for Discourse Analysis. Various concepts from Laclau and Mouffe’s work are used to innovate an explanation of how political practices in social media, both linguistic and material texts, enhance incivility and the struggle to fix a regime’s preferred meaning. Guided by Laclau and Mouffe’s Discourse Analysis, the study describes how the government is using linguistic tools and physical technologies to repair the dislocation caused by incivility in social media in its attempts to re-create hegemonic practices. Without engaging in naïve reversal of the polarities between acceptable and unacceptable speech, and considering that at the ontological level politics is a friend—enemy relation, the study argues that incivility in social media is part of the return of politics in a post-political era, rather than simple unacceptable speech. While remaining aware of the dangers of extreme speech, but without reinforcing the anti-political rational consensus narrative, incivility is seen as having disruptive counterhegemonic potential, that is, if we consider the powerplay inherent in democracy. It means that binary opposition is blind to the way power produces, and is countered through unacceptable speech. / Communication Science / D. Litt. et Phil. (Communication Science)
96

Bullying: Out Of The School Halls And Into The Workplace

Cooney, Lucretia 01 January 2010 (has links)
The primary purpose of this study is to identify those people at most risk of being bullied at work. While much research is being conducted on school bullying, little has been conducted on workplace bullying. Using data gathered from a 2004 study conducted by the National Opinion Research Center for the General Social Survey, which included a Quality of Work Life (QWL) module for the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), linear regressions indicated significant findings. As predicted, workers in lower level occupations, as ranked by prestige scoring developed at National Opinion Research, are more likely to be victimized. Data also suggest that being young, Black, and relatively uneducated may contribute to being bullied in certain situations. Future research is needed to examine influences of socio-economic, legal, and other demographic factors that may predict the chance of being bullied.

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