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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.
131

Indefinite Ethnicity in Fact and Fiction: "Invisible Color" or "Honkified Meanderings"?

Hughes, Anita Louise 17 December 2005 (has links) (PDF)
Passing, both standard and reverse, is the process of changing ethnicity. The methodology of reverse passing varies, but claiming "no color" is ineffective in fact and fiction as can be seen in James McBride's The Color of Water, Shirlee Taylor Haizlip's The Sweeter the Juice, Danzy Senna's Caucasia, and Rosellen Brown's Half a Heart. The characters in these texts attempt indefinite ethnicity by denying color and are prone to restlessness and failure until they accept racial duality.
132

Fatherhood and Fatherland in Chimamanda Adichie's "Purple Hibiscus".

Peters, Audrey D 18 December 2010 (has links) (PDF)
Purple Hibiscus, a novel by third-generation Nigerian author Chimamanda Adichie, appears at first glance to be a simple work of adolescent fiction, a bildungsroman in which a pair of siblings navigate the typical challenges of incipient adulthood: social ostracism, an abusive parent, emerging desire. However, the novel's setting-a revolutionary-era Nigeria-is clearly intended to evoke post-Biafra Nigeria, itself the setting of Adichie's other major work, Half of a Yellow Sun. This setting takes Purple Hibiscus beyond the scope of most modern adolescent fiction, creating a complex allegory in which the emergence of self and struggle for identity of the Achike siblings represent Nigeria's own struggle for identity. Adichie achieves this allegory by allowing the father figures of the novel to represent the different political paths Nigeria could have followed in its post-colonial period. The Achike siblings' identities develop through interactions with each of these patriarchs.
133

Status Disputes and Defiance in Postcolonial Relations: : How Can We understand France’s Increasingly Contested Status in Francophone West Africa?

Gloger, Janusz January 2022 (has links)
France is currently being faced with an increasing fury and insurrection in its former African colonies. This took many commentators by surprise. Afterall, French influence has been waning for at least two decades in the face of an increasing array of “new” players entering – what used to be considered – France’s “backyard”. Furthermore, French leaders have long expressed remorse and condemned France’s shady activities of the past. This is particularly the case for Macron who, in the name of being part of an entirely “new generation” of leaders, presents himself as an ally of African progress. How then, can we possibly understand the “anti-French sentiment” that has shaken-up the continent in recent years? This paper seeks to contribute to a better understanding of France’s contested status by providing a regional case study of francophone West-Africa. Drawing on Holsti’s role theory approach and Bull’s “Great Power” and “Recognition” concepts, this study analyzes the perception of French and West-African officials to investigate how and to what extent France is being challenged by decision-makers. It finds that albeit defiance towards France appears to be less prevalent among West-African decision-makers than the general-public, it is a phenomenon of regional scale that displays a high degree of convergence and has practical ramifications on Franco-African relations. It concludes that France’s historically based claims to a privileged relation with its former colonies is increasingly being challenged by West-African decision-makers due to its difficulty to justify itself in an increasingly multipolar world.
134

The Interactive Impact of Social Identities on Voter Turnout in the 2012 Presidential Election

Mendez, Karla M 01 January 2022 (has links) (PDF)
The first Black American president ran for re-election in the 2012 election, which saw record-breaking voter turnout. After this election, scholars sought to examine what social identities impacted voter turnout and, found that non-Hispanic Black voters played a critical role in shaping President Obama’s success. Although the effects of social identities on voter turnout are the focus of an extensive body of existing research, many scholars study the separate effects of characteristics, such as race/ethnicity, gender or party identification. Utilizing public opinion data from the 2016 General Survey Study (GSS), this paper seeks to examine the intersectional effects of race, ethnicity, and gender on voter turnout in the 2012 Presidential Election. The findings of this can assist in understanding the impact these social identities had on turnout for non-Hispanic Black women in the 2012 presidential election and provide a basis for studying these intersecting factors in succeeding elections.
135

Post-Colonial Economic Development of the United Republic of Tanzania

Ashagre, Tadesse 05 1900 (has links)
Tanzania achieved full self-government on May 1st, 1961 and adopted its constitution on December 9th, 1962. It is a member of the British Commonwealth, the Organization of African Unity and the United Nations. Tanzania is a developing country predominantly dependent upon agriculture. Tanzania's rate of economic development, relative to other African countries, is mid-way between the wealthiest and the poorest. The economic development of Tanzania is analyzed in detail between the years from 1961 to 197. The dual policy of development adopted by the Tanzanian government called for unbalanced growth in both agriculture and industry. To a certain extent that policy was proven successful.
136

Kvinnor, kolonialism, klimatförändringar och katastrofer - en scoping review / Women, Colonialsim, Climate change and Disasters - A Scoping Review

Fladvad, Tora January 2022 (has links)
In early 2022, the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) released its sixth evaluation report on the state of the global climate crisis. For the first time in thirty years global exploitation and colonial dominance was mentioned not only as a "driver of the climate crisis", but also as an ongoing element that exacerbates societies vulnerability to it. However, existing literature that specifically addresses the relationship between colonialism, climate change and women's vulnerability is relatively small and scattered. For these reasons, a multidisciplinary research review (scoping review) was conducted, in order to map the extent of "colonialism" as a contributing factor to women's increased vulnerability in relation to climate change and climate-related disasters. This study brings together literature from different research disciplines to examine how and under what circumstances colonialism is highlighted as an explanatory factor for women's increased vulnerability, as well as in Global North and Global South. The results shows that although the legacy of colonialism is manifested in different ways in different contexts, women's increased vulnerability may be linked to the reproduction of racism and hegemonic social structures with roots in colonial dominance. Finally, it is emphasized that this research overview should be seen as a complement to future studies, with the aim of minimizing women's vulnerability to climate induced disasters in the long term. Future attempts to address individuals' vulnerability should therefore apply a postcolonial lens to understand the specific societal dynamics in a particular context which may worsen the ability of certain groups to deal with the negative consequences of climate change.
137

Non-delinquency among American-Chinese youth : a pilot study

Mar, Conrad Foo 01 January 1964 (has links) (PDF)
It was the purpose of this study: (1) to examine the obstacles in research in the uniquely difficult area of sampling of the American-Chinese population and (2) to find out what descriptive approaches do not produce resistance, hopefully to suggest future research in this area and (3) to obtain historical and descriptive data which might offer, from a sample of both delinquent and non-delinquent American-Chinese youth, some clues to the rehabilitation of youthful offenders. Specifically, this was basically an attempt to obtain an available sample of both delinquent and non-delinquent American-Chinese youth for the purpose of identifying some of the psychosocial variables which might have deterrent influences upon delinquency.
138

DISMANTLING BIFURCATING DISCOURSES OF HOMELESSNESS: TOWARD AN ONTOLOGY OF LAND/BODY SIMULTANEITY AND RESISTANCE TO THE SEVERING VIOLENCE OF OCCUPATION, SETTLEMENT AND DEVELOPMENT

Stearns, Gessie 11 1900 (has links)
This thesis inquires into the transformative potentials and possibilities of attending specifically to matters of occupation, settlement and development for rearticulating discourses and knowledge relations on homelessness to undermine the projects of separation of land from body. Through an historiographical analysis applied to the National Housing Strategy (NHS), Reaching Home (RH), and Housing First (HF), as contemporary Canadian iterations of housing and homelessness policy and practice, this work critically examines representations, attentions, and omissions to understand, engage, and intervene on considerations of the common projects that constitute discourses on homelessness. This analysis found that contemporary understandings communicate and define the homeless body as an identity of lack, novel to the neoliberal contemporary that omit attentions to homelessness as a colonial capitalist process implicated in ongoing, relational, and severed histories of violence. This work also revealed that NHS, RH, and HF operationalize solutions to ending homelessness through abstracted/eugenic ‘expert’ medicalized, liberalized, and market-based systems/taxonomies of worth that reify/silo/silence/erase knowledges through and by embodied projects and discourses of ‘rights’, justice, care, and help. While NHS, RH, and HF claim ‘housing as a right’ and advocate deinstitutionalization via a discourse of ‘choice’ in a market system, this work revealed these discourses to be part of a redeveloped economic institutionalized politics severed, rearticulated, and managed in the social sphere. These findings are considered as a violence of Land/Body bifurcation possible through and by the imposition of claims on body and land in the creation and maintenance of ideal citizen subjects as settlement subjectivities becoming self-determined rights holders, consumers, tenants, and citizen placeholders in a commodified market for home. Overall, this project aims to contribute to a resistance of the severing violence of occupation, settlement, and development through an ontology of Land/Body simultaneity offering possibilities for transformational intervention into the context from which the ideas of homeless bodies and landscapes emerge. / Thesis / Master of Social Work (MSW)
139

Moving Towards "Pow Wow-Step" / Moving Towards "Pow Wow-Step": Constructions of "the Indian" and A Tribe Called Red's Mobilization of Art as Resistance

DiEmanuele, Elizabeth 11 1900 (has links)
The relationship between Indigenous peoples and Canadians is fraught with political and cultural divides. While Idle No More garnered some momentum to raise awareness of the need for political change, there has yet to be an approach that has popularly engaged and compelled response from Canadians. This thesis project navigates the political potential of artists, who can both accumulate cross-cultural audiences through entertainment and incite change through their vocalizations in performance. Offering a case-study approach to the Indigenous music group, A Tribe Called Red, this project considers their compelling Indigenous space-making work through their performance and celebrity. Drawing from this work, this project offers a navigation between the need for respectful cross-cultural dialogue between Indigenous peoples and Canadians and the actionable change that can occur through popular entertainment and its intimate connections. / Thesis / Master of Arts (MA) / The relationship between Indigenous peoples and Canadians is fraught with political and cultural divides. While Idle No More garnered some momentum to raise awareness of the need for political change, there has yet to be an approach that has popularly engaged and compelled response from Canadians. This thesis project navigates the political potential of artists, who can both accumulate cross-cultural audiences through entertainment and incite change through their vocalizations in performance. Offering a case-study approach to the Indigenous music group, A Tribe Called Red, this project considers their compelling Indigenous space-making work through their performance and celebrity. Drawing from this work, this project offers a navigation between the need for respectful cross-cultural dialogue between Indigenous peoples and Canadians and the actionable change that can occur through popular entertainment and its intimate connections.
140

Sediment Magnetic Record of Post-colonial Environmental Change in Frenchman's Bay, Lake Ontario

Clark, Christina 09 1900 (has links)
<p>Frenchman's Bay is a shallow coastal lagoon (0.84 km2) located near the eastern limits of the Toronto urban area. Wholesale land clearance in the 1850's and subsequent industrialization and urbanization of the watershed have had severely impacted wetland habitats and degraded sediment and water quality. Prior to implementation of remediation work, a detailed sedimentologic and magnetic property study was conducted to determine the impacts of post-colonial land use changes in Frenchman's Bay. 11 vibrocores (2-4.5m length) were extracted from the lagoon and 3 5 magnetic susceptibility profiles were collected using a probe driven 1-2 m in the lagoon floor. The core lithofacies were logged in detail and magnetic susceptibility (K, x.) and remanence parameters (NRM, SIRM, Bcr) were measured at 2 cm intervals. Magnetic property and lithofacies data were integrated with geochemical analyses (TOC, C03) and 210Pb dating of core in order to reconstruct the lagoon lithostratigraphy and the thickness of the post-colonial 'anthropogenic layer'. </p> <p>The stratigraphic succession in the lagoon consists of a thick upper sequence of marly gyttja and peat-rich silty marls overlying Holocene laminated marls. The postcolonial layer (Unit 1) is recognized as an uppermost high magnetic susceptibility (x = ~200-300 xl0-8 m3/Kg) gyttja layer that extends to 1-1.5 m depth. The base of the unit has a 210Pb age of 1850 (±55.6), corresponding with the main phase of land clearance and onset of industrialization of the harbour. Titanomagnetite, maghemite and magnetite spherules are the primary magnetic minerals, indicating soil erosion and coal burning as the predominant sources of magnetic particles. The underlying Unit 2 consists of peaty marls with abundant plant fragments recording a more extensive marsh. Unit 3 consists of more carbonate-rich laminated sands (magnetic susceptibility x = 6000 x10-8 m3/Kg) deposited in a low energy oligotrophic lagoon. The basal layer (Unit 4) consists of high magnetic susceptibility massive pebbly muds, which record a pre-lagoon phase of higher water levels in post-glacial Lake Iroquois (ca. 13,500 Ka). </p> <p> Isopach mapping of the magnetostratigraphic units clearly identifies that the anthropogenic layer (Unit I; post-1850) is thickest within a central basin which has acted as trap for sediment carried into the lagoon by several streams. The total volume of impacted anthropogenic sediment is estimated at 4 x105 m3. Isopach maps also identify two thin(< 2 m) wedges of sand (9.6 x104 m3) near the north and southern shores of the bay that records periodic overwash and growth of the beach barrier. </p> <p>The major environmental changes in the lagoon since it inception (ca. 2. 7 Ka include: 1. The formation of a shallow coastal embayment following water level rise from a mid-Holocene low-stand in Lake Ontario (Unit 4); 2. Development of a spit and beach barrier by eastward longshore transport (Unit 3); 3. Closure of the lagoon and development of a stabilized marsh habitat with low sedimentation levels (Unit 2); 4. Destruction of marsh habitats and eutrophication of the lagoon coinciding with land clearance (post-1850's) and an increased in the influx of sediments eroded from the catchment area. </p> / Thesis / Master of Science (MS)

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