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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.
1

White trash fetish representations of poor white southern women and constructions of class, gender, race and region, 1920-1941 /

Hester, Jessica Lynn. Canning, Charlotte, January 2005 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2005. / Supervisor: Charlotte Canning. Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
2

A comparative study of the determinants of bone strenght and the propensity to falls in black and white South African women /

Conradie, Magda. January 2008 (has links)
Dissertation (PhD)--Unviersity of Stellenbosch, 2008. / Bibliography. Also available via the Internet.
3

It's about more than "Just be consistent" or "Out-tough them" culturally responsive classroom management /

Hubbard, Terrance Michael, January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 2005. / Title from first page of PDF file. Includes bibliographical references (p. 233-245).
4

Experiences of white women in interracial relationships : individuals, partners and mothers

Ward, Patricia January 2016 (has links)
This research is a qualitative, heuristic study involving in-depth interviews with eight white, professional heterosexual women in interracial relationships. The women were found through an opportunistic or snowball approach. The participant women were in the age range 25-60. Six were married and two were in long term relationships. All women had children, seven having mixed-race children between 18 months and 23 years of age. Four women had partners of African-Caribbean heritage, three had partners of African heritage and one had a partner of Nepalese heritage. The women shared their reflections on having to confront the realities of racism, coming to terms with their own ambiguous racial position, facing the notion of whiteness and considering their social position as white women. The research was conducted using a heuristic methodology to explore white women's experiences, using creative images and personal reflective and reflexive narratives integrated throughout the text. The research offers insight into how the social experiences of being in an interracial relationship impacts on white women; as individuals, partners and in their role of mother. Implications for themselves as mothers and parenting their children in a racist context are explored and discussed. The findings suggest the women can feel caught between the known (whiteness) and the unknown (blackness). Having crossed a 'socially unaccepted racialised boundary' and challenging explicit dominant social, gendered and racialised beliefs, the women stepped into the unknown involving experiences of changes in status, challenges to assumptions of their maternal competence and living in a world which involved a continuous process of deconstruction and reconstruction of a new, unforeseen racialised identity. The white women moved from being an 'insider' within their own dominant social experiences, to becoming an 'outsider' within another cultural context, sometimes experiencing uncertainty about where they belonged. The white women experienced a shift of reference group orientation, with a new experience of continuous external scrutiny unfolding. These newly encountered social and personal events challenged the white women to review how they previously saw themselves, with this all impacting on their previously taken for granted social status. These experiences impacted at emotional and cognitive levels. As a consequence, the white women often found themselves occupying a liminal or unknown space where a process occurs of attempting to come to terms with the new experiences, new learning and adopting alternative strategies to deal with these different experiences. Implications for counsellors working with white women in interracial relationships are considered and suggestions for therapeutic engagement are made.
5

Effective Caucasian female teachers of African American students

Walker-Bowen, Wanda. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Mississippi State University. Department of Instructional Systems, Leadership, and Workforce Development. / Title from title screen. Includes bibliographical references.
6

Perfectionism, self-discrepancy, and disordered eating in black and white women

Weishuhn, Amanda S., Bardone-Cone, Anna. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.) University of Missouri-Columbia, 2006. / The entire dissertation/thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appears in the short.pdf file (which also appears in the research.pdf); a non-technical general description, or public abstract, appears in the public.pdf file. Title from title screen of research.pdf file viewed on (June 27, 2007) Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
7

Becoming a Woman for Herself and for and with Others: A Constructivist Grounded Theory Study of the Identity Development of White College Women Educated at Jesuit Colleges and Universities Engaged in Racial Justice Ally Behavior

Cornelius, Lisa M. 18 April 2023 (has links)
No description available.
8

The Impact of Access, Socioeconomic Status, and Education, on Breast Cancer Screening in Boston, MA

Azuonye, Chioma 01 January 2019 (has links)
In Boston Massachusetts, Black and White women aged 50-74, experience limited access to breast cancer screening. The purpose of this quantitative study was to investigate whether there is a correlation between breast cancer screening access to personal healthcare providers among Black and White women, aged 50- 74, in Boston, MA. The study focused on whether there was a correlation between breast cancer screening access and socioeconomic status among women, and whether a correlation existed between breast cancer screening and their educational levels. The study was informed by the health belief psychological framework. The study consisted of secondary data from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System with a sample size of n =1815, 18 years and above. Exclusion criteria consisted of adults under age 40, women above age 74 diagnosed with cancer, and had mastectomies previously. A chi square test examined the relationship between the independent and dependent variables. The key results showed a significant relation between race and access to healthcare providers. The study also found a significant relationship between low income levels and limited access. The study results portrayed a nonsignificant relationship between breast cancer screening and educational levels among black and white women. The results concluded that access to healthcare providers was significant among the races as well as their income levels. The study contributes to social change by promoting awareness through education of individuals, communities, organizations and the society at large.
9

[pt] MULHERES BRANCAS, BRANQUITUDE E AFETO: REFLEXÕES ACERCA DE PERFORMANCES RACIAIS E AFETIVAS BRANCAS, O SENTIR CRÍTICO E O FAZER ACADÊMICO / [en] WHITE WOMEN, RACISM AND AFFECT IN THE BRAZILIAN CONTEXT: REFLECTING UPON PERFORMANCES OF RACE AND AFFECT, ACADEMIC PRACTICES AND CRITICAL FEELING

THAIS REGINA SANTOS BORGES 31 October 2022 (has links)
[pt] O objetivo deste trabalho é refletir sobre como se dá a atualização do racismo à brasileira (Gonzalez, 1984, Munanga, 2010) pelo dispositivo de poder da branquitude (Bento, 2002, 2022, Carneiro, 2005, Schucman, 2012, Schucman; Cardoso et al., 2014, Muller; Cardoso et al., 2017, Conceição, 2020) em performances discursivas de mulheres brancas da classe média crítica (Souza, 2017). Para tal, esta tese segue metodologia qualitativa-interpretativa da Análise de Narrativas (Bastos; Biar, 2015) visando observar as performances raciais e afetivas brancas (Ahmed, 2004, Melo, 2019, 2021) das participantes, nas pequenas histórias (Georgakopoulou, 2015) compartilhadas por elas em conversas exploratórias (Miller, 2003), nas quais refletimos crítico-afetivamente sobre o que significa ser branca no Brasil e onde mora o privilégio branco em suas trajetórias de vida. Em minha escrita, ventilo questões relativas ao fazer acadêmico no contexto da Linguística Aplicada INdisciplinar (Moita Lopes et al., 2006, 2013) e ao sentir crítico (Borges, 2017a, 2017b, 2020, 2021), conceito que trabalho desde a minha dissertação, que se refere ao devir de sensibilidade que nutre e é nutrido nos processos de letramento crítico, cujo foco é a reflexividade crítico-afetiva (foco no afeto), de forma amalgamada ao pensamento crítico (foco cognitivo) e à ação crítica (foco político). As notas reflexivas desta pesquisa trazem a inexorabilidade do dispositivo de poder da branquitude na atualização do racismo em performances raciais e afetivas de mulheres do grupo racial branco, apontando para seu papel fundamental nesse processo, mesmo no contexto da academia dita crítica. Ciente disso, trago reflexões sobre a importância do letramento racial crítico (Ferreira, 2022), do sentir crítico (Borges, 2017a, 2017b, 2020, 2021), do estudo e da coalizão nos abaixo-comuns da Universidade (Harney; Moten, 2013, 2021), a fim de mitigar os efeitos dessas performances na Academia Cubo-Branco (Kilomba, 2019a). / [en] The aim of this paper is to reflect upon how Brazilian racism (Gonzalez, 1984, Munanga, 2010) is actualized by whiteness (Bento, 2002, 2022, Carneiro, 2005, Schucman, 2012, Schucman; Cardoso et al., 2014, Muller; Cardoso et al., 2017, Conceição, 2020) as an apparatus of power (Foucault, 1978) in discursive performances by white women who belong to what Jessé Souza (2017) classifies as critical middle-class in Brazil (Souza, 2017). To this end, this thesis follows qualitative-interpretative methodology from Narrative Analysis (Bastos; Biar, 2015) to investigate how whiteness shapes participants white racial and affective performances (Ahmed, 2004, Melo, 2019, 2021) in the small stories (Georgakopoulou, 2015) shared by them in exploratory conversations (Miller, 2003), in which we reflect critically-affectively on what it means to be white in Brazil and where white privilege resides in their life stories of accomplishment. In my writing, I vent issues concerning the critical academic doing in the context of INdisciplinary Applied Linguistics (Moita Lopes et al, 2006, 2013) and critical feeling (Borges, 2017a, 2017b, 2020, 2021), a concept I have been working on since my dissertation, which refers to the becoming of sensibility that nurtures and is nurtured in critical literacy processes, whose focus is critical-affective reflexivity (focus on affect), which merges with critical thinking (focus on cognitive aspects) and critical action (focus on political aspects). The reflexive notes of this research confirm the inexorability of whiteness as an apparatus of power which allows the actualization of racism in performances of race and affect by women who belong the white racial group in Brazil, pointing to their fundamental role in this process, even in the context of the so-called critical academia. Furthermore, it indicates that focus on undergoing processes of critical racial literacy (Ferreira, 2022), fostering critical feeling (Borges, 2017a, 2017b, 2020, 2021) and joining study with coalition in the under-commons of the University (Harney; Moten, 2013, 2021) may be a way to mitigate the effects of these performances in the White-Cube Academy (Kilomba, 2019a).
10

Benevolent Sexism and Racial Stereotypes: Targets, Functions, and Consequences

McMahon, Jean Marie 14 March 2018 (has links)
In this dissertation, I present three manuscripts in which I integrate race into an ambivalent sexism framework using experimental, correlational, and cross-sectional methods. The first paper tests whether a female's race acts as a subtype to differentially elicit benevolent sexism (BS). Two experiments demonstrated that BS is more strongly associated with White women than Black women. The second paper explores the relationship between protective paternalism (a subcomponent of BS), anti-minority attitudes, and threat. Threat was associated with stronger endorsement of protective paternalism and a corresponding increase in anti-minority attitudes, particularly for White men, implicating BS in the maintenance of racial inequality. Finally, my third study investigated potential real-world consequences of the differential application of BS to Black and White women in the context of police responses to intimate partner violence (IPV). Officers were more likely to file supplemental paperwork for White victims than Black victims, and were most likely to do so when encountering a White victim and a Black suspect. White victims were also written about with a greater "risk focus", consistent with BS. In sum, chapter II establishes racial differences in who receives BS, chapter III demonstrates how paternalistic protections of White women are racialized, and chapter IV reveals how the intersection of BS with racial stereotypes may impact women seeking help from police. This dissertation is the first investigation in the social psychological literature of how race informs the targets, function, and consequences of BS.

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