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Seeing Like a Racial State: the Census and the Politics of Race in the United States, Great Britain and CanadaThompson, Debra Elizabeth 05 December 2012 (has links)
This thesis compares the political development of racial categories employed by the United States, Canada and Great Britain on their national censuses, particularly focusing on the enumeration of mixed-race individuals in the late 20th century. Though literature on race and the U.S. census often stresses the causal influence of social mobilization, this analysis reveals that the common explanations for the development of racial classifications such as interest group mobilization, demography and civil rights legislation are not viable in comparative context. To explore and explain how the racial state sees, this thesis conceptualizes race as a system of power relations and develops a framework of the schematic state, which operates concurrently as both an actor responsible for putting the underlying organizational pattern of race into place, solidifying a particular set of racial meanings, and implementing a scheme for the racial configuration of society, and an arena in which policy alternatives are contested and where the state itself participates among other actors. This characterization demonstrates that the schematizing impetus of the census is not an exemplar of a dichotomous relationship between an all-powerful state and powerless racial subjects; instead, the power and meaning of race exist well beyond the control of the fragmented and sometimes contradictory schematic state, from the transnational realm to the level of the group or individual. Contrary to the majority of the literature on race, this thesis demonstrates that state institutions do not act for purely domestic reasons; rather, institutions mediate between national nuances and transnational ideas about race that exist in excess of national boundaries. Thus, while the decision to count mixed-race can be explained by a crystallization of transnational ideational trends that are mediated by national politics, the domestic arena of policy making – or the policy network itself – emerges as a key factor that determines the method of multiracial enumeration. However, these domestic political and policy outcomes are not contained by borders. Once a policy is in place, it has the potential to reinforce domestic policy and contribute to the global discourse of race itself – and in its travels among these levels of abstraction, race transforms.
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Seeing Like a Racial State: the Census and the Politics of Race in the United States, Great Britain and CanadaThompson, Debra Elizabeth 05 December 2012 (has links)
This thesis compares the political development of racial categories employed by the United States, Canada and Great Britain on their national censuses, particularly focusing on the enumeration of mixed-race individuals in the late 20th century. Though literature on race and the U.S. census often stresses the causal influence of social mobilization, this analysis reveals that the common explanations for the development of racial classifications such as interest group mobilization, demography and civil rights legislation are not viable in comparative context. To explore and explain how the racial state sees, this thesis conceptualizes race as a system of power relations and develops a framework of the schematic state, which operates concurrently as both an actor responsible for putting the underlying organizational pattern of race into place, solidifying a particular set of racial meanings, and implementing a scheme for the racial configuration of society, and an arena in which policy alternatives are contested and where the state itself participates among other actors. This characterization demonstrates that the schematizing impetus of the census is not an exemplar of a dichotomous relationship between an all-powerful state and powerless racial subjects; instead, the power and meaning of race exist well beyond the control of the fragmented and sometimes contradictory schematic state, from the transnational realm to the level of the group or individual. Contrary to the majority of the literature on race, this thesis demonstrates that state institutions do not act for purely domestic reasons; rather, institutions mediate between national nuances and transnational ideas about race that exist in excess of national boundaries. Thus, while the decision to count mixed-race can be explained by a crystallization of transnational ideational trends that are mediated by national politics, the domestic arena of policy making – or the policy network itself – emerges as a key factor that determines the method of multiracial enumeration. However, these domestic political and policy outcomes are not contained by borders. Once a policy is in place, it has the potential to reinforce domestic policy and contribute to the global discourse of race itself – and in its travels among these levels of abstraction, race transforms.
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Portland's community policing in U.S.A to give Kaohsiung reference's researchYeh, Yih-deng 30 June 2004 (has links)
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Census Tract 13.04 NeighborhoodUribe, Alexandra, Stanley, Andrelle D., Ramirez, Bianka V., Soto, Brian C., Cuevas, Cecy E., Lira-Saavedra, Connie Y., Jauregui, Elisa January 2015 (has links)
Poster presentation / Soc 397a / 2015 Poverty in Tucson Field Workshop
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Census Tract 26.02: Mountain View NeighborhoodCarbone, Nicoletta, DeAlto, Michael, Kennon, Katelyn, Peterson, Zeina, Rawson, Todd, Sandoval, Shayla January 2015 (has links)
Poster / Soc 397a / 2015 Poverty in Tucson Field Workshop
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Census Tract 25.03: Southwest TucsonAcosta, Daniel, Figueroa, Chantelle, Matthews, Jasmine, Peacock, Brandon, Richards, Krystal January 2015 (has links)
Poster / Soc 397a / 2015 Poverty in Tucson Field Workshop
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Census Tract 27.04: Campus Farm NeighborhoodAdamson, Alexandra, Berges, Shay, Flynn, Colin, Hasawy, Jazzi, Hernandez, Nicole, Morphy, Kendall January 2015 (has links)
Poster / Soc 397a / 2015 Poverty in Tucson Field Workshop
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Census Tract 37.04: Sunnyside NeighborhoodCamacho, Vanessa, Damian, Gloria, Davis, Lexy, Myers, Greg, Silva, Julio, Torres, Marjorie January 2015 (has links)
Poster / Soc 397a / 2015 Poverty in Tucson Field Workshop
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A Spatial and Health Burden Analysis of Census Tract 85: Implications for Prevention and InterventionEdwards, Allison C 10 December 2010 (has links)
New regulations requiring not-for-profit hospitals to provide documented evidence of charitable care and community benefits provide a unique opportunity for strategic and targeted investment within the given community of the hospital. And with a growing number of uninsured and underserved in the US, the need for tactical community benefits is increasing exponentially. The purpose of this capstone is to pool together the relevant resources and data necessary to guide and inform the decision making process involved in creating prevention and intervention programs tailored specifically to census tract 85. Utilizing several different forms of demographic and health data including Census, Online Analytical Statistical Information Systems (OASIS), and Geographic Information Systems (GIS), this capstone provides an assessment of the community of census tract 85 and identifies the two major health conditions of said community, diabetes and stroke, for prevention/intervention. Following the principles of evidence-based decision making, this project pulls together the necessary resources and provides recommendations on how not-for-profit hospitals and other community partners can best intervene within the community of census tract 85, thus improving the health of its residents.
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Disambiguating Multiple Links in Historical Record LinkageRichards, Laura 30 August 2013 (has links)
Historians and social scientists are very interested in longitudinal data created from historical sources as the longitudinal data creates opportunities for studying people’s lives over time. However, its generation is a challenging problem since historical sources do not have personal identifiers. At the University of Guelph, the People-in-Motion group have currently constructed a record linkage system to link the 1871 Canadian census to the 1881 Canadian census. In this thesis, we discuss one aspect of linking historical census data, the problem of disambiguating multiple links that are created at the linkage step. We show that the disambiguating techniques explored in this thesis improve upon the linkage rate of the People-in-Motion’s system, while maintaining a false positive rate no greater than 5%.
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