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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.
211

Luck egalitarianism criticisms and alternatives /

Han, Rui, January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hong Kong, 2010. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 207-220). Also available in print.
212

Association, reciprocity, sharing and dependency : conditions of access and forms of inequality beyond the market state /

Short, Patricia Margaret. January 2005 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph.D.) - University of Queensland, 2004. / Includes bibliography.
213

Women in the Royal Hong Kong Police Force equal or unequal partners? /

Ho, Lai-sheung, Cora. January 1988 (has links)
Thesis (M.Soc.Sc.)--University of Hong Kong, 1988. / Also available in print.
214

Gender mainstreaming and students in the Russian Far East

Alexeiko, Maria L. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Ohio University, June, 2005. / Title from PDF t.p. Includes bibliographical references (p. 79-81)
215

Luck egalitarianism : criticisms and alternatives /

Han, Rui, January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hong Kong, 2010. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 207-220). Also available online.
216

Polynomial GCD using straight line program representation

Naylor, Bill January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
217

An exploration of emotional participation within couple relationships

McQueen, Fiona Helen January 2016 (has links)
The study is informed by work from the 1990s which looked at emotional aspects of couple relationships and how this interacts with gendered power (Duncombe and Marsden, 1993, 1995; Benjamin, 1998). The context of couple relationships provides the backdrop to explore experiences of men and women navigating their emotional lives through a period of social change in which men are becoming more emotionally open. I examine to what extent emotional participation is moving towards being more equal, and whether this has an impact on gender relations within couple relationships, including consideration of how love can exist within unequal divisions of labour. The central analytical concepts of gender, power and emotion will be explored in order to look at whether there has been a change in practices of emotional participation in couple relationships. This thesis is a mixed-methods study exploring understandings of emotional participation within couple relationships. It is based on an online survey of 1,080 people, telephone interviews with 44 survey participants and 31 face-to-face interviews with participants living in Scotland. I explore the issues of communication, emotional skill and emotional capital through the narratives of men and women who are single and in relationships, predominantly heterosexual but not exclusively. This research design was used to test findings from previous research to enable an understanding of how gender shapes cultural constructions of emotional habitus within intimate relationships. I extend Burkitt’s concept of ‘emotional habitus’ (2014) to argue that ‘gendered emotional habitus’ (plural) are pervasive and enable the reproduction of heterosexuality within couple relationships. These habitus provide little room to negotiate alternative ways of doing gender, yet there are signs of a ‘clash of ideals of masculine emotion’ due to an increase in the value of emotional skills and the commonsensical discourse that it’s ‘good to talk’, found in the therapeutic discourse (Brownlie, 2014). I argue these signs of social change have led to a shift away from relationships in which women crave emotional fulfilment but do not receive it, to relationships in which men too want emotional closeness with their partner. The change in gendered ways of valuing emotion have impacted on how men and women perceive and manage their couple relationships, which is explored in depth through the concept of emotional participation.
218

Critical Feminist Institutional Analysis of Haiti’s «Politique d’egalité femmes hommes»

Champ, Hannah 22 August 2018 (has links)
Haiti has long been characterized as a fragile state. Particularly since 2004, responses from the international community have focused on Haiti’s stabilization and reconstruction. Post-colonial critiques highlight the constraints imposed by these approaches, but fail to sufficiently explore forms of agency which, by resisting and redirecting external impositions, could promote political, social and economic transformation. The adoption of the National Policy for Equality between Women and Men in Haiti in 2014/15 seems to represent such potentially transformative agency. The primary aim of this research is to understand how national agency and international actors (sometimes neo-colonial) interacted, through particular institutions, to shape the adoption and initial implementation of the National Policy. The second aim is to draw on selected feminist theories (institutional and more critical) to explain these processes and assess the extent to which they represent the emergence of transformative alternatives in the Haitian context.
219

Direitos de conciliação entre trabalho e família e o trabalho da mulher

Menezes, Priscila Cunha Lima de January 2013 (has links)
149 f. / Submitted by Ana Valéria de Jesus Moura (anavaleria_131@hotmail.com) on 2013-05-24T15:07:12Z No. of bitstreams: 2 TEXTO FINAL PARA IMPRESSÃO E DEPÓSITO.pdf: 833859 bytes, checksum: d424b31158a460f6cd324bbb07ce259e (MD5) PRÉ-TEXTO FINAL PARA IMPRESSÃO E DEPÓSITO.pdf: 110575 bytes, checksum: 311874d87736395abab8d767db26ba23 (MD5) / Approved for entry into archive by Ana Valéria de Jesus Moura(anavaleria_131@hotmail.com) on 2013-05-24T15:09:33Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 2 TEXTO FINAL PARA IMPRESSÃO E DEPÓSITO.pdf: 833859 bytes, checksum: d424b31158a460f6cd324bbb07ce259e (MD5) PRÉ-TEXTO FINAL PARA IMPRESSÃO E DEPÓSITO.pdf: 110575 bytes, checksum: 311874d87736395abab8d767db26ba23 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2013-05-24T15:09:33Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2 TEXTO FINAL PARA IMPRESSÃO E DEPÓSITO.pdf: 833859 bytes, checksum: d424b31158a460f6cd324bbb07ce259e (MD5) PRÉ-TEXTO FINAL PARA IMPRESSÃO E DEPÓSITO.pdf: 110575 bytes, checksum: 311874d87736395abab8d767db26ba23 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2013 / O presente trabalho tem como objetivo principal a análise das desigualdades que afetam os direitos da mulher, influenciadas, em sua gênese, principalmente pela desigual distribuição sexual dos encargos familiares. O vetor do estudo é o da perspectiva dos direitos de conciliação entre trabalho e família e a efetividade de tais direitos. O estudo dos direitos de conciliação tem o seu fundamento principal no princípio da igualdade impondo a não discriminação fundada na perspectiva do gênero. Desta forma, assegurar medidas de conciliação entre a vida laboral e familiar significa fomentar a igualdade entre os sexos, possibilitando novos rearranjos familiares que favoreçam o compartilhamento das responsabilidades familiares e domésticas entre homens e mulheres. As discriminações relacionadas às responsabilidades familiares precisam ser combatidas para permitir o alcance da igualdade entre os gêneros, a partir de uma mudança nos papeis atribuídos tradicionalmente a homens e mulheres na família. / Salvador
220

A society of equals : the meaning, justification and implications of our basic moral equality

Kirby, Nikolas Norman Patrick January 2015 (has links)
This is a thesis about our basic moral equality as human beings: its meaning, its justification and its implications for our society. It offers the fundamental principles of how we are obligated to live together in a Society of Equals. Its major conclusions are as follows. First, whilst there is more than one meaning to the claim that 'we are one another's basic moral equals', the most important meaning for political philosophy is that each individual has Equal Authority. More specifically, each individual has fundamental authority over herself, and herself alone. Secondly, the justification of this fundamental authority over ourselves lies in our common limitation: we are all fallible. Further, we are not merely all fallible in the sense that any one of our beliefs could be false, but also in the sense that we have no non-circular way of judging the reliability of any of our beliefs. This aspect of our natural epistemic position justifies our equal, fundamental, practical authority over ourselves alone. Finally, the most important implication of this justification is that each individual's most basic reason for action is to promote not merely her own, but each and every individual's compliance with her fundamental authority over herself. It follows that each individual has decisive reason to constrain her own compliance with her own fundamental authority over herself, where necessary, to allow the equal promotion of someone else's compliance with her fundamental authority over herself. This principle is called 'Equal Respect'. Upon this principle of Equal Respect arises an architectonic System of Right, and correlative duties, that is called Equal Sovereignty. Under this system, our rights and duties with respect to one another are distributed in accordance with a hypothetical auction and insurance scheme to ensure that each individual is truly sovereign over their own equal share of the world.

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