• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 399
  • 74
  • 34
  • 30
  • 30
  • 30
  • 30
  • 30
  • 30
  • 8
  • 7
  • 5
  • 3
  • 3
  • 2
  • Tagged with
  • 669
  • 669
  • 296
  • 296
  • 285
  • 285
  • 285
  • 285
  • 204
  • 116
  • 103
  • 94
  • 73
  • 69
  • 67
  • 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.
621

Exploring perspectives of parents on challenges of parenting children born from interracial relationships : a gestalt field perspective

Lloyd, Jacqueline 06 1900 (has links)
The phenomenon of interracial couples who are also parents is on the increase in South Africa, since one in every four marriages is interracial. An empirical study was undertaken to conduct applied, exploratory, descriptive, evidence-based research to describe the perspectives of interracial parents as related to Gestalt Theory, parenting challenges and strategies towards a sense of self and cultural identity of their children. A qualitative approach utilizing an open ended questionnaire and semi-structured interviews with six interracial parent couples was transcribed and analysed. The study concluded that interracial parent couples’, in respect of dealing with societal-non-acceptance of themselves and their “mixed” children, utilize several strategies including avoidance and focusing on the positive; that certain aspects play a vital role in the formation of their children’s sense of self and cultural identity such as religion or faith and both parental identities.The implication of this research is that despite the challenges there are no marked effects on their children’s identity and that interracial parenting strategies must be sound. / Social Work / M.A. Diac. (Play Therapy)
622

An analysis of Soviet Jewish emigration in the 1970s

Salitan, Laurie P. January 1992 (has links)
Domestic, not foreign affairs drove Soviet policy on Jewish emigration during the period of 1968-1989. This study challenges the prevailing view that fluctuating levels of exit from the USSR were correlated to the climate of relations between the USA and the USSR. The analysis also considers Soviet-German emigration for comparative perspective. Extensive historical background, with special emphasis on Soviet nationality policy is provided.
623

Neither victim nor fetish : ‘Asian’ women and the effects of racialization in the Swedish context

Hooi, Mavis January 2018 (has links)
People who are racialized in Sweden as ‘Asian’—a panethnic category—come from different countries or ethnic backgrounds and yet, often face similar, gender-specific forms of discrimination which have a significant impact on their whole lives. This thesis centres women who are racialized as 'Asian', focusing on how their racialization affects, and is shaped by, their social, professional and intimate relationships, and their interactions with others—in particular, with white majority Swedes, but also other ethnic minorities. Against a broader context encompassing discourses concerning ‘Asians’ within Swedish media, art and culture, Swedish ‘non-racist’ exceptionalism and gender equality politics, the narratives of nine women are analysed through the lenses of the racializing processes of visuality and coercive mimeticism, and epistemic injustice.
624

Formação de professores para relações étnico-raciais no contexto de uma escola com estudantes bolivianos / Teacher formation for ethnic-racial relations in the context of a school with Bolivian students

Santos, Elisângela Nogueira Janoni dos 03 September 2018 (has links)
Submitted by Filipe dos Santos (fsantos@pucsp.br) on 2018-10-10T10:16:52Z No. of bitstreams: 1 Elisângela Nogueira Janoni Dos Santos.pdf: 25358627 bytes, checksum: 8432d81e9ecedda4e9d984fe837c5c7e (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2018-10-10T10:16:52Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Elisângela Nogueira Janoni Dos Santos.pdf: 25358627 bytes, checksum: 8432d81e9ecedda4e9d984fe837c5c7e (MD5) Previous issue date: 2018-09-03 / With the objective of analyzing the resonance of a continuous training course of teachers in a public school in the city of São Paulo in relation to teaching practice and interpersonal relations in the perspective of Education for ethnic-racial relations, the research focused on the presence of Bolivian students in this school and sought to understand the migratory phenomenon Bolivia-Brazil and its consequences in the inclusion of them. The importance of approaching the theme is justified by the diversity of ethnicities and cultures present in our country. In this school unit, there was a need to increase the knowledge of the different Latin cultures, due to the great immigration (mainly Bolivian) and the insertion of these immigrants and / or their descendants into the school community. To do so, the data collection procedures of this qualitative research were questionnaires with teachers involved in the training developed in 2015 or in project practices with immigrant students in the school unit and questionnaires applied to Bolivian immigrant students or descendants of the seventh, eighth and ninety years. The questions that surrounded the problematic of this research were: "What are the resonances of this formation about ethnic-racial relations in the teaching practice? Have there been changes? In what aspects? " Thus, the objective was to analyze the effects of this training on ethnic-racial relations between the different members of the school community in the period from 2015 to 2018, as well as the view of the students involved and the establishment of their ethnic-racial relations. Understanding these phenomena through the view of teachers and students is an exercise of listening in the dialogical and horizontal perspective of the relations founded in Paulo Freire. The results of the research point to resonances from teacher education, promoting projects related to diversity and interculturality, as well as increasing the participation of immigrant students in these projects, improving communication and school climate / professores em uma escola da rede pública municipal de São Paulo em relação à prática docente e às relações interpessoais na perspectiva da Educação para as relações étnico-raciais, a pesquisa teve como foco a presença de estudantes bolivianos nessa escola e buscou compreender o fenômeno migratório Bolívia-Brasil e seus desdobramentos na inclusão dos mesmos. A importância a abordagem do tema é justificada pela diversidade de etnias e culturas presentes em nosso país. Verificou-se nesta unidade escolar, a necessidade de ampliar o conhecimento das diferentes culturas latinas, em razão da grande imigração (principalmente boliviana) e a inserção destes imigrantes e/ou seus descendentes na comunidade escolar. Para tanto, os procedimentos de coleta de dados desta pesquisa, de abordagem qualitativa, foram questionários com professores envolvidos na formação desenvolvida em 2015 ou em práticas de projetos com estudantes imigrantes na unidade escolar e questionários aplicados aos estudantes imigrantes bolivianos ou descendentes dos sétimos, oitavos e nonos anos. Os questionamentos que cercaram a problemática desta pesquisa foram: “Quais as ressonâncias dessa formação acerca das relações étnico-raciais na prática docente? Houve mudanças? Em quais aspectos?”. Assim, o objetivo foi analisar os efeitos da referida formação nas relações étnico-raciais entre os diferentes membros da comunidade escolar no período de 2015 a 2018, bem como o levantamento da visão dos estudantes envolvidos e o estabelecimento de suas relações étnico-raciais. Compreender tais fenômenos pela visão de docentes e estudantes é um exercício de escuta na perspectiva dialógica e de horizontalidade das relações fundamentadas em Paulo Freire. Os resultados da pesquisa apontam ressonâncias a partir da formação docente, promovendo a realização de projetos voltados à diversidade e à interculturalidade, bem como no aumento da participação dos estudantes imigrantes nesses projetos, na melhoria da comunicação e do clima escolar
625

Mobility of blacks and whites in the U.S: evidence from National Longitudinal Surveys and Nation Longitudinal Survey of Youth. / CUHK electronic theses & dissertations collection

January 2013 (has links)
Yeung, Ion Lam. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2013. / Includes bibliographical references. / Electronic reproduction. Hong Kong : Chinese University of Hong Kong, [2012] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Abstracts also in Chinese.
626

Parent-Child Relations as Protective and Promotive Factors for Ethnic Minority Children Living in Relative Poverty : A systematic literature review

Larsson, Anna January 2019 (has links)
Ethnic minority children living in relative poverty are a high-risk group for poor outcomes in all aspects of wellbeing. The relationship and interactions between child and parent are a key part of child development and a platform for providing positive experiences which can benefit a child’s wellbeing. There is therefore a need to identify what facilitates wellbeing for ethnic minority children in low-socioeconomic status families. By focusing on protective and promotive factors encompassing the parent-child relationship, factors can be identified which can use family strengths as a basis for interventions and practice within healthcare, social work and education, which is what this systematic literature review set out to do. Through a diligent search of the literature, 12 articles were identified for review according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria, containing research on African American, Roma, Native American and Hispanic/Latino youth. The results inform how child wellbeing can be facilitated through several parental factors, including parental involvement and support, maternal attachment, paternal warmth and ethnic identity and ethnic socialization. The findings also indicate a need for further studies on paternal influence on wellbeing in especially Native American and Roma youth, as well as the impact of ethnic socialization on youth wellbeing. Parents have an important role to play in child wellbeing and are vital partners alongside the child when planning interventions. Considerations naturally need to be shown for each ethnic minority, the child’s setting and its individual characteristics.
627

Professional migrants in Cape Town : identity, culture and community

Shea, Lenri 31 March 2008 (has links)
Before the 1990's, African migrants did not perceive South Africa as an ideal migration destination. This changed after the end of the apartheid era. The new political climate in the country and the new migration movements linked to increased globalisation changed the situation significantly. South Africa became an attractive migration destination, particularly also for professional African migrants. In this dissertation a select group of black professional/skilled migrants from non-SADC countries, who are resident in Cape Town, are studied. It is shown that such transients defy any migration typology within the South African context. Their position in the world of economic migrants is not automatically one of cosmopolitanism, privilege and glamour. Their decision to migrate is also not necessarily voluntary. The explication and analysis of the context and circumstances of the migrants are conducted with specific reference to: - professional mobility vis a vis identity, culture and community - human mobility and globalisation - the demographics and legalities of immigration to South Africa - origin, identity and the construct of `home' - the `host' nation and perceptions, stereotypes and xenophobia - personal networks and adaptation - the notion of space becoming place. What is thus demonstrated and interrogated is that `belonging' in this world is a process of change and fluctuation. `Crossing borders' will mean different things to different people - especially also for skilled/professional migrants. Issues such as class, gender, race, citizenship, ethnicity and sexuality, play a role in how `belonging' is defined and how people assign meaning to movements across borders. / Anthropology and Archaeology / (MA (Anthropology))
628

An interrogation of the representation of the San and Tonga ethnic ‘minorities’ in the Zimbabwean state-owned Chronicle, and the privately owned Newsday Southern Edition/Southern Eye newspapers during 2013

Mlotshwa, Khanyile Joseph January 2015 (has links)
This study critically interrogates representations of the San and Tonga in the Chronicle and the NewsDay Southern Edition/Southern Eye newspapers in 2013. It makes sense of how these representations and the journalistic practices that underwrite them position the ethnic groups as ‘minorities’ - in relation to other ethnic groups - within the discourses of Zimbabwean nationalism. Underpinned by a constructionist approach (Hall, 1997), the study makes sense of the San and Tonga identities otherwise silenced by the “bi-modal” (Ndlovu- Gatsheni, 2012: 536; Masunungure, 2006) Shona/Ndebele approach to Zimbabwean nationalism. In socio-historic terms, the study is located within the re-emergence of ‘ethnicity’ to contest Zimbabwean nationalism(s) during debates for the New Constitution leading to a Referendum in March 2013. The thesis draws on social theories that offer explanatory power in studying media representations, which include postcolonial (Bhabha, 1990, 1994; Spivak, 1995), hegemony (Gramsci, 1971), and discourse (Foucault, 1970, 1972; Laclau and Mouffe, 1985) theories. These theories speak to the ways in which discourses about identity, belonging, citizenship and democracy are constructed in situations in which unequal social power is contested. The thesis links journalism practice with the politics of representation drawing on normative theories of journalism (Christians et al, 2009), the professional ideology of journalism (Tuchman, 1972; Golding and Elliot, 1996; Hall et al., 1996), and the concept of journalists as an ‘interpretive community’ (Zelizer, 1993). These theories allow us to unmask the role of journalism’s social power in representation, and map ways in which the agency of the journalists has to be considered in relation to the structural features of the media industry in particular, and society in general. The study is qualitative and proceeds by way of combining a Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) (Fairclough, 1992; Richardson, 2007) and ideological analysis (Thompson, 1990) of eight news texts taken from the two newspapers and in-depth interviews with 13 journalists from the two newspapers. This way we account for the media representations journalists produced: sometimes reproducing stereotypes, at other times, resisting them. Journalists not only regard themselves as belonging to the dominant ethnic groups of Shona or Ndebele, but as part of the middle class; they take Zimbabwean nationalism for granted, reproducing it as common-sense through sourcing patterns dominated by elites. This silences the San and Tonga constructing them as a ‘minority’ through a double play of invisibility and hyper visibility, where they either don’t appear in the news texts or are overly stereotyped.
629

Ethnic differences in spiritual intelligence: a study in a multicultural context

Shanto, Diana January 2016 (has links)
Text in English / This study investigates the nature of spiritual intelligence and its link to ethnic identity, and gauges the difference across the main ethnic groups in Mauritius. A new scale, the Multicultural Spiritual Intelligence Scale (MSIS) was proposed, using the following six dimensions: self-awareness, transcendental awareness, levels of consciousness, the quest for meaning, sensitivity, and resilience. The MSIS was developed and tested using a cross-sectional survey research design with the option of completing a paper or online version, administered to a sample of 1,177 adult participants in Mauritius. This research looked at the three major ethnic groups in Mauritius: Hindu-Mauritians, Creole-Mauritians, and Muslim-Mauritians, and examined their conceptions of spiritual intelligence and ethnic identification. A factor analysis was conducted on the scale and five specific factors: self-mastery, transcendental awareness, spiritual sensitivity, resilience, and the existential quest. These factors emerged with factor loadings greater than 0.35. The MSIS’s construct validity was tested with other similar scales, particularly Meaning in Life (MLQ) (Steger et al., 2006), the Connor-Davison Resilience Scale (CD-RISC) (Connor & Davidson, 2011), Private Self-Consciousness (PSC) (Scheir & Carver, 1985), and New Indices of Religious Orientation (NIRO) (Francis, 2007). The Balanced Inventory of Desirable Responding (BIDR) (Paulhus, 1991) was also included to check for social desirable responses and MSIS’s divergent validity. A Welch ANOVA revealed a statistical difference in spiritual intelligence among the ethnic groups: Welch’s F (2, 639.98) = 3.923. Spearman’s rank order correlation revealed that ethnic identification was connected to spiritual intelligence: rs (98) = 0.52, p < 0.0005. A Games-Howell post-hoc analysis indicated a statistically significant mean difference between Muslim-Mauritians and Hindu Mauritians (0.27, 95% CI [0.083, 0.45]) and between Muslim-Mauritians and Creole Mauritians (0.44, 95% CI [0.25, 0.62]). The Muslim-Mauritians obtained the highest score in both ethnic exploration and ethnic commitment. Ethnic identification implied a prior quest for identity, which was connected with spiritual development. A second study was conducted on a sample of 303 participants using a shorter version of MSIS to confirm the five-factor model. Implications for further research include analysing the MSIS in terms of other constructs and using the MSIS with other minority groups in Mauritius. / Psychology / D.Litt et Phil. (Psychology)
630

The myth of the guiltless society. A socio-ethical appraisal of the experience of the aborigines in Australia since colonisation. Toward a theology of liberation for Australia

Louw, Andre Nathan 06 1900 (has links)
This study is a focus on a small minority group within Australian society. This study attempts to explore and expose the inherent injustices experienced by this Aboriginal group since colonization. Its major focus is the loss of their land and their human rights and dignity subsequent to this invasion/ colonization. It also attempts, subsequent to the High Court decision in favour of Aboriginal land ownership, to also theologically support that stance. This study exposes the heretical nature of the traditional theology and religious practices of the dominant white population. It also tries to show the correlation with the experience of the Maori people in New Zealand and how they lost their land to the British Monarch. It then attempts some directives for reconciliation between these peoples and what could be done to restore the damage done since 1788. / Theology / M.Th. (Systematic Theology)

Page generated in 0.1051 seconds