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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.
421

Msgr Nicetas Budka and the Ukrainian Immigrants in Canada

Lishchyns'kyi, Andrii January 1954 (has links)
Abstract not available.
422

An exploratory study of the psychological and social adjustment of the Estonian refugee intellectual in Montreal

Groenberg, Tiiu Mai January 1963 (has links)
Abstract not available.
423

La politique canadienne de multiculturalisme: Fragmentation ou fabulation

Coghlan, Vickie R January 2003 (has links)
Cet ouvrage à pour objet l'analyse des facteurs socio-politiques ayant influence la réorientation des discours officiels entourant la politique canadienne de multiculturalisme au début des années 1990. Tel que dénoté par Houle (1999), les discours du gouvernement fédéral touchant directement ou indirectement la politique canadienne de multiculturalisme au cours des années 1990 furent caractérisés par l'importance accordée au partage de valeurs communes et à l'unité nationale. Selon le gouvernement fédéral, cette réorientation des discours aurait visé à corriger les incompréhensions des Canadiens vis-à-vis de la nature véritable du multiculturalisme et à apaiser les inquiétudes des Canadiens croyant que la politique canadienne de multiculturalisme permette aux minorités ethnoculturelles de ne pas s'intégrer aux valeurs de la société canadienne. Une analyse statistique des résultats de l'enquête sur les attitudes multiculturelles et ethniques des Canadiens de 1991 vise à étudier les deux éléments de cette affirmation, à savoir l'inquiétude des Canadiens à l'endroit des conséquences de la politique canadienne de multiculturalisme et la non-intégration effective des minorités ethnoculturelles aux valeurs dites "canadiennes." (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
424

Les immigrant(e)s haïtien(ne)s à Montréal et la perception de leur rôle dans le développement d'Haïti

Oscar, Josiane January 2003 (has links)
Cette recherche est le fruit de deux observations: la première est liée au fait qu'un bon nombre d'ouvrages portent sur les immigrants et leurs transferts de fonds. Il n'existe aucune étude sur les transferts de revenus des immigrants haïtiens, qui pourtant constituent l'un des plus importants groupes ethniques dans certaines grandes villes nord-américaines. La deuxième constatation relève du fait que la plupart des études qui portent sur la migration et le développement parviennent à la conclusion que les transferts de fonds des émigrés peuvent contribuer au développement de leur pays d'origine. C'est ce qui nous a poussé à aller interroger les Haïtiens à Montréal pour voir s'ils croient que leurs transferts de fonds vers Haïti peuvent être une aide importante pouvant déclencher le processus de développement en Haïti. Nous avons obtenu des réponses plutôt mitigées à cette question. En effet, 15 répondants sur 35 estiment que leurs transferts peuvent aider au développement d'Haïti. Par contre, 20 participants sur 35 déclarent formellement que leurs transferts ne peuvent pas contribuer au développement de leur pays d'origine puisque ces envois de fonds ne sont pas effectués dans un tel but, ils ne sont pas investis dans des activités rentables. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
425

Perception of risk to health from environmental factors amongst the Mohawks of Akwesasne

Cole, Maxine A January 2004 (has links)
A survey of perceptions of health risk was conducted on 297 randomly selected residents of Akwesasne, a Mohawk community of approximately 13,000 citizens, straddling the border between Canada and the United States. The survey was conducted to understand how residents of Akwesasne perceive different types of health risks, and how attitudes about such risks are formed. Survey questions focused on association to the words risk and health, ranking of health hazards present in the community, sources of information on health risks, confidence in organizations and agencies responsible for health risk management, and a series of questions on risk related attitudes and behaviours. The survey demonstrated higher perceptions of risk among older as compared to younger respondents, and among women as compared to men. The media represented the primary source of information on risk, followed by traditional healers, although traditional healers were perceived as being more credible than the media.
426

Fusion, confusion, or illusion: Discursive constructions of health and fitness among second-generation South Asian Canadian women

George, Tammy January 2004 (has links)
Stereotypes emphasizing passivity, docility, and uncleanliness all contribute to cultural (mis)understandings of Canadian women of South Asian background. Such understandings feed dominant racist discourses, including "bodily" discourses related to fitness and health. In turn, such discourses have "effects" in terms of how women approach bodily practices. This study focuses on the constructions of health and fitness among ten 20--25 year old second generation South-Asian Canadian women who now reside in Ottawa or Toronto. Based on conversations with these women, the study focuses on how they construct health and fitness as well as the types of institutional and cultural discourses they draw from. Results show how these women struggle to construct an identity that speaks to their experience of being South Asian Canadian in that they often unsettle, contest, negotiate and resist normative constructions of both "South Asian" and "Canadian" identities. Results also highlight the impact of these negotiations on the young women's constructions of health, and on their position as un/fit and un/healthy subjects within cultural discourses. Insights from this study fill an important gap in the Canadian literature on health and fitness as well as inform contemporary debates regarding health policy and health education programs for South-Asian Canadian women.
427

Intergenerational value similarity in Polish immigrant families in Canada in comparison to intergenerational value similarity in Polish and Canadian non-immigrant families

Kwast-Welfeld, Joanna January 2004 (has links)
This study examined intergenerational value similarity in Polish immigrant families in Canada in comparison to value similarity in non-immigrant families, that is, Polish families in Poland and Canadian families in Canada. The 460 volunteers---members of 155 families living in Poland and Canada---participated by filling out the parent's or young adult's version of the questionnaire. In order to determine an impact of immigration on the value transmission process, the four scales of the Emic Questionnaire of Cultural Values and Scripts (EQCVS) were employed to measure similarity of value priorities and value congruence between parents and their grownup children in the three cultural groups. Comparisons of the groups' mean value scores revealed a generational effect, which depending on the value type, has shown to be culture-specific. However, both the group and family level of analyses showed no effect of immigration on the parent-child value similarity. The five scales of the Personal Authority in the Family System Questionnaire - College Version (PAFS-QCV), the four scales of Objective Measure of Ego Identity Status (OEMEIS) questionnaire and some demographic data were employed to test a possible association of contextual variables with parent-child value similarity. The study identified intergenerational relational styles, value similarity within the family and young-adult's identity status as culture specific predictors of parent-child value similarity. Even though the study applied different methods and levels of data analysis, it did not detect a difference in the levels of parent-child value similarity among immigrant and non-immigrant families. The lack of statistically significant difference as well as observed trends in differences in intergenerational similarity of values among the groups tested, and possible explanations for these results are discussed.
428

Xenophobia and social exclusion: Experiences of female Rwandan refugees in South Africa

Barnabe, Paula January 2007 (has links)
Abstract not available.
429

Towards an understanding of sudden, unexplained, prolonged pain in a Muslim context

Khanafer, Dani January 2008 (has links)
This thesis examines how Shia Muslims react to sudden, unexplained, and prolonged pain. In doing so, the thesis frames physical pain not only as physiological phenomenon but also as a phenomenon that is defined by historical, cultural and social context. Sudden, unexplained and prolonged pain not only produces physical hurt, it also has the capacity to interrupt individuals' social activities and as a consequence their identities and the meanings with which they are associated. For this reason, it is argued that biomedicine and psychology are not always capable of giving satisfactory accounts of the experience of pain. This failure frequently leads individuals who succumb to sudden, unexplained and prolonged pain to look for meaning in religious or quasi-religious experience. The thesis first explores historically divergent conceptions of pain. It then gives an overview of biomedical, psychological and sociological and anthropological conceptions of pain. A theoretical framework is developed that connects the experience of pain with broader social meanings, identity and the body. This framework is used to analyse qualitative data collected through semi-structured interviews with Shia Muslim scholars and Shia Muslim respondents who have experienced or are experiencing sudden unexplored pain. It is shown that the religious worldview provides believers with cultural resources that allow them to negotiate the crisis of meaning and identity provoked by the experience of sudden, unexplained, prolonged pain.
430

Educational attainment of Black children of immigrants in Canada: Evidence from the Ethnic Diversity Survey

Hujaleh, Filsan January 2009 (has links)
This thesis examines the educational adaptation of children of black immigrants from Africa and the Caribbean. The influence of common shared values on the educational attainment of a segment of the new second generation---Black children of immigrants---is explored. The data are drawn from the 2002 Ethnic Diversity Survey. The findings illustrate that the educational experience of black children of immigrants is heterogeneous. Depending on both socioeconomic and ethnic attachment factors, different educational outcomes for black children of immigrants were observed.

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