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Biografia de Josef Umann: memÃrias e contribuiÃÃes educacionais de um imigrante alemÃo em terras brasileiras (03/11/1850 - 13/08/1927) / Biography of Josef Umann: memories and contributions education of a German immigrant in Brazilian lands (03/11/1850 - 08/13/1927)Cristine Brandenburg 26 March 2015 (has links)
Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento CientÃfico e TecnolÃgico / Esta pesquisa questiona como Josef Umann contribuiu para o desenvolvimento econÃmico, social e educacional da comunidade de Linha CecÃlia, situada na cidade de VenÃncio Aires, no estado do Rio Grande do Sul. O objetivo foi biografar Josef Umann, retirante alemÃo que imigrou para o Brasil, na segunda metade do sÃculo XIX, em decorrÃncia da crise europeia desencadeada a partir do processo de industrializaÃÃo, ressaltando o contexto econÃmico, social e educacional da comunidade de Linha CecÃlia. Esse escopo foi contemplado por intermÃdio das narrativas orais de Hugo Umann, Norma Jaeger, Nilda Umann, respectivamente, neto, bisneta e nora de Josef Umann, Hilda Agnes HÃbner Flores, historiadora sobre o tema imigraÃÃo Alemà no Rio Grande do Sul, adquiridas com a metodologia da histÃria oral temÃtica complementada com outras fontes documentais e imagÃticas como: atas, fotografias, lÃpides de tÃmulos, peÃas de museus, poesias, livros e demais suportes acessados ao longo da pesquisa. O argumento preliminar consistiu em considerar que Josef Umann foi um imigrante e colonizador de Linha CecÃlia que muito contribuiu para seu desenvolvimento, percussor no fomento a leitura e educaÃÃo. A anÃlise dos dados foi realizada mediante: a transcriÃÃo das entrevistas gravadas em equipamento digital, transcriÃÃo e validaÃÃo; a anÃlise documental; e a confrontaÃÃo dos resultados da pesquisa com a histÃria oficial. Os achados deste demonstram a importÃncia de Josef Umann na comunidade de Linha CecÃlia no cunho educacional, econÃmico e social. O tema da imigraÃÃo no Brasil jà foi muito discutido, entretanto, permear o processo de integraÃÃo na cultura, educaÃÃo e identidade do povo âbrasileiroâ ainda merece ser uma singular fonte de estudos e pesquisa. / This research asks how Josef Umann contributed to the economic, social and educational development of Cecilia line community, in the city of Venancio Aires, in the state of Rio Grande do Sul. The objective was biografar Josef Umann, German migrant who immigrated to Brazil in the second half of the nineteenth century, due to the European crisis triggered from the industrialization process, highlighting the economic, social and educational context of Cecilia line community. This scope was awarded through the oral narratives of Hugo Umann, Jaeger Standard, Nilda Umann, respectively, grandson, granddaughter and daughter of Josef Umann, Hilda Agnes HÃbner Flowers, historian of the German immigration theme in Rio Grande do Sul, acquired with the methodology of oral history complemented by other documentary and image sources as: minutes, photographs, gravestones, museum pieces, poems, books and other media accessed during the research. The primary argument was to consider that Josef Umann was an immigrant and settler Cecilia line that greatly contributed to its development, precursor in promoting reading and education. Data analysis was performed by: a transcription of the interviews recorded in digital equipment, transcription and validation; document analysis; and the comparison of survey results with the official story. The findings of this demonstrate the importance of Josef Umann Cecilia in line community in the educational , economic and social nature . The immigration issue in Brazil has been much discussed , however, permeate the process of integration into the culture, education and identity of the people " Brazilian" still deserves to be a natural source of studies and research
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Transnational Activities and their Impact on Achieving a Successful Housing Career in Canada: The Case of Ghanaian Immigrants in TorontoFirang, David 30 August 2011 (has links)
Appropriate housing with security of tenure is an important factor in the immigrant settlement and integration process. However, many studies of immigrant settlement and the housing careers of immigrants do so within the borders of a nation-state without reference to transnationalism – immigrants’ ties and cross-border connections with the country of origin. This case study of the transnational ties and housing careers of Ghanaian immigrants in Toronto aims to increase our understanding of one recent immigrant group’s settlement and integration process in Canada. Using a mixed-method approach involving both quantitative and qualitative data collection methods, this study explores how transnational housing activities influence the housing careers of Ghanaians in Toronto. The findings include insights into the immigration history and the socio-demographic characteristics of Ghanaians in Toronto; the nature and extent of transnational ties between Ghana and Canada; the nature of housing careers among Ghanaians in Toronto; and the influence of transnationalism on housing careers of Ghanaians in Toronto.
Although Ghanaians’ immigration to Canada dates from the late 1950s, Ghanaians started coming to Canada in noticeable numbers after the 1960s. Ghanaian immigration to Canada generally and to Toronto particularly surged in the 1980s and beyond. Deteriorating economic and political conditions in Ghana and relatively favourable immigration policies and a good economic climate in Canada were the driving forces behind Ghanaian migration to Canada. However, the Ghanaian settlement process in Toronto does not culminate in a complete break with the homeland. Rather, Ghanaians in Toronto have engaged in a range of transnational activities with the country of origin, including contacts with family and friends, travelling to or visiting Ghana, following Ghanaian politics, investing in housing or property in Ghana, running businesses in Ghana, attending funerals in Ghana, and making regular remittances to Ghana.
With respect to Ghanaians’ housing careers, the study reveals that during their initial settlement period, most Ghanaians lived in public subsidized rental housing or poor-quality private rental housing. They considered their housing conditions as inadequate and unsuitable and were not satisfied with their neighbourhood’s safety and security. At the time of the survey, however, respondents were more likely to own homes and were more likely to feel safe and secure in their neighbourhoods. However, housing affordability remains a major problem for Ghanaians in Toronto. With respect to the influence of transnationalism on housing careers of Ghanaians in Toronto, the study finds that transnational housing activities, especially Ghanaians’ attitudes to and preference for investing in housing in Ghana, affect their housing careers in Toronto. Sending regular remittances to Ghana and investing in housing in the homeland involve mobilizing huge financial resources from Toronto to achieving their housing needs in the country of origin, while many Ghanaians struggle to meet their own needs in Toronto. A logistic regression analysis shows that personal income and strong ties with Ghana are statistically significant predictors of investing in housing in Ghana. At the same time, significant predictors of Ghanaians’ propensity to own a house in Canada include loyalty to Canada and household income.
The study contributes conceptually and empirically to three areas of research – transnationalism, housing careers, and immigrant settlement and integration – which hitherto have been studied as separate themes. Conceptually, it breaks away from the traditional way of researching immigrant settlement and housing careers by introducing a new conceptual dimension, transnationalism. Further, this research has added new insights about a recently arrived immigrant group in Toronto. Finally, the study contributes to the social work literature by identifying an emerging field of international social work. It has drawn attention to the fact that in the era of transnationalism, the emergence of a population of migrants whose needs and lives transcend national borders will affect the future of social work research and practice.
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Responses to Difference in Initial Teacher Education: A Case of Racial and Linguistic Minority Immigrant Teacher CandidatesChassels, Caroline June 30 August 2011 (has links)
Despite recent rhetoric advocating the diversification of the teacher workforce, teachers in Canada continue to be disproportionately white and of northern European heritage. By investigating responses to difference experienced by racial and linguistic minority immigrant teacher candidates in an initial teacher education program, this thesis sheds light on dynamics that challenge or support the induction of minoritized individuals as members of the teaching profession in Canada.
Data collected through interviews with eight immigrant teacher candidates, four instructors, and five student support staff of an initial teacher education program at an urban Canadian university (UCU) indicated that teacher candidates at UCU experienced varied responses to difference. Influences of both hegemony and collaboration were found in the university and practice teaching contexts where individuals representing regimes of competence enacted challenging assimilationist or supportive multiculturalist ideologies. In practice teaching contexts, although all of the teacher candidates engaged with at least one collaborative mentor teacher and they all persisted to complete the program, six of the eight teacher candidates (i.e., all of the linguistic minority teacher candidates in this study) encountered a challenging and significantly discouraging relationship with a mentor teacher. In these hegemonic contexts the legitimacy of the teacher candidates appeared to be measured against a conception of “real teachers” as “real Canadians” who are native English-speakers and who are familiar with the culture of schooling in Canada. Within the university context, student support staff were consistent in their critical awareness of the challenges and supports experienced by teacher candidates while instructors demonstrated a range of familiarity with these issues and with concepts of equity as they relate to the experiences of teacher candidates.
Implications of this study support the following: continuation of programs offered through student support services; educative collaborative implementation of UCU’s equity policy to promote greater consistency in its influence; application of inclusive pedagogy; greater curricular emphasis on social power and constructions of difference; recognition of immigrant teachers’ linguistic capital; development of a collaborative method to evaluate teacher candidates in practice teaching contexts; and continued effort to advance a more profound and consistent influence of multiculturalist ideology in Canadian schools.
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Responses to Difference in Initial Teacher Education: A Case of Racial and Linguistic Minority Immigrant Teacher CandidatesChassels, Caroline June 30 August 2011 (has links)
Despite recent rhetoric advocating the diversification of the teacher workforce, teachers in Canada continue to be disproportionately white and of northern European heritage. By investigating responses to difference experienced by racial and linguistic minority immigrant teacher candidates in an initial teacher education program, this thesis sheds light on dynamics that challenge or support the induction of minoritized individuals as members of the teaching profession in Canada.
Data collected through interviews with eight immigrant teacher candidates, four instructors, and five student support staff of an initial teacher education program at an urban Canadian university (UCU) indicated that teacher candidates at UCU experienced varied responses to difference. Influences of both hegemony and collaboration were found in the university and practice teaching contexts where individuals representing regimes of competence enacted challenging assimilationist or supportive multiculturalist ideologies. In practice teaching contexts, although all of the teacher candidates engaged with at least one collaborative mentor teacher and they all persisted to complete the program, six of the eight teacher candidates (i.e., all of the linguistic minority teacher candidates in this study) encountered a challenging and significantly discouraging relationship with a mentor teacher. In these hegemonic contexts the legitimacy of the teacher candidates appeared to be measured against a conception of “real teachers” as “real Canadians” who are native English-speakers and who are familiar with the culture of schooling in Canada. Within the university context, student support staff were consistent in their critical awareness of the challenges and supports experienced by teacher candidates while instructors demonstrated a range of familiarity with these issues and with concepts of equity as they relate to the experiences of teacher candidates.
Implications of this study support the following: continuation of programs offered through student support services; educative collaborative implementation of UCU’s equity policy to promote greater consistency in its influence; application of inclusive pedagogy; greater curricular emphasis on social power and constructions of difference; recognition of immigrant teachers’ linguistic capital; development of a collaborative method to evaluate teacher candidates in practice teaching contexts; and continued effort to advance a more profound and consistent influence of multiculturalist ideology in Canadian schools.
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Transnational Activities and their Impact on Achieving a Successful Housing Career in Canada: The Case of Ghanaian Immigrants in TorontoFirang, David 30 August 2011 (has links)
Appropriate housing with security of tenure is an important factor in the immigrant settlement and integration process. However, many studies of immigrant settlement and the housing careers of immigrants do so within the borders of a nation-state without reference to transnationalism – immigrants’ ties and cross-border connections with the country of origin. This case study of the transnational ties and housing careers of Ghanaian immigrants in Toronto aims to increase our understanding of one recent immigrant group’s settlement and integration process in Canada. Using a mixed-method approach involving both quantitative and qualitative data collection methods, this study explores how transnational housing activities influence the housing careers of Ghanaians in Toronto. The findings include insights into the immigration history and the socio-demographic characteristics of Ghanaians in Toronto; the nature and extent of transnational ties between Ghana and Canada; the nature of housing careers among Ghanaians in Toronto; and the influence of transnationalism on housing careers of Ghanaians in Toronto.
Although Ghanaians’ immigration to Canada dates from the late 1950s, Ghanaians started coming to Canada in noticeable numbers after the 1960s. Ghanaian immigration to Canada generally and to Toronto particularly surged in the 1980s and beyond. Deteriorating economic and political conditions in Ghana and relatively favourable immigration policies and a good economic climate in Canada were the driving forces behind Ghanaian migration to Canada. However, the Ghanaian settlement process in Toronto does not culminate in a complete break with the homeland. Rather, Ghanaians in Toronto have engaged in a range of transnational activities with the country of origin, including contacts with family and friends, travelling to or visiting Ghana, following Ghanaian politics, investing in housing or property in Ghana, running businesses in Ghana, attending funerals in Ghana, and making regular remittances to Ghana.
With respect to Ghanaians’ housing careers, the study reveals that during their initial settlement period, most Ghanaians lived in public subsidized rental housing or poor-quality private rental housing. They considered their housing conditions as inadequate and unsuitable and were not satisfied with their neighbourhood’s safety and security. At the time of the survey, however, respondents were more likely to own homes and were more likely to feel safe and secure in their neighbourhoods. However, housing affordability remains a major problem for Ghanaians in Toronto. With respect to the influence of transnationalism on housing careers of Ghanaians in Toronto, the study finds that transnational housing activities, especially Ghanaians’ attitudes to and preference for investing in housing in Ghana, affect their housing careers in Toronto. Sending regular remittances to Ghana and investing in housing in the homeland involve mobilizing huge financial resources from Toronto to achieving their housing needs in the country of origin, while many Ghanaians struggle to meet their own needs in Toronto. A logistic regression analysis shows that personal income and strong ties with Ghana are statistically significant predictors of investing in housing in Ghana. At the same time, significant predictors of Ghanaians’ propensity to own a house in Canada include loyalty to Canada and household income.
The study contributes conceptually and empirically to three areas of research – transnationalism, housing careers, and immigrant settlement and integration – which hitherto have been studied as separate themes. Conceptually, it breaks away from the traditional way of researching immigrant settlement and housing careers by introducing a new conceptual dimension, transnationalism. Further, this research has added new insights about a recently arrived immigrant group in Toronto. Finally, the study contributes to the social work literature by identifying an emerging field of international social work. It has drawn attention to the fact that in the era of transnationalism, the emergence of a population of migrants whose needs and lives transcend national borders will affect the future of social work research and practice.
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山地鄉的平地客家人—以新竹縣尖石鄉前山地區客家住民之經濟活動為核心之研究 / Non-Indigenous Hakka People in the Indigenous Township—A Study of Economic Activities of Hakka Residents in the Front-Mountain Area of Jianshi Township, Hsinchu County羅文君 Unknown Date (has links)
本研究以新竹縣尖石鄉前山地區的旮旯牌與尖石兩個客家聚落的經濟活動為研究範疇,藉由史料爬梳與深度訪談建構兩個移居聚落的形成過程、產業類型及社會關係網絡的樣貌,細緻地討論兩者的經濟活動如何運作,並於原鄉經濟發展的不同階段中扮演角色;同時,運用鑲嵌理論討論經濟活動與社會關係如何交織互動。本研究有三個主要的研究發現:一、在平地人無法輕易取得原鄉土地所有權的情況下,地權狀態與地理區位對於移居聚落的經濟活動與社會關係形塑具有決定性影響;二、不同時期出現的平地人聚落處在原鄉經濟發展的不同位階上,從早期作為泰雅族人的佃農與第一線山林資源採伐的勞動者,轉變為平地商品與山林產物交換的中介者;三、Polanyi與Granovetter對於經濟與社會鑲嵌的討論,提供本文不同的觀察尺度來解釋兩聚落中出現的不同鑲嵌型態;此外,本研究以兩個聚落雜貨店交換行為為例,指出經濟活動的「鑲嵌標的」,以及作為「交換媒介的物品特質」皆可成為觀察鑲嵌性質的指標。整體而言,本文突破以原(被剝削者)漢(剝削者)的二元架構來解釋原鄉中經濟關係的討論模式,並對鑲嵌理論的實際運用提出新的思考方向。 / This study focuses on the economic activities of Ga La Pai Community and Jian Shi Community in the front-mountain area of Jianshi Township, Hsinchu County. Adopting the methods of literature review and in-depth interview, this study retraces the history of the forming of these two communities, explores the industries and social relationships within, reveals how their economic activities operated, and the roles they played in different development stages of this region. Base on the concept of embeddedness, this study also discusses the role of social relations in economic activities. There are three main findings in this study. First, the land tenure and location of settlement area have significant impacts on the residents’ economic activities and social relations. Second, non-indigenous settlement are in different stratums of indigenous economy in different periods. They were at once peasants of Tayal people and workers of forest logging, but later they transformed into agents for the exchanges of forest products and commodities from urban area. Third, the different concerns of embeddedness from Karl Polanyi and Mark Granovetter provide multiple scales of view to approach several types of embeddedness occurred in each community. Besides, the comparison of exchange systems between two grocery shops respectively from Ga La Pai Community and Jian Shi Community points out that both of “the subject of embeddedness” and “the nature of medium for exchange” can be the indexes reflecting the characteristics of embeddedness. In general, this study makes a breakthrough in elaborating the roles of non-indigenous in indigenous economy other than the “Han-Chinese (exploiter)/ indigenous people (exploited)” dichotomy. Furthermore, this study makes additional remarks to the concept of embeddedness after practice case studies.
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