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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.
11

When You Are the News: The Health Effects of Contemporary Islamophobia on Muslims in the United States and United Kingdom

Hassan, Safiah Seid 05 April 2017 (has links)
Since the attacks on September 11, 2001, Muslims in the United States and United Kingdom have been the targets of Islamophobia: unwavering scrutiny, discrimination, and being made to feel like âothers.â I use mixed methods of literature review, qualitative interviews, and quantitative analysis to argue that this Islamophobia affects the health of Muslims. I draw primarily from the concepts of orientalism and biological citizenship to link history with contemporary Islamophobia. My main qualitative findings include that there are highly significant studies linking Islamophobia and perceived discrimination with objective health outcomes and that there are three main levels that contribute to the overall perceived discrimination of Muslims. These three levels are interpersonal, community, and societal-level discrimination. Through quantitative analysis, I show that with confounding variables aside, Muslims experience more discrimination than similar non-Muslims, which leads to adverse mental and self-reported health outcomes, decreased happiness, and decreased feeling at home in America. By framing Islamophobia as a public health issue, I argue that its condemnation is essential to improving population health.
12

Fighting Food Insecurity with The Nashville Mobile Market: A Temporary Solution to Systemic Food Injustice

Cross, Michael Scott 29 July 2013 (has links)
A comprehensive review of the state of food security in the United States with a specific focus on the communities in Nashville, Tennessee is presented in this thesis. Food insecurity is proposed as a mechanism by which diet-related health disparities are maintained. The reduction of health disparities, particularly diet-related conditions like Type II diabetes, chronic heart disease, and obesity, between individuals of differing race, income-level, educational attainment, socioeconomic status, and geographic residential location is not possible without reducing the structural barriers impeding access to fresh, healthful foods. The Nashville Mobile Market circumvents these barrierscost, time, and energyby providing a dependable, convenient mobile grocery store. This thesis provides a detailed analysis of The Nashville Mobile Market, its development, sustainability, operation, and its use as a research tool to assess changes in purchasing and consuming fresh produce.
13

Misplaced/Displaced: Defining the Refugee Category

Martin-Willett, Renée 27 July 2015 (has links)
Refugees from disparate locations are consolidated and reconsolidated under the refugee label as they are displaced and later resettled, and the accumulated layers of movement and categorization also create new layers of acculturation. But in addition to the experience of negotiating and internalizing multiple cultures, the way you are asked about that process, what you are asked about it, and in what context can also influence acculturation attitudes. Being consistently asked about negative psychological states through mental health screening tools that quantify depression, anxiety, or PTSD may not allow for the occupation of multiple, simultaneous states of acculturation, nor do they allow for acculturation and emotional experience as a dynamic process. Continuing to over-apply these screening tools in clinical and non-clinical practice and in research recapitulates the homogenization of traumatized groups, acting to create categories defined by trauma and anxiety, and obscuring important dimensions of resilience. As a partial result of international and domestic refugee resettlement policies, refugees are created as a homogenous, traumatized category. The statistical instruments that characterize refugee mental health further legitimize this category and are used too broadly in clinical, non-clinical and scholarly contexts. According to my empirical evidence, a paradigm shift towards wellbeing and resilience would better align with self-characterizations of mental health by refugees and clinical and non-clinical professionals working on the ground in resettlement. Importantly, it would also undermine the homogenous category of the traumatized refugee.
14

How Identity, Stressors and Obesity should be considered in Intervention Programs to Reduce Chronic Disease Risk among Southern Middle-Aged African American Men

Marrero, Katie Ann 01 April 2015 (has links)
Southern African American middle-aged men have high rates of obesity and premature mortality due to chronic illnesses. Different sources were brought together to perform a critical literature review to better understand how factors influence this populations high rates of chronic disease risk and obesity and where to most effectively intervene. Based on this critical review, it suggests that there are a number of challenges that Southern African American men face when attempting to engage in healthy behaviors, manage stress and fulfill key age congruent roles and responsibilities. While there are a lot of efforts to intervene, one place it seems important to do so within the mesosystem via families and communities. We found that given the intersection of this populations many identities (Southern, African American, middle-aged, male), it is important to try to help them more effectively make healthy decision in their unhealthy environments (a result of race base residential segregation), overcome social norms and environmental stressors, and deal with their efforts to fulfill these masculine age-based roles. Future research should help to operationalize the idea of these identities and role strain by using an intersectional perspective that will take into account environment, culture, and social factors that influence African American men as they relate to disease risk.
15

Genital Injury in Modern Warfare: The Struggle for Intimacy Inside the Bio-power of the Military Institution

Sacks, Robert Samuel 05 April 2015 (has links)
The prevalence of combat-induced male genital injury suffered in modern warfare is at historic levels, and yet it remains as an underdeveloped area of military discourse, rendering it into an invisible phenomenon. Although the Veterans Administration (VA) releases injury data to the public, it offers little insight into the lived experience of veterans suffering from genital trauma and how these specific veterans are cared for within the military rehabilitation system. Because existing literature is still scarce, this paper draws on a diverse set of resources in an attempt to illuminate a body of knowledge that accurately defines genital injury within the context of the military. The purpose of this is to reveal the clashing intersection between the intimate embodiments of genital injury and the bio-power manifested within the military as a means to argue why this phenomenon remains an invisible crisis. Due to the lack of medical care knowledge surrounding genital injury, I argue for a novel method rooted in feminist science that can sufficiently care for male veterans suffering from genital injury.
16

Intrapersonal Stigma: The Latent Function of Apartheid and HIV/AIDS Stigmatization in South Africa and Implications for Interventions

Sharp, Else Weil 06 April 2015 (has links)
This thesis seeks to contextualize current high levels of HIV/AIDS stigmatization (H/A stigma) by applying a structural functionalist perspective to the study of stigmatization and of apartheid. I argue that the latent function of apartheid was to institutionalize the politically and socially constructed identity of black South Africans into the psyches of South Africans. Classified as an inferior, devalued and base race, and persistently confronted by the poor conditions and demeaning stereotypes associated with their racial classification, many black South Africans internalized this racial identity and developed a negative self-concept. Applying recent structural stigma theory, I argue that apartheid was able to legitimize the socially constructed differences between races through the mechanism of intrapersonal stigma, thus serving a system-justifying function. I hold that the centrality of identity to stigma and to apartheid history leaves people living with HIV/AIDS in South Africa increasingly vulnerable to stigmatization, discrimination, and psychological impairment through the development of a negative self-concept. With the modern conception of stigma as a power-driven structural process operating in a system of inequality (Parker & Aggleton, 2003; Campbell et al., 2007), this thesis illustrates how stigma is often deeply embedded within the structures of a society. Though the majority of current H/A stigmatization reduction interventions target stigma operating at the interpersonal level, this thesis advocates for improving structural level interventions for stigma operating at the intrapersonal level, looking at the Black Consciousness Movement as a catalyst of these efforts.
17

A New Perspective on Racism and Health: How White Men are Hurt By Their Own Racial Attitudes

Smith, Brian Austin 14 April 2015 (has links)
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) has massive potential to help reduce gender and SES disparities in health, yet low-SES white men overwhelmingly oppose the policy. This paper argued white men are hurt by their negative racial attitudes towards blacks, as analysis of language used by low-SES white men in debate surrounding the ACA would reveal that their opposition is rooted in symbolic racism, rather than biological or economic self-interest. To test this hypothesis, I constructed a code consisting of four lexical indicators of symbolic racism in opposition to the ACA, namely: (1) the profound impact of The O-Word-Obama- on whites attitudes towards the ACA, (2) the use of racial stereotypes as a proxy for race, (3) Us vs. Them: assertion of unfairness and perceived racial difference in values as a proxy for race, and (4) comparing the ACA to other social welfare policies. This paper then analyzed symbolic racism in a rhetorical context by applying the code to two different sources of ACA debate. First, analysis of public opinion poll comments suggested symbolic racist rhetoric was highly prevalent in the ACA debate. Second, applying the code to focus groups yielded evidence that low SES white men utilized symbolic racist language heavily in their opposition to the ACA. These findings are consistent with my hypothesis, suggesting that low-SES white men are hurt by their own racial prejudices towards blacks- as negative racial attitudes trump their biological and economic self-interest.
18

Under the Shade of Hopelessness: Future Orientation and Black Middle Class Youth

Hill, Kristin Anita 14 April 2015 (has links)
Previous research in low-income urban environments led to the conclusion that the underachievement of African-American youth is attributed to their disadvantaged environment and lack of self-esteem. In recent years, however, I observed a similar underachievement and lack of future orientation, or the image one has for their future, in middle/working-class African-American students at Chute Middle School in the middle-class suburb of Evanston, IL. My research is unique in that it focuses on middle and working-class African-American youth living in a suburban environment and proposes a new perspective of future orientation as a summation of self-concept, perceived societal worth, life expectancy, and belief in ones potential for upward mobility. Despite residence in Evanston, these youth are still exposed to violence, both locally and nationally, which negatively impacts the development and pursuit of a positive future orientation. I believe a sense of hopelessness is cultivated via the influence of interpersonal and structural violence, invidious class-based comparison, and inequity on the formation of positive Black identity and upward social mobility. This pathway is further substantiated with psychological, sociological, and intersectional frameworks that accentuate the dynamic relationship between an individual and their environment, and the unique consequences of race and class relations. This thesis is a literature review designed to build a foundation that will support ethnographic research and field work of Chute Middle School in the near future.
19

Trans* Health Disparities, Health Care Utilization, and the Gender Dichotomy

Nektalova, Elina 03 December 2014 (has links)
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) was signed into law by President Obama in 2010; it undertook to address the many faults in the current healthcare system, particularly focusing on historically marginalized and underserved communities. Although the bill prohibited healthcare providers from discriminating against certain patients, the trans* community continues to face health disparities, particularly a lack of access to knowledgeable doctors and adequate health care services that address their specific needs, in addition to obtaining insurance enrollment and coverage. Although there are undeniably certain loopholes and inconsistencies that detract from the bills purpose, the main culprit behind the continued discrimination is not insurance policy but rather the conceptualization of gender in Western society. By adhering to a strict binary gender system, social institutions and mainstream society codify discrimination again people that identify outside of this dichotomous labelling classification. In the last few decades, there has been a promising trend toward tolerance of the LGBT community and particularly a movement toward sharing the non-standard narratives. This thesis took advantage of that opportunity to speak to trans* individuals about their health care experiences with doctors, medical treatments, insurance companies, and a more general description of their transitional process, in whichever point they were currently experiencing. In addition to providing an analysis of the current situation, this work hopes to inspire the reader to question their fundamental conceptions of gender to help create a more open-minded society for all people.
20

âIâm The One That Understands Whatâs Happening To Meâ: Sensemaking Narratives of People with Type I Diabetes

VanHouten, Courtney Brianne Akutsu Bright 08 December 2017 (has links)
While healthcare research has examined how social and emotional factors complicate treatment of chronic disease, practitioners often have few resources to assess and address the impact of non-biological influences on patient care. This is especially problematic in patients with Type-I diabetes as the chronic nature of the condition requires the person with the illness to act as their own health-care provider outside of the physicianâs office. It is important for practitioners to understand how patientâs experiences, values, and perceptions shape their health-related activities and how they express their understanding in order to fully engage and assist the person with their own self-care. Drawing from in-depth interviews with people diagnosed with Type-I diabetes, this paper makes two claims. First, drawing from Narrative theory, this paper demonstrates how participants use narrative storytelling as a medium to communicate their holistic understanding of their illness. Second, this paper uses Sensemaking theory to examine how participants iteratively organize social, emotional, environmental, and experiential elements (including narratives) to construct their understanding.

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