Spelling suggestions: "subject:"minority"" "subject:"sinority""
51 |
Dear God. Dear Bones. Dear Yellow.Hindi, Noor 09 July 2020 (has links)
No description available.
|
52 |
Sexual Minority StressWilliams, Stacey L. 01 March 2015 (has links)
No description available.
|
53 |
Brown Girl ChromatographyBhowmik, Anuradha 26 June 2018 (has links)
This poetry manuscript is based on the experiences of a Bangladeshi-born American female. The narrator of these poems navigates the conflict between her two cultural identities while growing up as a first generation immigrant in the United States. This creative work interrogates issues of race, class, gender, and sexuality in post-9/11 America. This collection, written as a memoir-in-verse, draws from pop cultural icons and personal experiences in order to build a narrative arc that spans from the Bangladeshi-American female's birth to her mid-twenties adulthood. / MFA
|
54 |
Minoritetspolitik för vem?Karlsson, Ellen, Hansson, Erica January 2013 (has links)
Different reports imply that the Roma are an excluded group in numerous areas of both Sweden and Europe. Efforts have been done through the centuries without given intentional results. The past 12 years as a Swedish national minority have not diminished the gap between the Roma and the majority society. How does Sweden create and operate its minority policy especially towards the Roma? We have studied international and national minority policy to see how it is described and implemented in the municipality work. Malmö is the base of our study because of its high population of the Roma from various groups. Malmö is also one of the pilot municipalities in the governmental venture for including the Roma into the society. To obtain information we have analyzed governmental documents and minority rights and complemented those with interviews with politicians, community workers in the minority field. A lot of effort and work are being done in Malmö to change the situation of the Roma. Our informants gave an impression of feeling confident and hopeful towards the future. At the same time we feel a lack of discussion about the essence of minority policy and the possible negativity in “helping” the Roma as a minority group. We also think it’s important to question the meaning of recognition to motivate what efforts should be done in the minority field. By this study we hope to demonstrate the complexity that lies within the field of minority policy in general and regarding the Roma in particular.
|
55 |
Minority Stress in AppalachiaWilliams, Stacey L. 07 July 1905 (has links)
No description available.
|
56 |
A history of immigrant groups in ToledoBartha, Stephen J. January 1945 (has links)
No description available.
|
57 |
Persistence of interest in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics: an analysis of persisting and non-persisting studentsWhite, Jeffry L. 13 May 2005 (has links)
No description available.
|
58 |
Vocational rehabilitation for persons with dual diagnosis: An examination of outcomes for minority and non-minority clientsRobinson, Hermona Cozella 14 July 2005 (has links)
No description available.
|
59 |
Performing Differences: Negotiating a Muslim Minority’s Space in ChinaZhao, Yuanhao 19 July 2012 (has links)
No description available.
|
60 |
Power and Status in Majority - Minority RelationsSachdev, Itesh 09 1900 (has links)
Social psychological processes underlying intergroup behaviour should be placed in their sociostructural contexts. Previous experimental studies have usually created groups that do not differ on sociostructural dimensions such as group numbers, power, and status. The impact of these factors on intergroup behaviour constituted the major aim of the present research.
Predictions were formulated assuming that individuals are motivated to achieve a positive social identity (Tajfel & Variants of the "minimal group" paradigm see Tajfel & Turner, 1979) were used, first, to replicate previous minimal group results, and second, to assess the independent and combined effects of power, status, and group as in previous studies, allocation matrices developed by Tajfel and his colleagues were the main dependent measures. Unlike previous studies, these were supplemented with extensive possession questionnaire items that included items on social identifications and various intergroup perceptions.
First, the classic minimal group discrimination effect, replicated under conditions of equal group numbers, power, and status, was eliminated when group members had little or no power (study 2). Categorization per se was net sufficient for intergroup discrimination. Without usable power, minimal group members did net discriminate.
However, categorization per se was sufficient in eliciting prejudice. Second, results of this research clearly shewed that increases in group status and group power led to concomitant increases in matrix discrimination. Membership in minority groups polarised these patterns of behaviour (and perceptions) more than membership in majority groups. Status was the best predictor of social identification (and related perceptions), while power best predicted actual behaviour. In conclusion, evidence from these studies indicated that group numbers, power, and status, independently and in combination, have a strong impact on intergroup behaviour and perceptions. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
|
Page generated in 0.0493 seconds