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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.
1

Problematics of military power : government, discipline and the subject of violence

Drake, M. S. January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
2

Virtual morality : virtual reality, human values and christian ethics in postmodernity

Houston, Graham Richard January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
3

Fear of crime, place and the moral order: A secondary analysis of gated communities

Riddles, Alton January 2019 (has links)
Magister Artium (Development Studies) - MA(DVS) / This study will use secondary data analysis of academic articles to study the topic under question. Much has been written on fear of crime from a quantitative and to a lesser extent qualitative approach (Burgess and Doran 2012) but little attention has been on this fear as an emotion from an interpretive sociological approach. The approach to emotions employed in this study will draw on Hochschild’s (1983) notion that emotions have signal functions and that emotions constitute a sense just like hearing and seeing, and in her estimation the most important one. Briefly stated, fear (of crime) signals to the person experiencing the emotion that something is worth being wary of; this in turn is based on expectations –and assumptions– of what a safe and orderly situation/environment or person is.
4

Narratives of Troubled Journeys: Personality disorder and the medicalisation of moral dilemmas

Middleton, Raymond P. January 2017 (has links)
This thesis examines the interaction of the medical and moral in the historical evolution of “personality disorder” starting with the relationship between Prichard’s (1835) diagnosis of “Moral Insanity” and an anti-modern religious text (Hancock, 1824) describing disorder of the moral faculty. Moral insanity is traced through to Psychopathic Personalities and the military’s Medical 203 to Personality Disorder in DSM I (1952) through to DSM 5 (2013). The extent to which DSM medicalises everyday moral categories is examined by building on the works of writers theorising moral orders and moral selves, such as Harré (1993), Bakhtin (1981, 1984, 1986) and Taylor (1989). This thesis moves from macro-level concerns to the micro-level using dialogical narrative methodology (Sullivan, 2012) alongside Bakhtin’s conceptual tools to examine how medical and personal narratives of "Personality Disorder" interact in lived experience by analysing a triangulation of my psychiatric clinical notes, contemporary diary entries and an autobiographical account. An analysis is undertaken of several diverse autobiographical accounts of ‘successful’ recovery from mental health crisis already available in the public sphere. Consideration was given to how concepts developed throughout this study might be used in future work, concepts such as “dialogical search for a new narrative”, the dialogical ethics of “habitual excess and insufficiency” and “authoritative narrators”. This thesis’s originality is in linking DSM 5’s diagnosis of personality disorder to anti-modern moral discourses on disorder of the moral faculty, and in revealing complex genre relationships between literal/medical and literary/moral understandings of emotional and mental crisis and recovery.
5

Moral order as necessity and as impossibility : common sense, race and the difficulty of change among four 'poor white' families in Newcastle

Peens, Michelle 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA (Sociology and Social Anthropology))--University of Stellenbosch, 2011. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The thesis examines the lives of four families in Newcastle, KwaZulu-Natal and what the situation in which these families find themselves tells us about race, poverty and social change in contemporary South Africa by using ethnographic participant observation techniques. Central to the thesis is a concern with contradiction expressed in the entanglement of these four families with a particular moral order. This moral order is the basis of continued material survival, but at the same time, it is not adequate to transform conditions of poverty nor to change feelings of entitlement, making it impossible for these families to imagine their condition as shared with other races. The problem appears to be just about individuals not thinking correctly about their position and about them not seeing how many South Africans are struggling to survive and therefore share similar difficulties. The thesis shows that the difficulties experienced have rather more to do with changing the families' common sense notions. Their common sense is grounded in material realities, in realties of institutions that provide for them but also dictate a particular way of seeing the world, a moral order. Common sense is embedded in the material practices of people, in how they inhabit space and make place for themselves, in how they interact with family, in how they work with the institutions that are the very condition of their survival, and in how they come to understand and judge the past. At the moments when the limits of the moral order become clear, it is then not the moral order that comes into question but rather it is reasserted through explanations based on particular structural changes as contingencies that reinforce the moral order rather than challenge it. It is at these moments that people reassert race since their common sense explanations seem limited. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie proefskrif ondersoek die alledaagse lewens van vier families in Newcastle, KwaZulu-Natal en wat hul situasie ons kan vertel van ras, armoede en sosiale verandering in 'n kontemporêre Suid-Afrika gebasseer op deelnemende waarneming en etnografiese tegnieke. Sentraal tot die proefskrif is 'n fokus op die teenstrydigheid wat voorkom in die verstrengeling van hierdie vier families met 'n bepaalde morele orde. Hierdie morele orde is die grondslag vir voortgesette materiële oorlewing, maar terselfde tyd is dit nie voldoende om die kondisies van armoede te transformeer of om hul gevoelens van geregtigheid te verander nie en maak dit amper onmoonltik vir die families om hulle kondisie as gedeel en gemeenskaplik met ander rasse te sien. Die probleem blyk om meer te wees as net individue wat nie korrek nadink oor hul posisie nie of nie sien hoeveel ander Suid Afrikaners sukkel om 'n bestaan te maak nie en dus soortgelyke probleme ervaar. Die tesis wys dat dit het eerder te doen met 'n verandering in wat die families „weet‟ gebaseer op hulle gesonde verstand (common sense). Hulle gesonde verstand is gegrond in materiële realiteite, die realiteite van instellings wat vir hulle voorsiening maak en gevolglik die spesifieke wyse waarop hulle die wêreld sien dikteer; 'n morele orde. Hulle gesonde verstand is gegrond in die materiële praktyke van mense, in hoe hulle in ruimtes leef en plek maak vir hulself, in hoe hulle omgaan met familie, in hoe hulle te werk gaan met instellings wat die basis is vir hulle oorlewing en in hoe hulle sin maak van die verlede asook dit oordeel. In die oomblike wanneer die grense van die morele orde bereik word, is dit nie die morele orde wat bevraagteken word nie. Die morele orde word eerder gehandhaaf deur regverdigings gebasseer op spesifieke strukturele veranderings wat dit verder versterk, eerder as uitdaag. Dit is in hierdie oomblikke wat mense fokus op ras omdat hulle gesonde verstand se rationalisasies of regverdigings beperk is.
6

A campesinidade presente na construção do espaço geográfico da cidade de Cubatão / A campesinidade presente na construção do espaço geográfico da cidade de Cubatão

Silva, Vilma Aparecida da 19 December 2006 (has links)
O presente estudo tem o objetivo de analisar a ampla ocorrência de práticas rurais na cidade de Cubatão atualmente. Para tanto, considera o processo de urbanização dessa cidade, iniciado com a industrialização. Nesse sentido, o conceito de campesinidade de Woortmann (1990) assume importância central para a análise do contexto cultural que envolve a realização dessas práticas e o significado que elas apresentam para os sujeitos sociais nelas envolvidos. Cubatão se destacou por muitos anos como local estratégico de ligação entre o planalto e o litoral (Baixada Santista), exercendo a função de porto e posto fiscal. Com a instalação de colonos açorianos em suas terras em 1803, deu-se início a algumas atividades agrícolas no município. A partir da instalação da Estrada de Ferro Santos-Jundiaí, as atividades comerciais entraram em declínio e Cubatão passou a se dedicar à cultura da banana que se tornou uma importante atividade econômica até 1950, quando a cidade se tornou industrial. A produção agrícola foi drasticamente reduzida, ao passo que a indústria passou a atrair uma grande massa de trabalhadores migrantes, sendo muitos provenientes do campo. O tipo de urbanização advinda dessa industrialização produziu um espaço fragmentado, em sua maioria composto por favelas. A partir da realização de atividades agrícolas, a espacialização do migrante de raiz camponesa revela uma tentativa de apropriação do espaço através da lógica do uso. No entanto, essa prática é atravessada pela racionalidade do capital, através da ação estatal. Esse embate é vivenciado pelo migrante no plano do vivido, onde as insurgências do uso se impõem como o irredutível, não sucumbindo à opressão da equivalência; ou seja, as atividades realizadas por esse sujeito social são praticadas independente de serem permitidas, toleradas, proibidas ou negadas. Dessa forma, a cidade expõe suas contradições relativas à sua forma e seu conteúdo. / The aim of this study is to analyse the widespread incidence of rural practices that currently take place in the city of Cubatão. For this purpose, it considers the city\'s urbanization process, which began following the industrialization process. In this context, Woortmann\'s concept of peasant moral order (1990) assumes central importance in the analysis of the cultural context involving the accomplishment of these practices and its significance given by the social actors involved. For many years, due to its strategic localization, Cubatão played a relevant role in linking the plateau and the coastline (Baixada Santista), operating as a port and fiscal site. With the settlement of Azorean colonists in its land, in 1803, agriculture was introduced in the city. After the Santos-Jundiai Railway was built, commerce declined and Cubatão started concentrating on the culture of banana which became an important economic activity up to 1950, when the city became industrial. The agricultural production was then drastically reduced at the same time that the industry began to attract a great mass of migrant workers, constituted mainly by peasant individuals. The type of urbanization created by the industrialization process produced a fragmented space, formed in majority by slums quarters. As a result of rural practices, the spacialization of the migrant from a peasant background, discloses an attempt of spacialization through the logic of the use. However, these practices are crossed by the rationality of the capital, supported by State action . This conflict is experienced by the migrant in the realm of the lived, where the insurgencies of the use impose themselves as the irreducible, not succumbing to the oppression of equivalence; that is, the activities carried out by this social actor are practised independently of being allowed, tolerated, forbidden or denied. In this way, the city displays its contradictions relating to its form and content.
7

Negotiating social and moral order in internet relay chat

Lawson, Danielle January 2008 (has links)
Although internet chat is a significant aspect of many internet users’ lives, the manner in which participants in quasi-synchronous chat situations orient to issues of social and moral order remains to be studied in depth. The research presented here is therefore at the forefront of a continually developing area of study. This work contributes new insights into how members construct and make accountable the social and moral orders of an adult-oriented Internet Relay Chat (IRC) channel by addressing three questions: (1) What conversational resources do participants use in addressing matters of social and moral order? (2) How are these conversational resources deployed within IRC interaction? and (3) What interactional work is locally accomplished through use of these resources? A survey of the literature reveals considerable research in the field of computer-mediated communication, exploring both asynchronous and quasi-synchronous discussion forums. The research discussed represents a range of communication interests including group and collaborative interaction, the linguistic construction of social identity, and the linguistic features of online interaction. It is suggested that the present research differs from previous studies in three ways: (1) it focuses on the interaction itself, rather than the ways in which the medium affects the interaction; (2) it offers turn-by-turn analysis of interaction in situ; and (3) it discusses membership categories only insofar as they are shown to be relevant by participants through their talk. Through consideration of the literature, the present study is firmly situated within the broader computer-mediated communication field. Ethnomethodology, conversation analysis and membership categorization analysis were adopted as appropriate methodological approaches to explore the research focus on interaction in situ, and in particular to investigate the ways in which participants negotiate and co-construct social and moral orders in the course of their interaction. IRC logs collected from one chat room were analysed using a two-pass method, based on a modification of the approaches proposed by Pomerantz and Fehr (1997) and ten Have (1999). From this detailed examination of the data corpus three interaction topics are identified by means of which participants clearly orient to issues of social and moral order: challenges to rule violations, ‘trolling’ for cybersex, and experiences regarding the 9/11 attacks. Instances of these interactional topics are subjected to fine-grained analysis, to demonstrate the ways in which participants draw upon various interactional resources in their negotiation and construction of channel social and moral orders. While these analytical topics stand alone in individual focus, together they illustrate different instances in which participants’ talk serves to negotiate social and moral orders or collaboratively construct new orders. Building on the work of Vallis (2001), Chapter 5 illustrates three ways that rule violation is initiated as a channel discussion topic: (1) through a visible violation in open channel, (2) through an official warning or sanction by a channel operator regarding the violation, and (3) through a complaint or announcement of a rule violation by a non-channel operator participant. Once the topic has been initiated, it is shown to become available as a topic for others, including the perceived violator. The fine-grained analysis of challenges to rule violations ultimately demonstrates that channel participants orient to the rules as a resource in developing categorizations of both the rule violation and violator. These categorizations are contextual in that they are locally based and understood within specific contexts and practices. Thus, it is shown that compliance with rules and an orientation to rule violations as inappropriate within the social and moral orders of the channel serves two purposes: (1) to orient the speaker as a group member, and (2) to reinforce the social and moral orders of the group. Chapter 6 explores a particular type of rule violation, solicitations for ‘cybersex’ known in IRC parlance as ‘trolling’. In responding to trolling violations participants are demonstrated to use affiliative and aggressive humour, in particular irony, sarcasm and insults. These conversational resources perform solidarity building within the group, positioning non-Troll respondents as compliant group members. This solidarity work is shown to have three outcomes: (1) consensus building, (2) collaborative construction of group membership, and (3) the continued construction and negotiation of existing social and moral orders. Chapter 7, the final data analysis chapter, offers insight into how participants, in discussing the events of 9/11 on the actual day, collaboratively constructed new social and moral orders, while orienting to issues of appropriate and reasonable emotional responses. This analysis demonstrates how participants go about ‘doing being ordinary’ (Sacks, 1992b) in formulating their ‘first thoughts’ (Jefferson, 2004). Through sharing their initial impressions of the event, participants perform support work within the interaction, in essence working to normalize both the event and their initial misinterpretation of it. Normalising as a support work mechanism is also shown in relation to participants constructing the ‘quiet’ following the event as unusual. Normalising is accomplished by reference to the indexical ‘it’ and location formulations, which participants use both to negotiate who can claim to experience the ‘unnatural quiet’ and to identify the extent of the quiet. Through their talk participants upgrade the quiet from something legitimately experienced by one person in a particular place to something that could be experienced ‘anywhere’, moving the phenomenon from local to global provenance. With its methodological design and detailed analysis and findings, this research contributes to existing knowledge in four ways. First, it shows how rules are used by participants as a resource in negotiating and constructing social and moral orders. Second, it demonstrates that irony, sarcasm and insults are three devices of humour which can be used to perform solidarity work and reinforce existing social and moral orders. Third, it demonstrates how new social and moral orders are collaboratively constructed in relation to extraordinary events, which serve to frame the event and evoke reasonable responses for participants. And last, the detailed analysis and findings further support the use of conversation analysis and membership categorization as valuable methods for approaching quasi-synchronous computer-mediated communication.
8

A campesinidade presente na construção do espaço geográfico da cidade de Cubatão / A campesinidade presente na construção do espaço geográfico da cidade de Cubatão

Vilma Aparecida da Silva 19 December 2006 (has links)
O presente estudo tem o objetivo de analisar a ampla ocorrência de práticas rurais na cidade de Cubatão atualmente. Para tanto, considera o processo de urbanização dessa cidade, iniciado com a industrialização. Nesse sentido, o conceito de campesinidade de Woortmann (1990) assume importância central para a análise do contexto cultural que envolve a realização dessas práticas e o significado que elas apresentam para os sujeitos sociais nelas envolvidos. Cubatão se destacou por muitos anos como local estratégico de ligação entre o planalto e o litoral (Baixada Santista), exercendo a função de porto e posto fiscal. Com a instalação de colonos açorianos em suas terras em 1803, deu-se início a algumas atividades agrícolas no município. A partir da instalação da Estrada de Ferro Santos-Jundiaí, as atividades comerciais entraram em declínio e Cubatão passou a se dedicar à cultura da banana que se tornou uma importante atividade econômica até 1950, quando a cidade se tornou industrial. A produção agrícola foi drasticamente reduzida, ao passo que a indústria passou a atrair uma grande massa de trabalhadores migrantes, sendo muitos provenientes do campo. O tipo de urbanização advinda dessa industrialização produziu um espaço fragmentado, em sua maioria composto por favelas. A partir da realização de atividades agrícolas, a espacialização do migrante de raiz camponesa revela uma tentativa de apropriação do espaço através da lógica do uso. No entanto, essa prática é atravessada pela racionalidade do capital, através da ação estatal. Esse embate é vivenciado pelo migrante no plano do vivido, onde as insurgências do uso se impõem como o irredutível, não sucumbindo à opressão da equivalência; ou seja, as atividades realizadas por esse sujeito social são praticadas independente de serem permitidas, toleradas, proibidas ou negadas. Dessa forma, a cidade expõe suas contradições relativas à sua forma e seu conteúdo. / The aim of this study is to analyse the widespread incidence of rural practices that currently take place in the city of Cubatão. For this purpose, it considers the city\'s urbanization process, which began following the industrialization process. In this context, Woortmann\'s concept of peasant moral order (1990) assumes central importance in the analysis of the cultural context involving the accomplishment of these practices and its significance given by the social actors involved. For many years, due to its strategic localization, Cubatão played a relevant role in linking the plateau and the coastline (Baixada Santista), operating as a port and fiscal site. With the settlement of Azorean colonists in its land, in 1803, agriculture was introduced in the city. After the Santos-Jundiai Railway was built, commerce declined and Cubatão started concentrating on the culture of banana which became an important economic activity up to 1950, when the city became industrial. The agricultural production was then drastically reduced at the same time that the industry began to attract a great mass of migrant workers, constituted mainly by peasant individuals. The type of urbanization created by the industrialization process produced a fragmented space, formed in majority by slums quarters. As a result of rural practices, the spacialization of the migrant from a peasant background, discloses an attempt of spacialization through the logic of the use. However, these practices are crossed by the rationality of the capital, supported by State action . This conflict is experienced by the migrant in the realm of the lived, where the insurgencies of the use impose themselves as the irreducible, not succumbing to the oppression of equivalence; that is, the activities carried out by this social actor are practised independently of being allowed, tolerated, forbidden or denied. In this way, the city displays its contradictions relating to its form and content.
9

Governmentality, pedagogy and membership categorization : a case of enrolling the citizen in sustainable regional planning

Summerville, Jennifer A. January 2007 (has links)
Over the past twenty years, the idea that planning and development practices should be ‘sustainable’ has become a key tenet of discourses characterising the field of planning and development. As part of the agenda to balance and integrate economic, environmental and social interests, democratic participatory governance arrangements are frequently purported to be necessary to achieve ‘sustainable development’ at both local and global levels. Despite the theoretical disjuncture between ideas of democratic civic participation, on the one hand, and civic participation as a means to achieve pre-determined sustainability goals on the other, notions of civic participation for sustainability have become integral features of sustainable development discourses. Underpinned by a conceptual and methodological intent to perform an epistemological ‘break’ with notions of civic participation for sustainability, this thesis explicates how citizens are enrolled in the sustainable development agenda in the discourse of policy. More specifically, it examines how assumptions about civic participation in sustainable development policy discourses operate, and unpacks some discursive strategies through which policy language ‘enrols’ citizens in the same set of assumptions around their normative requirement for participation in sustainable development. Focussing in on a case study sustainable development policy document – a draft regional plan representing a case of ‘enrolling the citizen in sustainability’ - it employs three sociological perspectives/methods that progressively highlight some of the ways that the policy language enjoins citizens as active participants in ‘sustainable’ regional planning. As a thesis-by-publication, the application of each perspective/method is reported in the form of an article prepared for publication in an academic journal. In a departure from common-sense understandings of civic participation for sustainability, the first article examines the governmentality of sustainable development policy. Specifically, this article explores how civic community – particularly community rights and responsibilities – are deployed in the policy discourse as techniques of government that shape and regulate the conduct of subjects. In this respect, rather than seeing civic community as a specific ‘thing’ and participation as corresponding to particular types of ‘activities’, this paper demonstrates how notions of civic participation are constructed and mobilised in the language of sustainable development policy in ways that facilitate government ‘at a distance’. The second article begs another kind of question of the policy – one concerned more specifically with how the everyday practices of subjects become aligned with the principles of sustainable development. This paper, therefore, investigates the role of pedagogy in establishing governance relations in which citizens are called to participate as part of the problematic of sustainability. The analysis suggests that viewing the case study policy in terms of relationships of informal pedagogy provided insights into the positioning of the citizen as an ‘acquirer’ of sustainability principles. In this instance, the pedagogic values of the text provide for low levels of discretion in how citizens could position themselves in the moral order of the discourse. This results in a strong injunction for citizens to subscribe to sustainability principles in a participatory spirit coupled with the requirement for citizens to delegate to the experts to carry out these principles. The third article represents a further breakdown of the ways in which citizens become enrolled in ‘sustainable’ regional planning within the language of the case study policy. Applying an ethnomethodological perspective, specifically Membership Categorization Analysis, this article examines the way ‘the citizen’ and ‘civic values and obligations’ are produced in the interactional context of the text. This study shows how the generation of a substantive moral order that ties the citizen to sustainable values and obligations with respect to the region, is underpinned by a normative morality associated with the production of orderliness in ‘text-in-interaction’. As such, it demonstrates how the production and positioning of ‘the citizen’ in relation to the institutional authors of the policy, and the region more generally, are practical accomplishments that orient the reader to identify him/herself as a ‘citizen’ and embrace the ‘civic values and obligations’ to which he/she is bound. Together, the different conceptual and methodological approaches applied in the thesis provide a more holistic picture of the different ways in which citizens are discursively enrolled in the sustainability agenda. At the substantive level, each analysis reveals a different dimension of how the active citizen is mobilised as a responsible agent for sustainable development. In this respect, civic participation for sustainability is actualised and reproduced through the realms of language, not necessarily through applied occasions of civic participation in the ‘taken-for-granted’ sense. Furthermore, at the conceptual and methodological level, the thesis makes a significant contribution to sociological inquiry into relationships of governance. Rather than residing within the boundaries of a specific sociological perspective, it shows how different approaches that would traditionally be applied in a mutually exclusive manner, can complement each other to advance understanding of how governance discourses operate. In this respect, it provides a rigorous conceptual and methodological platform for further investigations into how citizens become enrolled in programmes of government.
10

Give us this day our daily bread : The moral order of Pentecostal peasants in South Brazil

Alves, Leonardo Marcondes January 2018 (has links)
This ethnography aims to identify the role of the Pentecostal beliefs that peasants in South Brazil use in justifying their life situations. Anthropological data were collected in the Sertão region of Jaguariaíva, in the Brazilian State of Paraná. An interpretative approach was used with concepts including the moral order of peasantness, moral economy, and multiple livelihood strategies. The core results indicated that Pentecostals in the countryside are not monolithic in terms of religion and have varying degrees of engagement with a variety of churches as well as their relations with the wider capitalism. Their economic and life-changing decisions are articulated by a moral order of peasantness expressed by dependence on Providence and the interpretation of events as a revelation of Divine will. The moral order is significant for maintaining viable peasant communities, orienting their relations to land, kinship, work, and consumption in a way that sets them apart from the “world.” Such findings question the Weberian explanations for the role of Pentecostalism in Latin American capitalism and confirm the repeasantization theory concerning the persistence of a distinctive peasant way of life. / Esta etnografia visa identificar o papel das crenças pentecostais com as quais os camponeses do sul do Brasil se expressam para justificar sua subsistência. O trabalho de campo antropológico no Sertão de Jaguariaíva, Paraná, serviu para a coleta de dados. Em uma abordagem interpretativa, a análise emprega conceitos de ordem moral da campesinidade, economia moral e múltiplas estratégias de subsistência. Os principais resultados são: o pentecostalismo rural não é monolítico e conta com diferentes graus de envolvimento com uma variedade de igrejas e com o capitalismo em geral. Não obstante, suas decisões econômicas, ou de grande impacto na vida, são articuladas por uma ordem moral campesina expressa pela espera na providência e pela interpretação de eventos como uma revelação da vontade divina. A ordem moral tem relevância para a manutenção de comunidades camponesas viáveis, orientando suas relações com a terra, o parentesco, o trabalho e o consumo, de modo a distingui-las do “mundo”. Tais resultados juntam-se ao debate das explicações weberianas sobre o papel do pentecostalismo no capitalismo latino-americano e confirmam a teoria do retorno do camponês como categoria e sua persistência como um distinto modo de vida.

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