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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.
501

The role of women in economic development : case studies of Taiwan, Indonesia and the Philippines

Bahramitash, Roksana. January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
502

A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF E-VOTING ADOPTION: GLOBAL TRENDS, INDONESIA, AND THE PHILIPPINES

Darmawan, Ikhsan 26 July 2023 (has links)
No description available.
503

Class Inequality among Third World Women Wage Earners: Mistresses and Maids in the Philippines

Arnado, Mary Janet Madrono 14 March 2002 (has links)
This dissertation is geared toward a deeper understanding of the complexity of the multiple positions of women in the "Third World," and on how these positions create, sustain, and reproduce inequalities. I examine class inequality among employed women in the Philippines in the context of mistress-maid employment relationship. Using feminist fieldwork approaches, my gatekeeper, Merly, and I conducted extensive interviews and focus groups with thirty-one maids and ten mistresses between May and August 2000 in a medium-sized city in the Philippines. Recorded interviews were transcribed and processed using QSR NUD*IST N4. Domestic workers, who started as child laborers, live in their mistresses' homes where they perform household chores and carework. Aside from their "job description," they carry out additional tasks within and outside the household. The maids' relationship with their mistresses is based on maternalism, in which the mistresses integrate them into the family, engage in gift giving, provide educational support, but at the same time, control their bodies, times, spaces, and relationships. Except in cases where maternalist behavior becomes violent, both maids and mistresses approve of maternalism. In looking at the factors that may contribute to the mistresses' maternalist behavior, this study found that mistresses who are subordinate relative to their spouses and their workplaces are more likely than those who are not subordinate to engage in maternalist behavior with their maids. As maids prefer maternalist relationship with their mistresses, they accommodate their mistresses' dominating tendencies. When reprimanded, they respond through culture-specific rituals of subordination. However, when their threshold of tolerance is breached, they apply a combination of subtle and blatant resisting strategies. Younger maids perceive domestic work as a stepping-stone toward a more comfortable future, while older maids view it as a dead-end occupation. From a global standpoint, class mobility is examined based on the domestic workers dialectic positions within the international division of reproductive labor. Throughout this dissertation, women's inequality in the context of mistress-maid relations were analyzed from various angles, shifting the analysis from micro to macro dynamics; from class to the intersection of gender, ethnicity, age, and class; and from local to global. In addition to providing a sociological understanding of this phenomenon, I put the varied voices of "Third World women" at the forefront of this study. / Ph. D.
504

bahay sa buhay [from house to life]: exploring architecture's role in informal settlement in Payatas, Philippines

Fannin, Nicole M. 03 August 2010 (has links)
No description available.
505

The Piano Compositional Style of Lucrecia Roces Kasilag

Salido, Caroline Besana 20 December 2002 (has links)
No description available.
506

Anticipating 1898: Writings of U.S. Empire on Puerto Rico, Cuba, the Philippines, and Hawai'i

Garcia, Ivonne Marie 05 September 2008 (has links)
No description available.
507

Does Mobility Make Bad Citizens? The Impact of International Migration on Democratic Accountability

Oh, Yoon-Ah 21 July 2011 (has links)
No description available.
508

Prohibition as a Moral Framework: The United States' Opium Policy, 1898-1914

Smith, Britnee January 2016 (has links)
This study explores the creation of American prohibition policy towards drugs and drug trafficking. It examines the United States’ opium policy in the first decade of the twentieth century as the first example of drug prohibition and locates the impetus for drug prohibition in the American acquisition of the Philippines Islands in 1898. This work shows how prohibition in the early twentieth century was based on a moral understanding of drug policy. This study also briefly looks at how drug prohibition continues today with the modern War on Drugs policy. The War on Drugs in this framework is an expansion of an earlier failed policy. By revisiting the first example of drug prohibition and thereby historicizing the current debates about drug policy, this thesis argues history does not provide reasons to expect that the prohibition of drug use and trafficking will prove effective. / History
509

Type 2 diabetes mellitus risk and prevalence: a descriptive study in communities of the Zamboanga Peninsula, Philippines

Shirinzadeh, Maryam January 2020 (has links)
Background: Diabetes is an important cause of morbidity, mortality, and health-system costs worldwide. The growing burden of T2DM particularly in developing countries has directed more attention to primary prevention. This cross-sectional study assessed the prevalence of T2DM and its risk factors among general and diabetic populations of the Zamboanga Peninsula, Philippines. Methods: This was a multi-center community-based cross-sectional study. 2624 individuals 40 years old or older residents (100 persons per Barangay of total 26 barangays) of the Zamboanga Peninsula province have been chosen via door-to-door systematic random sampling procedure. Personal demographic, anthropometric and lifestyle information was collected using a structured questionnaire. Weight, height, WC, BMI, and HbA1c test was were obtained through participant measurements. Results: Valid data of 2572 (98.01%) individuals analyzed, mean ±SD of age was 57.39 ± 10.41 and 1843 (71.7%) of participants were women. Based on ADA 2018 guideline, the prevalence of T2DM and prediabetes were 18.3% and 26.7%, respectively. The frequency of having T2DM and prediabetes was higher in older people (p< 0.05). Urban areas had a significantly higher prevalence of diabetes, prediabetes compared with rural areas (p< 0.01). 54.4 % of the population had a normal body mass index while 45.6% of the population were overweight (32.1 %) or obese (13.5%), and 65% had high or elevated WC. There was a significant association between BMI /central obesity and glucose abnormalities (P<0.01). The prevalence of overweight, obesity and abdominal obesity was significantly higher in women and the older age groups had significantly lower BMIs/ abdominal obesity than younger age groups. 40.4% of the participants had HTN and the prevalence of HTN was significantly higher in the older age groups and female participants. The prevalence of HTN and family history of diabetes were higher in T2DM patients and individuals with prediabetes (P<0.01). Based on the FINDRISC score, the risk of developing diabetes was high or very high in 17.6% and moderate in 20.0% of the population. Conclusion: The prevalence of T2DM and prediabetes was higher in this study compared to previous surveys in the country. This finding highlights the need for public health efforts to improve T2DM risk factors such as obesity and hypertension in this population. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)
510

Factors affecting compliance: treatment for anemia in pregnant Philippine women

Velasco-Albarillo, Ma. Lourdes 14 November 2012 (has links)
The primary objective of this research is to explore the determinants of compliance to iron supplement medication among a sample of pregnant women. The data is based on a larger research project on Nutritional Anemia collected by the Nutrition Center of the Philippines, from 1980 to 1982. The focus of analysis is on compliance as a dependent variable. Also, three sets of factors are used to explain compliance behavior. These are: socio-demographic, treatment, and social psychological factors. The sample consists of 377 pregnant women who were interviewed to explore the research problem. Data are obtained from a survey, and are analyzed using zero-order correlations and multiple regression techniques. Results of the zero-order correlation analysis show that the socio-demographic and treatment factors have weak relationships with compliance rate. Moreover, among the social-psychological factors, three are found to have significant positive correlations with compliance rate; and these are, folk health beliefs, perceived knowledge about the benefits of vitamins, and mothers‘ health practices. The results of the multiple regression analysis indicate that, with controls, all the potential determinants are not significantly related to compliance rate. The study results are then evaluated in the light of the literature on compliance in the United States. A compliance model is then suggested which serves as a guideline for future research. However, even with the establishment of this compliance model, a question concerning the operationalization of the variables remains. Some suggestions on measures of the variables are provided. / Master of Science

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