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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.
21

State Repression of Black Dissent in the USA : A Comparative Analysis of the Black Panther Party and the Movement for Black Lives

Stanowsky, Siri January 2023 (has links)
This comparative analysis explores the state repression experienced by The Black Panther Party, which was active mainly during the late 1960s and early 1970s, and the currently biggest movement for racial equality in the US, the Movement for Black Lives. Using Conflict Theory and Critical Race Theory the research asks two research questions: How has state repression changed from the Black Panther Party to the Movement for Black Lives? and What are possible explanations for this change? This thesis aims to shed light on state repression in relation to movements focused on black rights and equality. The findings of this research are in line with conflict theory, and supportive of racial threat perspective as a theoretical framework. The thesis concludes that state repression of black dissent has changed in multiple aspects, such as police violence, legislative measure, surveillance, and media framing, yet is still prevalent and harmful to social movements.
22

Media Coverage and the Ferguson Unrest

Wyatt, Brittanni 01 January 2015 (has links)
The media aids in bringing to light many social issues across the nation each and every day. Historically, police force on African Americans can be seen amongst many media outlets. However, with technological advances the media has flourished which makes it possible for the media to supply coverage of police force on African Americans more now than ever before. This exploratory analysis aimed to uncover ways in which the media has framed the individuals involved in the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri on August 9, 2014. Articles from four media outlets were used in this analysis. Data was collected from the articles that specifically focused on terms and phrases used to describe the deceased and the officer involved as well as the altercation between the two individuals involved. Results of the analysis show that specific words to identify and describe the deceased and officer involved were used at a much higher rate in national news outlets as opposed to a local news out-let from Missouri. These results are specifically discussed as well as limitations and ideas for further research on the data that was collected and use.
23

The Killing Agent : A comparative transitivity analysis of US news headlines regarding killings of and by the civilian and the police officer

Rikardsdotter, Wendela January 2023 (has links)
Due to its status and reach, media discourse can shape its reader's perspective on social actors and events, for good and for worse. This thesis investigates 100 headlines retrieved via searches in the NOW corpus, of which 50 portray killings of police officers by civilians and 50 portray the opposite, killings of civilians by police officers. The US headlines were exposed to transitivity analysis with a focus on agency in order to discover potential differences in portrayal when comparing the two groups. The results show that the killing agents are placed similarly, that the civilian as the killing agent is named to a slightly higher extent and that the police officer as the killing agent is presented in plural or as a group to a much higher extent. All of these choices may have different motives. The descriptions of the participants and the circumstances seem to be the most significant in comparison, where the police officers and their actions are mainly neutrally described and the civilians and their actions are often negatively described, even when they are the victim. The study highlights and discusses the imbalanced relationship between journalists and police, which perhaps needs to be addressed more often publicly in order for news media's portrayals of mishaps by police officers to be understood critically.
24

South Shore and Everyplace You Don't Belong

Bump, Gabe 01 January 2017 (has links) (PDF)
South Shore and Everyplace You Don’t Belong tracks a young man, Claude, raised by his grandmother on Chicago’s South Side. We follow Claude as he experiences tropes familiar to young Chicagoans: segregation, gun violence, gang recruitment, death, police brutality, and crooked politics. We also follow Claude though universal experiences familiar to all young persons: falling in love, social anxiety, making friends, losing friends, rebellion, and identity crises of all shapes and sizes. We follow Claude as he experiences America as a young black man.
25

Unmaking the torturer : re-establishing meaning and identity after committing atrocities

Bing, Elaine 06 1900 (has links)
During apartheid numerous atrocities, including torture were committed by the security forces in South Africa. Most atrocities were directed at black people, during the political violence. The question which the researcher investigated was how people who worked in the police and had tortured and committed other atrocities re-established meaning and identity after South Africa became a democracy. South Africa’s history was discussed, focussing on factors which created an environment which was conducive to the committing of atrocities. The basic tenets of social constructionism were considered and how they relate to concepts such as agency, power, essentialism, identity, morality, meaning-making, torture, illness and posttraumatic stress disorder. Dialogic analyses were conducted on each participant’s narrative. The researcher is seen as an integral part of the storytelling event. The ways in which the participants positioned themselves in telling their stories are discussed as attempts to reconstitute themselves. The impact on the researcher of working with perpetrators is discussed. Themes were distilled from participants’ narratives. These are discussed with attention given to the problems they identified as having led to perpetration, such as racism, enacting of masculinity and militarisation. Problems they identified which arose as a result of perpetration include aggression, alienation, illness and addiction to violence. They demonstrated extreme shame and remorse in telling their stories. / Psychology / D.Litt. et Phil. (Psychology)
26

Unmaking the torturer : re-establishing meaning and identity after committing atrocities

Bing, Elaine 06 1900 (has links)
During apartheid numerous atrocities, including torture were committed by the security forces in South Africa. Most atrocities were directed at black people, during the political violence. The question which the researcher investigated was how people who worked in the police and had tortured and committed other atrocities re-established meaning and identity after South Africa became a democracy. South Africa’s history was discussed, focussing on factors which created an environment which was conducive to the committing of atrocities. The basic tenets of social constructionism were considered and how they relate to concepts such as agency, power, essentialism, identity, morality, meaning-making, torture, illness and posttraumatic stress disorder. Dialogic analyses were conducted on each participant’s narrative. The researcher is seen as an integral part of the storytelling event. The ways in which the participants positioned themselves in telling their stories are discussed as attempts to reconstitute themselves. The impact on the researcher of working with perpetrators is discussed. Themes were distilled from participants’ narratives. These are discussed with attention given to the problems they identified as having led to perpetration, such as racism, enacting of masculinity and militarisation. Problems they identified which arose as a result of perpetration include aggression, alienation, illness and addiction to violence. They demonstrated extreme shame and remorse in telling their stories. / Psychology / D.Litt. et Phil. (Psychology)
27

Estado de exceção e vida nua : violencia policial em Porto Alegre entre os anos de 1960 e 1990 / State of exception and maked life : police violence in Porto Alegre

Rosa, Susel Oliveira da 14 September 2007 (has links)
Orientador: Italo Arnaldo Tronca / Tese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Filosofia e Ciencias Humanas / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-09T04:06:02Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Rosa_SuselOliveirada_D.pdf: 48973232 bytes, checksum: c7c9394557b14485a291c659a50a165e (MD5) Previous issue date: 2007 / Resumo: Abordo, neste trabalho, histórias de pessoas que entre os anos de 1960 e 1990 foram alvo da violência policial na cidade de Porto Alegre, no intuito de mostrar que se a violência e a tortura intensificaram-se durante a ditadura militar brasileira (1964-85), elas acompanham a trajetória das instituições policiais no Brasil até a atualidade. Utilizo os conceitos de ¿biopolítica¿, de Michel Foucault, ¿vida nua¿ e ¿estado de exceção¿ de Giorgio Agamben, ao refletir e escrever sobre a vida e a morte de Manoel Raimundo Soares, Hugo Kretschoer, Luis Alberto Arébalo, Mirajor Rondon, Antônio Clóvis, Júlio César, Jefferson Pereira e Guiomar Nunes / Abstract: I approach, in this work, histories of people who had been, between the years of 1960 and 1990, object of police violence in the city of Porto Alegre, in an effort to show that if violence and torture had been intensified during the Brasilian military dictatorship (1964-85), they follow the trajectory of the police institutions in Brazil until nowadays. I use the concepts of ¿biopolitics¿, from Michel Foucault, ¿naked life¿ and ¿state of exception¿ from Giorgio Agamben, when reflecting and writing about the life and the death of Manoel Raimundo Soares, Hugo Kretschoer, Luis Alberto Arébalo, Mirajor Rondon, Antônio Clóvis, Júlio Cesar, Jefferson Pereira and Guiomar Nunes / Doutorado / Politica, Memoria e Cidade / Doutor em História
28

Policejní brutalita v knihách pro mladistvé / Police Brutality in Young Adult Literature

Svobodová, Markéta January 2021 (has links)
The aim of a master thesis called Police Brutality in Young Adult Literature is to analyze the portrayal of police brutality in three young adult books, whether it reflects the reality and thus conveys a credible picture of the situation to teenage readers. The three books used for the analysis are The Hate You Give by Angie Thomas, Dear Martin by Nic Stone and Ghost Boys by Jewel Parker Rhodes. The analysis is based on three key areas and their analysis: the environment, language, and the act of police brutality in connection to racial stereotypes. To do so, the theoretical knowledge from the first three chapters of this thesis is applied. This part covers the concepts of police brutality and applies it to the case of the United States. It shows how the American police force has evolved and its current state, including the factors that influence police brutality in the United States. The analysis of individual books shows, that police brutality is portrayed in a credible way and it shows no distortion of reality for the purposes of fiction. This thesis also highlights the possibility of different interpretation of certain scenes, where the authors attempt to portray racial stereotypes and the interpretation depends on the readers' historical and cultural knowledge, which might result in a slight...
29

Patient Perspectives of Police Presence in the Emergency Room: A Trauma Informed Study

Ross, Sharmaine Gabrielle January 2022 (has links)
Structural racism has been identified as a major source of medical vulnerability for urban populations. Police brutality is a consequence of structural racism and a critical social determinant of urban health that is associated with both physical and psychological injury. However, the presence of law enforcement agents is common in the healthcare setting, especially in the emergency department. The emergency department occupies a critical social role as a major source of healthcare for vulnerable urban populations, yet very little is known about patients’ opinions regarding police activity in the ED. This study contributes to the growing body of literature on the pathogenic effects of structural racism by designing trauma informed methodology to investigate patient perceptions of police presence in the emergency room. / Urban Bioethics
30

What Factors in the Life Experience of African Americans Cause Them to Comply with or Confront Law Enforcement Officers?

Jefferson-McDonald, La'Shelle 27 October 2022 (has links)
No description available.

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