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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

Psychological and social adaptation of Vietnamese refugee adolescents in South Australia

Loughry, Maryanne, 1955- January 1992 (has links) (PDF)
Includes bibliography.
12

A Vietnamese village in Hong Kong

黃明康, Wong, Min-hon, Thomas. January 1999 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Architecture / Master / Master of Architecture
13

Survival feminists identifying war's impact on the roles of Vietnamese refugee women /

Albertson, W. Cory. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Georgia State University, 2009. / Title from file title page. Jung Ha Kim, committee chair ; Donald C. Reitzes, Denise A. Donnelly, committee members. Description based on contents viewed November 3, 2009. Includes bibliographical references ( p. 80-83).
14

From refugee camps to city streets: young Vietnamese in Hong Kong.

January 2003 (has links)
Chan Wai Kwong. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2003. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 136-139). / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / Abstract --- p.i / Acknowledgements --- p.iii / Chapter Chapter One --- Introduction --- p.1 / Research Aims and Significance / Historical Backgrounds of Young Vietnamese Refugees in Hong Kong / Literature Review / How is This Research Different From Previous Research? / "Methodology, Field-site and My Personal Background" / Organization of Thesis / Chapter Chapter Two --- A Prison for Non-criminals: What Made Closed Refugee Camp Experiences Positive for My Informants --- p.41 / General Conditions of Two Different Closed Camps / Survival Strategies and Micro-economic Systems / What Made the Closed Camp Positive for My Informants? / Analysis / Conclusion / Chapter Chapter Three --- The Open Refugee Camp: The Place Between Physical Existence and Legal Non-Existence --- p.65 / Introduction / Sinh's Story-An Ethnic Vietnamese / Hung's Story - An Ethnic Chinese / Born To Be A Refugee - Hau's Story / Comparison / Conclusion / Chapter Chapter Four --- The Adaptation of Young Refugee in Hong Kong --- p.92 / Introduction / Integration in Hong Kong -Thuy's Story / Integration in Vietnam - Man's Story / Pik Uk Prison - Hai's Story / What Happened to Other Students From Pillar Point Camp? / Analysis / Conclusion / Chapter Chapter Five --- Research Implications --- p.119 / Introduction / Review / Cultural Shaping of Self / What Does It Means to Grow Up in Refugee Camp in Hong Kong? / Implications of This Research / Appendix --- p.134-135 / Bibliography --- p.139
15

Psychosocial adjustment of Vietnamese immigrants in Hawaiʻi

Fox, Stephen January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 163-169). / ix, 169 leaves, bound 29 cm
16

Embodied humanitarianism : refugee sponsorship and support from Vietnam to Vancouver

Webber, Graham 11 1900 (has links)
There is a tendency in Vancouver, British Columbia (BC), to racialize and criminalize recently-arrived minorities. This acts as a barrier to successful integration between newcomers and host groups. The difficulties inherent in these processes have been exacerbated for Vietnamese settlers through the prominence they gained in the media and public discourse during the Allied War in Vietnam, Operation Babylift and the Private Sponsorship Programme. Through interviews and discourse analysis, I have come to believe that the framing of Vietnamese 'refugee' bodies has provided an extraordinary venue for Canada to produce, naturalize and reify the settler nation as humanitarian, compassionate, enlightened, unified and permanent - as more than we truly are - in a collective forgetting of the less press-worthy of our flaws. This discursive strategy intersects and overdetermines the hi/multicultural settler state while also threatening to undermine it. Thus, to a certain extent, Vietnamese (and other) refugee bodies resignify from receptive, when/where the public is in favour of refugee sponsorship, to criminal, when/where they are not. This discursive 'risky refugee' rides the contradictions of liberal humanitarianism, marginalizing the formerly welcomed and undermining the political will to support the refugee process. There are strong interests in the Lower Mainland of BC who work tirelessly to sponsor and support refugees, despite this fickle nature of self-serving public opinion, pressuring the government to live up to its myth. Meanwhile, Vietnamese people in Vancouver, in general, have struggled and fought to rid themselves of the myths created through pejorative racialization and criminalization. My position in this thesis is that we need to relax this space of very constricted possibilities for negotiations around identity and space, acknowledging refugees as more than just under-educated, potentiallydiseased and probably-criminal Others. Suggestions, in the final chapter, come directly from interview material, as all study participants have had at least 20 years of refugee support and advocacy. The more general conclusion, from theoretical, operational and epistemological perspectives, is that we should work through all our diverse vulnerabilities to re-imagine a multiculturalism more expansive than inclusive. I hope my thesis will challenge the shaky short-term humanitarianism of the liberal state, encouraging a more stable and genuine commitment to refugee support / Arts, Faculty of / Geography, Department of / Graduate

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