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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.
121

Le processus de co-rumination entre amis chez les jeunes victimes de harcèlement par les pairs : impact sur le développement des symptômes dépressifs à l’adolescence

Jerabkova, Barbara 10 1900 (has links)
La victimisation au sein du groupe de pairs est un facteur de risque associé à l’augmentation des symptômes dépressifs au début de l’adolescence. En contrepartie, le fait d’entretenir des relations d’amitié constitue un facteur protecteur important susceptible de modérer les conséquences négatives associées à la victimisation par les pairs. Toutefois, les bénéfices associés aux relations d’amitié peuvent varier en fonction de certaines caractéristiques de celles-ci. Cette étude a pour but d’évaluer dans quelle mesure les caractéristiques des relations d’amitié (c.-à-d., le caractère intime et soutenant de la relation et la propension des amis à co-ruminer) modèrent l’association entre la victimisation par les pairs et l’augmentation des symptômes dépressifs sur une période d’un an. L'échantillon est composé de 536 élèves du secondaire auprès de qui la victimisation et les caractéristiques des relations d’amitié ont été évaluées au premier temps de mesure de façon auto-rapportée. Les symptômes dépressifs des élèves ont également été mesurés lors de deux années consécutives. Les résultats démontrent que le niveau de victimisation des élèves, la qualité des relations d’amitié et la tendance des amis à co-ruminer sont respectivement associés de façon concomitante à l’expression des symptômes dépressifs. En contrepartie, seule la co-rumination entre amis permet de rendre compte de l’augmentation des symptômes dépressifs sur une période d’un an. L’association entre la victimisation par les pairs et le développement des symptômes dépressifs n’est toutefois pas modérée par les caractéristiques des relations d’amitié. / Victimization is an important risk factor for depression in early adolescence. On the other hand, having friends is an important protective factor susceptible of moderating the negative effects associated with victimization. However, the benefits associated with friendships may vary according to some of their characteristics. The goal of this study was to evaluate whether friendship characteristics (i.e. intimacy and support as well as co-rumination) moderate the association between victimization experiences and depressed feelings a year later. The sample is composed of 536 high school students whose victimization level, friendship quality and tendency to co-ruminate were self-reported at the first time point. Depressive mood were self-reported at the end of two consecutive years. Results show that victimization, friendship quality and co-rumination are respectively associated with concurrent depressive mood. However, only co-rumination predicted depressive mood a year later after controlling for initial adjustment. The link between peer victimization and depressive mood was not moderated by friendship characteristics.
122

The Role of the Victim in the South African System of Plea and Sentence Agreements: A Critique of Section 105A of the Criminal Procedure Act.

Rodgers, Megan Bronwynne. January 2009 (has links)
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,&quot / serif&quot / ">Crime victims once played a prominent role in the criminal justice system. Historically, victims who sought to bring their wrongdoers to justice conducted </span> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html / charset=utf-8"> <meta name="ProgId" content="Word.Document"> <meta name="Generator" content="Microsoft Word 12"> <meta name="Originator" content="Microsoft Word 12"><span style="font-size: 12pt / line-height: 115% / font-family: &quot / Times New Roman&quot / ,&quot / serif&quot / ">their own investigations<span style=""> </span>and argued their own cases or employed others to do so. As time passed,<span style="">&nbsp / </span>a distinction was drawn between offences against the social order and disputes between individuals. Crime control became a function of government and the state increased its responsibility for the investigation and punishment of criminal conduct. Gradually, the victim was removed from the proceedings and relegated to serving as a witness for the state. The assumption was that the state, whilst representing the interests </span> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html / charset=utf-8"> <meta name="ProgId" content="Word.Document"> <meta name="Generator" content="Microsoft Word 12"> <meta name="Originator" content="Microsoft Word 12"><span style="font-size: 12pt / line-height: 115% / font-family: &quot / Times New Roman&quot / ,&quot / serif&quot / ">of society, would represent the interests</span> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html / charset=utf-8"> <meta name="ProgId" content="Word.Document"> <meta name="Generator" content="Microsoft Word 12"> <meta name="Originator" content="Microsoft Word 12"><span style="font-size: 12pt / line-height: 115% / font-family: &quot / Times New Roman&quot / ,&quot / serif&quot / "> of the victim also. This fallacy provided the foundation for a criminal justice which, until recently, encourage victim exclusion. In recent years, there has been a clear trend towards re-introducing the right of victims to participate in the criminal justice process. This international trend has been labelled the &bdquo / return of the victim‟. In South Africa, the Constitution and, in particular, the Bill of Rights contained therein underscore the move towards procedural rights for victims of crime. Moreover, the South African government has taken significant legislative steps to ensure that victims have formal rights in criminal justice proceedings. However, to date, comparatively little attention has been paid to the question of whether or not victims should be allowed a meaningful role in the process of plea and sentence negotiations. One of the aims of this study is to determine whether victims‟ rights are properly understood, defined and implemented within the criminal justice system. In particular, this study aims to clarify the rights of victims who find themselves affiliated with a specific stage of criminal prosecution, namely, negotiated justice.<span style="">&nbsp / </span><span style="">&nbsp / </span><span style="">&nbsp / </span><span style="">&nbsp / </span></span> </meta> </meta> </meta> </meta> </meta> </meta> </meta> </meta> </meta> </meta> </meta> </meta> </meta> </meta> </meta> </meta> </p>
123

"Staying Alive" while "Living the Life" : conceptualizations of risk among homeless youth

MacDonald, Sue-Ann 06 1900 (has links)
Résumé Le but de cette thèse est de comprendre les représentations du risque chez les jeunes de la rue. Plus précisément, elle s’intéresse à appréhender les constructions du risque que font les jeunes de la rue eux-mêmes, d’autant plus que ces jeunes sont définis comme un groupe à risque. Si le risque est plus souvent défini de manière stricte comme le mal éventuel, dans cette étude, il est défini plus largement intégrant l’idée des opportunités et prises de risque. Ancrée dans une perspective double du constructionnisme social et de l’interactionnisme symbolique, cette recherche a exploré les savoirs des jeunes sur les risques qu’ils vivaient dans les contextes observés et la manière dont ils les appréhendaient. Pour y parvenir, cette recherche s’inscrit dans une approche ethnographique pour mieux comprendre le monde des jeunes de la rue, utilisant des méthodes d'observation participante et dévoilée et des entrevues informelles variées. Cette approche globale permet de saisir comment les jeunes définissent leur capacité à estimer, gérer, éviter ou prendre des risques. L’utilisation d’une perspective longitudinale (de un à deux ans) et les relations de confiance bâties avec ces jeunes, ont permis de suivre comment la construction identitaire des jeunes observés a influencé leurs perception du risque et leurs pratiques de débrouillardise. En outre, les liens établis ont permis de révéler les points de vue singuliers des jeunes mais aussi leurs savoirs expérientiels relatifs aux risques. Il s’agit dans cette étude de montrer à partir des théories générales qui définissent nos sociétés comme des sociétés du risque, comment des individus, identifiés comme appartenant à un groupe à risque, définissent et gèrent leurs risques à partir de leur propre expérience et point de vue afin de révéler la diversité et la complexité des expériences et savoirs des jeunes de la rue à l’endroit du risque. En effet, cette thèse montre qu’un ancrage dans une sociologie du risque permet de sortir de l’image de victime ou de déviance associée généralement aux jeunes de la rue mais qu’elle demeure marquée par la promotion de la sécurité légitimant intervention et régulation de la situation des jeunes de la rue tout en ignorant l’expérience même des jeunes. Les discours sur les risques associés à la rue sont alors inscrits dans une logique d’expertise. Cette étude vise à sortir de ces préconceptions des risques pris par les jeunes de la rue pour au contraire s’attarder à comprendre comment se définit le risque à partir du sens que les jeunes accordent et les expériences qu’ils en ont. Mots clés: jeunes itinérants, jeunes de la rue, le risque, à risque, victimisation, déviance, identité. / Abstract The goal of this dissertation is to understand conceptualizations of risk among homeless youth. In particular, it strived to examine an identified "at-risk" group's understanding of risk. Risk in this study encompassed all notions of risk, and was not limited to a narrow definition of perceived harm, but also embraced references of opportunities or chances taken. In this light, this study employed an ethnographic approach to better understand the worlds of homeless youth, relying on participant observation and informal interviewing methods. This ontological approach hoped to capture how youth conceptualize their personal power in estimating, managing, and avoiding or embracing risk. Coupling social constructionism with symbolic interactionism, this study explored participant's understandings of risk in the contexts in which they found and understood themselves. Participant's evolving identities greatly impacted their perceptions of risk and subsequently, their management strategies. Utilizing a longitudinal perspective (one to two years) and building relationships with participants allowed for an unfolding of their unique frames of reference and their local knowledges. One of the goals of this study was to disembody grand socio-cultural theories of risk, such as: the risk society, cultural/symbolic, and governmentality approaches, to uncover their cogency for an identified "at-risk" group. Exploring the phenomenological meanings of participant's individual experiences of risk in an identified risk-laden group revealed the heterogeneity of their experiences and understandings. Indeed, this dissertation argues that a sociology of risk has largely subsumed a sociology of victimization and deviance in regards to homeless youth. A sociology of risk has supplanted these earlier underpinnings and rests on this binary of victimization and deviancy to push for intervention and regulation (i.e. normalization) and endorses a "safety at all cost" approach, ignoring the wide array of youth's experiences. However, the insidious risk discourses that are so pervasive in the literature on homeless youth are not deconstructed for the meanings that are imbued, and are presented in a de-contextualized, rational, apolitical fashion; presented in a manner that seems indisputable, as they are nestled in expert logic. This study attempted to re-contextualize conceptualizations of risk by deconstructing such meanings and giving voice to the complexity of youth's experiences that are too frequently portrayed as homogenously victimizing or deviant. Keywords: homeless youth, street youth, risk, at-risk, victimization, deviance, identity.
124

Les caractéristiques des agresseurs comme facteurs de risque associés au développement du sentiment de solitude chez les adolescents victimes de harcèlement par les pairs

Ferrer, Sarah 09 1900 (has links)
La présente étude vise à examiner dans quelle mesure le sexe ainsi que les caractéristiques comportementales et relationnelles des agresseurs permettent de rendre compte de l’augmentation, sur une période d’un an, du sentiment de solitude chez les victimes de harcèlement par les pairs au secondaire. L’échantillon est composé de 538 élèves de secondaire I et II de la région de Montréal. Au cours de deux années consécutives, le niveau de victimisation des élèves ainsi que l’identité et les caractéristiques des agresseurs (i.e.: sexe, agressivité, popularité et victimisation) ont été évalués à partir de mesures auto-révélées et de procédures de nominations par les pairs. Les résultats démontrent, qu’au-delà de la fréquence à laquelle les élèves sont victimisés, le sexe des agresseurs permet de rendre compte de l’augmentation à travers le temps du sentiment de solitude chez les filles et les garçons. Plus spécifiquement, le nombre d’agresseurs féminins identifiés par les élèves constitue un facteur de risque étroitement lié au développement du sentiment de solitude. Par ailleurs, les caractéristiques des agresseurs ne sont pas associées à l’accroissement du sentiment de solitude à travers le temps. Cependant, le fait de se faire agresser par des élèves qui présentent des difficultés d’ajustement social importantes (i.e. : agressifs et victimisés) est associé de manière concomitante à un moins fort sentiment de solitude. La discussion aborde les processus intra- et interpersonnels permettant d’expliquer pourquoi les sentiments de solitude associés à la victimisation par les pairs sont susceptibles de varier en fonction des caractéristiques des agresseurs. / The goal of the present study is to examine to what extend bullies’ behavioral and relational characteristics account for changes over time in loneliness feelings among victimized middle school students. The sample was composed of 538 grade 7 and 8 students from two middle schools in Montreal. During two consecutive years, students’ level of victimization and bullies’ characteristics (gender, aggressive behaviors, popularity and victimization) were evaluated with self-reported measures and peer nominations. Results show that, beyond the frequency to which students are victimized, bullies’ gender was associated with an increase over a one year period in loneliness feelings for girls and boys. Specifically, the number of females bullies identified by the students, constitutes a risk factor closely linked to the development of loneliness feelings. Moreover, the behavioral and relational characteristics of the bullies were not associated with an increase over time of loneliness feelings. However, being bullied by students characterized by social adjustment difficulties (aggressive and victimized bullies) was negatively associated with concurrent loneliness feelings. The discussion highlights the intra- and interpersonal processes explaining why the loneliness feelings linked to victimization by peers are likely to vary according to the bullies’ characteristics.
125

Une étude examinant les retombées d'une programmation éducative par l'aventure sur les habiletés personnelles et sociales visant à contribuer à la prévention de l'intimidation chez de jeunes victimes potentielles

Smolla-Deziel, Helena 01 1900 (has links)
No description available.
126

Les trajectoires de femmes victimes de violence conjugale : les facteurs qui expliquent la dynamique de la violence physique à travers le temps

Blondin, Odrée 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
127

Le lien maternel à l'épreuve de la victimisation : impact des perceptions du rôle de mère des femmes victimes de violence conjugale sur leur lien à l’enfant

Tanguy, Adélaïde 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
128

A socio- educative analysis of aggressive behaviour displayed by adolescent girls

Gouws, Cheryl 06 1900 (has links)
The successful social development of adolescent girls is dependent on the acquisition of the skills required to face the challenges of adult life. Young girls are faced with the problem of a growing aggressive behaviour displayed by the girls who are supposedly their friends. This aggressive behaviour may negatively affect social, psychological or emotional development, possibly resulting in long term social adjustment problems. This investigation identifies the types and causes of aggressive behaviour displayed by adolescent girls, with the intention of ultimately identifying strategies to address aggressive behaviour. The implementation of a schoolbased approach, including all sectors involved in the education of the child in a whole-school programme to address aggressive behaviour, is recommended. Including all parties, firmly committed to addressing aggressive behaviour from a preventative perspective, may result in reducing aggressive behaviour and possibly provide adolescent girls with the coping skills required for successful social development. / Educational Studies / M.Ed. (Socio-Education)
129

Le processus d'adhésion aux citoyens souverains : une étude exploratoire du phénomène au Québec

Lavigne-Desnoyers, Gabrielle 12 1900 (has links)
Il est difficile de définir le groupe des citoyens souverains car il a été très peu étudié. Selon les sources, il s’agit d’un groupe terroriste, d’un groupe sectaire ou d’un mouvement radical. La Gendarmerie royale du Canada, les tribunaux et certains services fédéraux et provinciaux prennent des mesures pour contrer l’impact des actions criminelles qu’ils commettent. Pour sa part, le Service canadien du renseignement de sécurité (SCRS) n’identifie pas ce groupe comme une entité terroriste. L’objectif de ce mémoire n’est pas de définir le groupe des citoyens souverains, mais plutôt de comprendre le processus d’adhésion à ce groupe au Québec. À l’aide de la théorie de l’action situationnelle, il démontre les étapes de la création d’un filtre moral chez les adhérents au mouvement. Par induction analytique à partir de témoignages de membres du groupe, il présente les conditions nécessaires à l’adhésion aux citoyens souverains. Parmi celles-ci, on retrouve la victimisation et l’exposition sélective aux théories du complot. Ce mémoire est la première étude qui sonde le point de vue des adhérents pour permettre de comprendre comment ils en viennent à commettre des gestes illégaux qu’eux considèrent légitimes. / Groups of sovereign citizens are hard to define since they are the subject of very few studies. According to sources, they are terrorist groups or sectarian groups or they are part of a radical movement. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police, courts and some federal and provincial departments and agencies are taking measures to offset the impact of criminal actions they commit. As for the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS), it does not consider these groups as terrorist entities. The purpose of this thesis is not to define these groups per se, but rather to understand the enrolment process for Quebec sovereign citizens. Through situational action theory, it shows the various steps involved in the creation of a moral filter by this movement’s members. By analytic induction based on testimonies of group members, it shows the prerequisites for enrolling in the sovereign citizen movement – such as victimization and selective exposure to conspiracy theories. This thesis is the first study to poll the views of these members in order to understand how they get to commit illegal acts that they consider to be totally legitimate.
130

Exploring the nature of oppression as experienced by people with learning disabilities

Jeyacheya, D. Z. January 2015 (has links)
Aim: The principal aim of this qualitative research study is to gain a clearer understanding of oppression as experienced by People with Learning Disabilities (PWLD). In particular, this study investigated: 1) the nature of oppression - the typical kinds of oppression PWLD face during the course of their everyday lives; 2) the causes of their oppressive experiences: 3) the impact these oppressive experiences can have on their quality of life; and 4) their reaction - the strategies PWLD employ to prevent further oppression. Rationale: Despite policies of deinstitutionalisation since the 1980s, many PWLD have not found social integration easy and continue to endure oppressive experiences in community-based settings. The nature/extent of this social problem has often been overlooked by researchers and practitioners. Methods: This research was conducted using interpretive phenomenology as a methodology; an approach which influenced the study’s design, method of data collection and strategy for analysing the rich qualitative findings. Semi-structured interviews were carried out across two sample populations; a group of PWLD (N=11) and a group of community-based practitioners/carers (N=11). The participants were selected through purposive sampling and the qualitative data was analysed using a specific Interpretive Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) process. Findings: PWLD remain a deeply oppressed social group. Respondents reported experiencing multiple forms of oppression, which seem to interact in complex ways and be present throughout the course of their lives. The two key super-ordinate themes (most dominant forms of oppression experienced by PWLD) emerging from the process of IPA appear to be: 1) The life-long effects of marginalisation (social exclusion, powerlessness and existing as a socio-economic underclass) and 2) Multiple forms of victimisation (coping with exploitation, intimidation and abuse, both overt and subtle, from the public, family members and at times practitioners). Respondents believe that the underlying cause of their oppressive experiences is society’s negative perception. Negative attitudes and beliefs arise from oppressive social forces such as: the use of diagnostic labels, segregated special needs education and limited opportunities for employment. These are experiences which respondents assert often do little more than spoil their social identity as human beings. Conclusion: The findings confirm that PWLD living in the community continue to encounter negative social experiences which are pervasive. This research attempts to draw together and make sense of these experiences in terms of the concept of oppression. Through gaining a clearer understanding of the marginalised and victimised status of PWLD policy makers will be more informed about how to respond to their social and economic needs, and in turn help alleviate their experiences of oppression.

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