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Woman SuffrageMuir, Mae Douglas 01 January 1927 (has links)
No description available.
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Role satisfaction in the sisterhoodMikulka, Jacqueline Veronica 01 January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
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Role satisfaction in the sisterhood: A cross-cultural replicationGerman, Raquel Miranda 01 January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
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When Women Say Yes: Sexual Initiation, Minority Status, and Opportunity CostsFlippo, Chris A. 01 January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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THE INFLUENCE OF WOMEN IN TASK GROUPS: THE EFFECTS OF SEX COMPOSITION AND ACCOUNTS OF ATTRIBUTION (DECISION-MAKING, SMALL GROUPS, LOCUS-OF-CONTROL)Unknown Date (has links)
This study examines group sex composition and accounts of attribution as plausible explanations for differences in female influence and interpersonal attraction in small decision making task groups. A sample of 108 college students participated in four person task groups of varying male to female proportions. A female confederate was a member of each of the 36 groups studied. Results indicated that females in all female (uniform) groups tend to exert more influence and exhibit more interpersonal attraction when they give internal accounts of attribution. Conversely, females in otherwise all male (skewed) groups tend to exert more influence and exhibit more interpersonal attraction when they give external accounts of attribution. Females in groups of one half male members and one half female members (balanced) tended to exert the most influence and exhibit moderate interpersonal attraction regardless of the locus of their accounts of attribution. Implications of these findings for theory, practice, and future research are discussed. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 46-12, Section: A, page: 3890. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1985.
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' Ourselves alone ' ? : the work of single women in South Australia, 1911-1961 : the institutions which they shaped and which shaped themKeane, Mary Veronica January 2005 (has links)
This thesis investigates the work of life-long single women in South Australia between 1911 and 1961. Its argument is that, to achieve their work objectives, these women had to both contest and collude with the dominant ideologies, and institutional controls which disadvantaged them. The thesis asserts that this examination of a group of life-long single women undermines the stereotype of lonely, useless spinsters. Three themes were investigated in this study. The first was the challenge of accommodating the heterogeneity of single women's work, the number of institutions which shaped their occupational choices, and where and how they worked. The second was revealing the extent to which life-long single women both subverted and supported the ideologies of the period 1911 to 1961 to achieve their work objectives. The third theme was to show the power of institutions to incorporate within their structures, organisational cultures and work practices the dominant ideologies. Because the women were linked by their unmarried state, not their occupations, the study integrates the labour force statistics and institutional histories with the personal life and work histories of a group of life-long single women. Apposite developments in Feminist History, Labour History and Organisational Theory, as well as the particular characteristics of South Australia have informed this analysis. Feminist History highlighted the importance of identifying the extent to which women both contested and colluded with the dominant ideologies. Labour History publications revealed the limited research on voluntary work and work done for religious reasons or to execute social responsibilities. Organisational Theory, in particular the field of Organisational Culture, fostered the investigation of single women's understanding of and negotiation with the dominant institutional cultures of the period. This research demonstrates that the life-long single women studied here needed to and did test the boundaries of women's work in South Australia between 1911 and 1961. The small achievements of these single women provided for the next generation an example of the strengths and weaknesses of negotiation and conciliation to improve women's access to and success in the paid workforce. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--School of Social Sciences, 2005.
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Psychosocial Factors that Contribute to HIV/AIDS Risk Behavior among Young Black College WomenAlleyne, Binta D. 01 May 2007 (has links)
The primary purpose of this dissertation was to investigate the relationship between certain factors associated with the Theory of Gender and Power including: sexual relationships, condom use self-efficacy, substance use, and perceived risk to HIV/AIDS risk behaviors among young Black college women. It provides an intellectual context for empirically-based and theory-supported interventions geared toward this population. African American women are disproportionately burdened by Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) and Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS). Statistics show that African American women account for 64% of all HIV/AIDS cases reported in 2005 compared to White women at 19% and Hispanic women at 15% (CDC, 2005). Typically, the majority of HIV/AIDS research focuses on prevention for lowincome, substance abusing minority women, adolescents, and men who have sex with men (MSM), while young Black college women are ignored as a risk group. Though this group does not have some of the common risk factors commonly associated with HIV such as poverty, injection drug use, or low levels of education, they still engage in behaviors that place them at risk for contracting HIV. This study consisted of convenience sample of 189 young Black women from Clark Atlanta University between the ages of 18 and 24. Participants were recruited through various campus student organizations. A hierarchical multiple regression analysis was used to test each research hypothesis. Results indicated that type(s) of sexual relationship was the strongest predictor of condom use among young Black college women and accounted for 2.5% of the variance in their condom use. HIV/AIDS knowledge, condom use self-efficacy, substance use nor HIV/AIDS perceived risk predicted this sample’s condom use.
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Role of women's organizations for empowerment of distressed women in KarnatakaSangeetha, G N January 2003 (has links)
empowerment of distressed women
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Incorporating Disability Studies: Revising the introductory women's studies course curriculumKhalsa, Sat Bir Kaur January 2003 (has links)
In this thesis, Incorporating Disability Studies: Revising the Introductory Women's Studies Course, I emphasize scholarship from Disability Studies that draws on feminist scholarship. I analyze introductory women's studies courses, using on-line syllabi only, and demonstrate the lack of Disability Studies work within the introductory courses. When analyzing Disability Studies courses for themes and required texts, I discover a rich field of feminist Disability Studies scholarship. I explore the historical trajectory of the development of the "social model of disability," as well as how it differs from the traditional "medical model." I examine the influence of feminist theory on issues of language, identity, embodiment, and sexuality within Disability Studies scholarship. I reveal the omission of Disability Studies perspectives from feminist scholarship. When revising, I offer scholarship that reflects themes noted as significantly important to Disability Studies scholars. Building a URLography, I provide brief annotations to web addresses that also contribute to incorporating Disability Studies material into the introductory women's studies course.
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Post-Roe: In defense of reproductive rightsSabine, Kathryn Rose January 2004 (has links)
Second wave feminists almost necessarily withdrew from the quagmire of motherhood politics to focus more directly on reproductive rights policy. Many third wave feminists have not yet experienced the hardships and heartache of attempting to balance career and motherhood, so there is a generational rift at play within the feminist movement. Being inclusive of all women's experiences and choices will help feminists create a reproductive rights policy that meets the needs of more women in their decisions to mother (or not) and provide invaluable information feminists need in seeking to address disparate measures of economic and social stability mothers are subjected to. By meeting the needs of more women, the feminist movement creates a sympathetic political constituent base to draw from when backlash efforts are enacted against such policies.
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