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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.
111

Legal Lives and Carceral Histories: Making the Uncontrollable Girl in Jamaica

Reinhart, Natalie Swan January 2024 (has links)
This dissertation examines the question of girlhood as a social and legal category, within contemporary feminist frameworks. Turning to Jamaica today, girls are disproportionately apprehended by the law and sentenced to prison for a range of so-called deviant behaviors. Colloquially, they are known as uncontrollable girls, and the law that incarcerates them, the uncontrollable law. This dissertation examines how girlhood has long been a site of Jamaican governance. I argue that the figure of the uncontrollable girl and the uncontrollable law must be analyzed as a project of state building, revealing carceral and colonial logics from chattel slavery into the present. Further, I examine the perceived deviance or vulnerability that girlhood elicits—as a dissident body that transgresses, or an innocent class in need of legal protection. Drawing across multiple discursive domains—from archival travelogues, colonial acts and amendments, to contemporary newspapers, legal documents, Jamaican literature, and ethnographic fieldwork—the dissertation situates girlhood as an analytic lens through which we might better understand how Jamaican citizenship, rights, and political futures are forestalled or qualified. The historical particularity of Jamaica exemplifies the role the state plays in discursively producing and surveilling the domestic—from the intimate register of the family to the everyday lives of girls.
112

婦女與「延安模式」. / 婦女與延安模式 / Fu nü yu "Yan'an mo shi". / Fu nü yu Yan'an mo shi

January 2004 (has links)
許艷霞. / "2004年7月". / 論文(哲學碩士)--香港中文大學, 2004. / 參考文獻 (leaves 108-119). / 附中英文摘要. / "2004 nian 7 yue". / Xu Yanxia. / Lun wen (zhe xue shuo shi)--Xianggang Zhong wen da xue, 2004. / Can kao wen xian (leaves 108-119). / Fu Zhong Ying wen zhai yao. / 鳴謝 --- p.i / 提要 --- p.ii-iii / Chapter (一) --- 引言:「延安模式」的性別觀 / Chapter 1.1 --- 硏究成果回顧 --- p.1-12 / Chapter 1.2 --- 硏究目的、方法及預期貢獻 --- p.12-16 / Chapter (二) --- 中共的婦女運動及其政策 / Chapter 2.1 --- 上海時期(1921 年-1927 年) --- p.17-18 / Chapter 2.2 --- 瑞金時期(1928 年-1935 年) --- p.18-20 / Chapter 2.3 --- 延安時期(1936年-1947年) --- p.20 / Chapter 2.4 --- 內戰時期(1946 年-1949 年) --- p.20-21 / Chapter (三) --- 延安時期的婦女運動 / Chapter 3.1 --- 陝北地區的政治、經濟和社會風俗 --- p.22-24 / Chapter 3.2 --- 延安時期婦女運動的理論基礎 --- p.24-26 / Chapter 3.3 --- 延安時期婦女運動的發展階段及政策內容 --- p.26-39 / Chapter (四) --- 延安時期婦女政策的推行情況 / Chapter 4.1 --- 推行方法 --- p.40-45 / Chapter 4.2 --- 成果 --- p.46-58 / Chapter 4.3 --- 困難和局限 --- p.58-78 / Chapter (五) --- 基層社會的反應 / Chapter 5.1 --- 支前工作 --- p.79-82 / Chapter 5.2 --- 生產 --- p.82-84 / Chapter 5.3 --- 婚姻 --- p.84-89 / Chapter 5.4 --- 文化及衛生教育等 --- p.89-95 / Chapter (六) --- 結論:婦女與革命的「延安模式」 / Chapter 6.1 --- 中國婦女與中共領導的民族革命 --- p.96-98 / Chapter 6.2 --- 中國婦女與中共的社會革命 --- p.99-104 / Chapter 6.3 --- 硏究的新方向 --- p.104-107 / 參考書目 --- p.108-119 / 附表 / Chapter 1. --- 邊區一級機關學校在職女幹部統計(1949年1月) --- p.47-48 / Chapter 2. --- 邊區十五縣縣級女參議員統計表(1941年11月9日) --- p.49 / Chapter 3. --- 邊區一級各機關在職女幹部小孩處理情況(1949年1月) --- p.50-51 / Chapter 4. --- 1938年及1939年生產成績統計表(1940年5月10日) --- p.53 / Chapter 5. --- 吳旗縣五區一ˇёإ婦女纏足、天足狀況表(1948年6月) --- p.56 / Chapter 6. --- 1938-1943年間各縣判決的離婚案件數目(1948年9月10日) --- p.56-57 / Chapter 7. --- 由高等法院直接判決的離婚案件數目(1948年9月10日) --- p.57 / Chapter 8. --- 圪衚坬村婦女結婚年齡統計(1948年) --- p.58 / Chapter 9. --- 1942年綏德分區解除婚約案件的原因及數目(1945年12月) --- p.85-86 / Chapter 10. --- 1944年至1945年綏德分區請求離婚當事人成份統計(1945年12月) --- p.86 / Chapter 11. --- 1944年綏德分區各縣離婚案件提出原因及數目(1945年12月) --- p.86-87 / 附圓 / Chapter 1. --- 陝甘寧邊區地圖 --- p.120 / Chapter 2. --- 陝甘寧邊區婦女參加參議員選舉(30、40年代) --- p.121 / Chapter 3. --- 邊區農村選舉情況(40年代) --- p.121 / Chapter 4. --- 中共中央婦女委員會招待陝甘寧邊區參議會女參議員(1939年9月) --- p.122 / Chapter 5. --- 婦女自衛隊(1939年) --- p.122 / Chapter 6. --- 延安婦女紡織合作社(40年代) --- p.123 / Chapter 7. --- 中共359旅的家屬組織起來編織毛衣(40年代) --- p.123 / Chapter 8. --- 農民變工隊(40年代) --- p.124 / Chapter 9. --- 中國女子大學學生(1939年) --- p.124 / Chapter 10. --- 中國女子大學學生上軍事課(1939年) --- p.125 / Chapter 11. --- 延安醫科生在窰洞前溫習(1945年) --- p.125 / Chapter 12. --- 陝甘寧邊區第二次婦女代表大會部分代表(1948年) --- p.126 / Chapter 13. --- 陳琮英、蔡暢、夏明、劉英長征到達陝北(1935年) --- p.126 / Chapter 14. --- 擁軍(40年代)(夏風刻) --- p.127 / Chapter 15. --- 宣傳衛生(1943年)(王流秋刻) --- p.127 / Chapter 16. --- 怎樣養娃(40年代)(郭鈞刻) --- p.128 / Chapter 17. --- 婚姻登記(1945年)(木刻作品) --- p.128 / Chapter 18. --- 學習文化(1944年)(戚單刻) --- p.129 / Chapter 19. --- 女生開荒隊(1939年)(江豐刻) --- p.129
113

Images and lyrics: Representations of African American women in blues lyrics written by black women

Pugh-Patton, Danette Marie 01 January 2007 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis is to examine to what extent representations of double jeopardy and the stereotypical images of African American females: Mammy, Matriarch, Sapphire, and Strong Black Woman emerge in the blues lyrics of Alberta Hunter, Gertrude "Ma" Rainy, Memphis Minnie, and Victoria Spivey, using the theoretical framework of Black feminist rhetorical critique. The findings in this research entail several meanings regarding the lives of African American women during the 1920s and 1930s. Representations of racism, sexism, and classism also appear in the theme of relationships with various subthemes. The focus of this study is to explore the evolution of Black music and examine the role women have played in both the development and advancement of the blues genre. Additionally, the study will explore various concepts of cultural identity development in order to establish the process of how identity is constructed and negotiated in African Americans specifically African American women.
114

(Un)globalizing civil society: when the boomerang rebounds :transnational advocacy networks and women groups in post-conflict Burundi and Liberia / (Dé)globalisation de la société civile: l'effet rebond du boomerang :les réseaux transnationaux de plaidoyer et les groupements de femmes au Burundi et au Libéria de l'après-conflit.

Martin De Almagro, Maria 28 April 2015 (has links)
To date, few scholars have addressed the internal dynamics of transnational advocacy networks (TANs) and their impact on the production of international norms. The lack of research on the topic seems rather surprising at a time when constructivists produce literature on the significance of global civil society and the role networks play in processes of recruitment and collective identity construction (Crugel 1999; Keck and Sikkink 1998; Boli and Thomas 1999; Anheier et al. 2001; Taylor and Rupp 2001; Keane 2003; Bob 2005). I cover this gap by looking at how power struggles between the international and the local members of a TAN shape the implementation of international norms in post-conflict settings. The purpose of the thesis is twofold: firstly to contribute to a broader literature on global civil society and secondly, to propose a new, more dynamic account on the life-cycle of international norms. The campaign for the implementation of UN Security Council Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace and Security presents an ideal case study. First, it is one of the most successful stories of global norm creation and diffusion thanks to the advocacy efforts of non-state actors. Second, it also shows a case of policy gridlock, where the international efforts to bettering the situation of women in non-Western settings through an implicit liberal normative teleology have shown their limits by the socializee’s formal acceptance of the framework and informal resistance to the dominant norm. Based on extensive fieldwork, my approach combines feminist research methodology (Bar On 1993; Devault 1990; Pillow 2003; Taylor 2000), with the reflexive approach advocated by qualitative researchers in post-colonial and post-structuralist studies (Said 1978; Butler 1990; Escobar 1995). I conducted 60 semi-structured interviews with women activists during 4 field visits in Bujumbura (Burundi) and Monrovia (Liberia) between 2012 and 2013. Following discourse analysis theory (Shepherd 2008; Hansen 2006) and using NViVo8, the interviews were systematically analysed with regard to the reasons they put forward to explain their engagement in the women’s movement and the type of rights they sought to accomplish. The research is conducted through a relational approach in which the interactions of agents are affected by 1) a diversity of structural opportunities through three mechanisms: brokerage, gatekeeping and diffusion and, 2) a compound of ideas forming the master-frame. Those two, in turn, modify interests and identities, both understood as outputs and not as variables determining the interactions of agents. I show how a certain discourse on gender security became accepted as the master frame of the campaign, and how other discourses were left out. That is, I show how discourses created boundaries and identities amongst actors, and how these actors used their agency to stretch those boundaries and identities in order to steer other activists to move towards certain behaviour. Building upon my empirical findings, the thesis sets out a theoretical model of identity boundaries stretching and adaptation in order to analyse the discursive construction of identity and subjectivity as political action. It develops the concept of rebound effect, that is, the point where the ideational boundaries between the thrower of the boomerang (issue entrepreneur) and the receiver (issue follower) are so impervious that the boomerang bounces back and never reaches its destination. I found out that norms based on a liberal peacebuilding approach such as UNSCR1325 are created and maintained by a failure to engage with local and grassroots movements (Richmond 2013). This, in turn, contributes to a process of de-legitimization of NGOs and local associations who form the TAN vis-à-vis the affected population. My findings have important implications for international relation theories of global governance and global activism since they provided a critique of the mainstream norm’s cascade model by introducing new temporalities and geographies in the analysis of the life-cycle of international norms. / Doctorat en Sciences politiques et sociales / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
115

The persistence of female genital mutilation (FGM) and its impact on women's access to education and empowerment : a study of Kuria district, Nyanza province, Kenya

Ondiek, Concellia Aoko 06 1900 (has links)
The overall policy goal of education for the Kenyan Government is the provision of education and training to all Kenyans as it is fundamental to the Government’s overall development strategy. This emphasis means that every Kenyan has the right to education and training no matter his/her socio-economic status. The Government has therefore allocated substantial resources and there has been notable achievements attained, but the sector still faces major challenges related to access, equity, and quality amongst others (Session paper no. 1 2005:2). One of these major challenges to access is the existence and persistence of retrogressive traditional practices such as female genital mutilation (FGM).The first concern of this study is that despite the immense awareness of the dangers on the victims in many aspects in life, and efforts to stamp it out, FGM still persists and thrives in many parts of the country to date. Secondly, there is an ever growing gender disparity in Kuria district, whereby women professionals are hard to come by. Even in the teaching profession which is associated with females in Kenya, there are a negligible number of Kuria female teachers. There is therefore need to liberate these girls from the persistent “senseless genital mutilation” by proper and relevant socialization and empowerment against cultural practices. The Cultural Lag theory of sociologist William F. Ogburn (1964) will be the underlying theoretical perspective of this study to explain the phenomenon, focusing explicitly on the / Sociology / DLITT(SOC)
116

Working women’s perceptions of power, gender-based violence and HIV-infection risks: an explorative study among female employees in an airline business

Freeman, Rachel Johanna 11 1900 (has links)
Power imbalances and gender-based violence (GBV) have increasingly been cited as important determinants putting women at risk of HIV infections. Studies have shown that globally one in every three women has been beaten, coerced into sex or otherwise abused in her lifetime. The study explored working women’s perceptions of power, gender-based violence and HIV-infection risks. A qualitative, explorative study was conducted among female employees in an airline business in Namibia. Five women participated in in-depth, face-to-face interviews. The findings show that all of the participants experienced power imbalances and GBV in their intimate relationships. All of the women reported emotional or psychological abuse, whilst the majority were subjected to economic abuse, followed by physical abuse, and two alleged having been sexually abused. The study concludes with specific recommendations for the development and successful implementation of workplace policy and programmes to protect and promote women’s rights. / Social Work / M.A. (Social Behaviour Studies in HIV/AIDS)
117

The persistence of female genital mutilation (FGM) and its impact on women's access to education and empowerment : a study of Kuria district, Nyanza province, Kenya

Ondiek, Concellia Aoko 06 1900 (has links)
The overall policy goal of education for the Kenyan Government is the provision of education and training to all Kenyans as it is fundamental to the Government’s overall development strategy. This emphasis means that every Kenyan has the right to education and training no matter his/her socio-economic status. The Government has therefore allocated substantial resources and there has been notable achievements attained, but the sector still faces major challenges related to access, equity, and quality amongst others (Session paper no. 1 2005:2). One of these major challenges to access is the existence and persistence of retrogressive traditional practices such as female genital mutilation (FGM).The first concern of this study is that despite the immense awareness of the dangers on the victims in many aspects in life, and efforts to stamp it out, FGM still persists and thrives in many parts of the country to date. Secondly, there is an ever growing gender disparity in Kuria district, whereby women professionals are hard to come by. Even in the teaching profession which is associated with females in Kenya, there are a negligible number of Kuria female teachers. There is therefore need to liberate these girls from the persistent “senseless genital mutilation” by proper and relevant socialization and empowerment against cultural practices. The Cultural Lag theory of sociologist William F. Ogburn (1964) will be the underlying theoretical perspective of this study to explain the phenomenon, focusing explicitly on the / Sociology / DLITT(SOC)
118

The analysis of Iraqi women's political participation, civil rights, and societal roles

Unknown Date (has links)
The effects that Women's political participation in the Middle East has on political parties and regimes have been investigated by the political science community. However, how women's political participation and changing societal roles affect women's lives has not received adequate attention. This is a comparative historical analysis that investigates how women's societal roles and political participation in Iraq changed from 1968 to the present. It examines how factors such as social conservatism, party ideology, war, sanctions, religion, and international pressure during different periods in Iraq's modern history influenced changes in Iraqi women's roles and participation over time. These changes in societal roles and political participation are used to analyze the restrictions and expansions in Iraqi women's civil rights in areas such as family, work and mobility, political and cultural expression, health and sexual control, and education. / by Gina Marie Longo. / Thesis (M.A.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2008. / Includes bibliography. / Electronic reproduction. Boca Raton, Fla., 2008. Mode of access: World Wide Web.
119

The discourse of the divine: radical traditions of black feminism, musicking, and myth within the black public sphere (civil rights to the present)

Unknown Date (has links)
The Discourse of the Divine: Radical Traditions of Black Feminism, Musicking,and Myth within the Black Public Sphere (Civil Rights to the Present) is an exploration of the historical precursors and the contemporary developments of Black feminism in America, via Black female musical production and West and Central African cosmology. Historical continuity and consciousness of African spirituality within the development of Black feminism are analyzed alongside the musical practices of two Black female musicians, Nina Simone and Me’shell Ndegéocello. Simone and Ndegéocello, The High Priestess of Soul and the Mother of Neo-Soul, respectively, distend the commodified confines of Black music and identity by challenging the established norms of music and knowledge production. These artists’ lyrics, politics, and representations substantiate the “Signifyin(g)” elements of West and Central African feminist mythologies and music- making traditions. / Includes bibliography. / Dissertation (Ph.D.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2015 / FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
120

Women and poverty in Hong Kong: power in the economy, the state and discourse.

January 2000 (has links)
Wu, Ka Ming. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2000. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 155-163). / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / Abstract --- p.i-iii / Table of Content --- p.iv-v / Abbreviations --- p.vi / Chapter Chapter One --- Introduction: Women and Poverty in Hong Kong --- p.1 / Poor Women: Where and Who are They? / Research Purpose and Questions / Research Methodology / Some Research Reflections / Chapter Chapter Two --- "Engendering the Question of Poverty: Power in Economy, State and Discourse" --- p.14 / Women and Development under Economic Globalization / Working Daughters Getting Old: The Hong Kong Case / Hong Kong in the International Political Economy / Poor Women: The Opposition of Workers and Citizens / Welfare Perspectives: Three Different Theoretical Streams / The Political Economy of Welfare State / Feminist Critique of Welfare State / Poor Women and Welfare Services in Hong Kong / The Genealogy of Modern Power: Foucault on Power and Discourse / Discourse Analysis / Ideology versus Truth / The Power of Gaze / The Welfare Cut: The Poor as Objects of State Intervention / Power/ Knowledge / Chapter Chapter Three --- poor Women as Product of Economic Development: Changing Role of Hong Kong in the Global Economy --- p.45 / Changing Role of Hong Kong in the Global Economy / Poor Women after Economic Restructuring / Reproductive Work Positions: Sliding Ranks and Salaries / No Jobs for Poor Mothers / Working Poor Mothers: Reconciling Paid Work and Family Responsibility / Familialism and the Incorporation of Women as Labor / Capitalist Production of Familialism / The Matron Workers in the 1970s vs the Disabled Women in the 1990s / Entering the Information Age in the late 1990s: Poor Women and Development / Conclusion / Chapter Chapter Four --- "Women, Poverty and the Welfare System in Hong Kong " --- p.72 / Concern of Hong Kong Social Policy / The Myth of Lassie-faire in Social Welfare / Productivity: Philosophy of Hong Kong Social Welfare / Single Mothers as Study Focus / Who has the Right to Social Welfare? The Breadwinner's Myth / Housing Problem for Single Mothers with Children / Poor Lives of Lone Mother: Child Caring and Work / Women in Our Welfare System without Citizenship / Chapter Chapter Five --- Discourse on the Welfare Cut: The Poor as Object of Intervention --- p.101 / Discursive Analysis / The Arrival of Dependency Culture in Hong Kong / Colonial Fear against the Poor: History of the Politics of Welfare / The Poor as the Object of Intervention / "The Poor against the “Imagined Poor"" " / The Construction of Social Subjectivities of the Lower Class / Conclusion: Difficulty of the Underclass and their Agency / Chapter Chapter Six --- Knowledge Production and Power Relation in Hong Kong --- p.124 / Social Welfare in Hong Kong: To Prevent People from Starving to Death / Make Money and Be Happy: People and Society in Hong Kong / Chou's Discourse on Welfare in Hong Kong / The Hidden Reality in the Affluent 1990s / Rocketing Welfare and Car Crash / The Meaning of Non-Interventionism: Government and Business Interests / Non-Interventionism as Ruling Success or Ruling Inability? / Power/ Knowledge and the Politics of Writing / Conclusion / Chapter Chapter Seven --- Conclusion --- p.148 / Complicity of Economic Development / Complicity of the Government / Power of Discourse / Effects of Discourse / Discourse and Knowledge Production / The Future / Bibliography --- p.155

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