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The impact of non-native woody plants on the native herbivorous insect community of northern DelawareZuefle, Marion E. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Delaware, 2006. / Principal faculty advisor: Douglas W. Tallamy, Dept. of Entomology & Wildlife Ecology. Includes bibliographical references.
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Stuck Watching the Skies: What Alien Invasion Films can tell us about Challenges to Hegemonic AuthorityYang, Yaochong January 2013 (has links)
This project analyzes two sets of alien invasion films to understand lay opinions on hegemonic authority. It defines hegemonic authority along two major lines: neo-Gramscian hegemony and hegemonic stability theory. The project uses alien invasion films to study challenges to hegemonic authority because of the unique and confrontational narrative alien invasion films typically possess. Through a comparative process, the project concludes that alien invasion films reveal paradoxical relationships of power, where the hegemon encourages aggressive pre-emptive policies against its challengers but at the same time depends upon these challengers to maintain its power. It argues that despite arguments of growing globalism and cosmopolitanism in the world, the liberal hegemon remains clearly divided among notions of Us versus Them.
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Determining patterns and impacts of multiple forest stressors in Southern Ontario /Tanentzap, Andrew Joseph. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.Sc.)--York University, 2007. Graduate Programme in Biology. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 114-162). Also available on the Internet. MODE OF ACCESS via web browser by entering the following URL: http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&res_dat=xri:pqdiss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:dissertation&rft_dat=xri:pqdiss:MR32029
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Non-citizen soldiers, veterans, and their families : defense personnel policy and the principles of American politicsLamm, Jennifer Elizabeth 21 February 2011 (has links)
This report examines the place of non-citizen soldiers, veterans, and their families in U.S. political and civil life. Historically, military service has allowed marginalized groups to earn their social and political status as equal citizens. Part one of this report explores why, despite this history, recent legislative changes, and a 2002 Executive Order eliminating the legal and bureaucratic barriers to naturalization, less than forty percent of the non-citizen servicemen and women today actually acquire U.S. citizenship while on active duty. Part two examines the political and policy context surrounding a soldier's decisions to naturalize. It suggests that some soldiers may be “undocumented”; they forgo naturalization to protect themselves and their families. Part three discusses the legal, political, and normative implications of current policy. Some practices, such as the deportation of alien veterans, challenge the foundations of the American political order. The place of undocumented soldiers and veterans raises important issues about civic obligation, the cultural narratives that define membership in and service to the state, and the ruling political collations in which these narratives find support. / text
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Filipina live-in caregivers in Canada: migrants' rights and labor issues (a policy analysis)Cuenca, Joseph Gerard B. 05 1900 (has links)
Asian women make up the fastest growing category of the world's population of migrant
workers. The thesis examines labor and immigration policies of Canada as a host country for
Filipino women migrant workers. It also determines how Canada's working environment for
Filipino women migrant workers is mapped out.
The thesis is anchored on three major concerns. The first is an analysis of the Philippines as a
leading labor exporting country. The thesis expounds on the state mechanisms promoting
labor exportation and the corresponding problems that ensue. It is argued that a majority of
the problems of labor migration from the Philippines can be attributed to the inadequate
policies and laws of the government in the 1970s when labor export first flourished.
The second area of concern is a situation analysis of the Filipina migrant workers who come
to Canada to work as live-in caregivers. This discussion is focused on Canada's general
framework of immigration laws, foreign worker policies and the pertinent provincial labor
laws of British Columbia. It analyzes how these pieces of legislation have been shaped by
Canada's national policies. The thesis argues that Canada's regulations restricting the rights of
foreign domestic workers and the marginalization of their social mobility and status reflect the
unequal relationship between the host and the sending countries.
The third and most important concern is a policy analysis of the Live-In Caregiver Program
vis-a-vis migrants' rights and labor issues. The thesis argues that Canada, through the
continuation of the Live-In Caregiver Program, provides Filipino domestic workers
inequitable working conditions. It is argued that since Canada is an international forerunner in
championing human rights, it becomes anachronistic that a cluster of the country's
immigration policies continue to advocate indentured form of labor. Canada is in a unique
position, both as a traditional immigrants' country and as an international player, to blaze the
trail for international recognition of migrant workers' rights. Canada must eliminate the
double standards in the Live-In Caregiver Program vis-a-vis the general immigration policies.
Therefore, it is argued that in order to maintain the high marks it has been receiving at the
international level, Canada must eliminate two requirements of the Live-In Caregiver
Program: First, the two-year live-in requirement and second, the temporary migrant status of
live-in caregivers upon initial entry to Canada. Live-in work must be optional and not subject
to the granting of permanent residence status. To preserve it international reputation, Canada
must also make reforms on the international level by ratifying and implementing international
conventions.
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Stuck Watching the Skies: What Alien Invasion Films can tell us about Challenges to Hegemonic AuthorityYang, Yaochong January 2013 (has links)
This project analyzes two sets of alien invasion films to understand lay opinions on hegemonic authority. It defines hegemonic authority along two major lines: neo-Gramscian hegemony and hegemonic stability theory. The project uses alien invasion films to study challenges to hegemonic authority because of the unique and confrontational narrative alien invasion films typically possess. Through a comparative process, the project concludes that alien invasion films reveal paradoxical relationships of power, where the hegemon encourages aggressive pre-emptive policies against its challengers but at the same time depends upon these challengers to maintain its power. It argues that despite arguments of growing globalism and cosmopolitanism in the world, the liberal hegemon remains clearly divided among notions of Us versus Them.
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Traveling Through the Iris: Re-producing Whiteness in Stargate SG-1Parrent, Kim Louise January 2010 (has links)
This study analyses how Stargate SG-1 perpetuates dominant representations of whiteness, and how whiteness is used as a marker of racial identity in American popular culture. The popular science fiction television show Stargate SG-1 continually uses the nonwhite alien to juxtapose the seeming superiority of the white human, with white Americans acting as trusted gatekeepers for the entire planet. Whiteness becomes almost invisible and normative as the alien “other” requires assistance or containment enacted through SG-1’s adventures “off-world”. I also examine the representation of superior white aliens as an extension of these dominant white discourses.
It is through the study of the constructed nature of “race” that whiteness is made visible. As represented in Stargate SG-1 whiteness discourses contribute to and reflect “common sense” constructions of race within U.S. society. This examination of Stargate SG-1 illuminates how negotiations of whiteness are constructed within United States dominant cultural discourses as a means to exclude the “other”.
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Determinants and impacts of international labour migration in rural Thailand / by Subordas Warmsingh.Subordas Warmsingh January 1998 (has links)
Bibliography: leaves 274-308. / xiv, 308 leaves : ill. (chiefly col.), maps ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Examines the social and economic impacts of international labour migration on villages in Northeast Thailand. Based on Hugo's migration impact frameword, the study assesses the efforts of overseas labour migration on the social and economic wellbeing of migrants, families and communities at the origin. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Geography, 1999?
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Shorebird use of smooth cordgrass (Spartina alterniflora) meadows in Willapa Bay, WashingtonParks, Jared R. January 2006 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.E.S.)--Evergreen State College, 2006. / Title from title screen viewed (3/30/2009). Includes bibliographical references (leaves 40-45).
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Short-term intensive management of high densities of the invasive plant sericea lespedezea /Cornell, Jack E., January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Missouri State University, 2008. / "May 2008." Includes bibliographical references (leaves 39-42). Also available online.
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