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Black Deathing to Black Self-Determination: The Cultivating Substance of Counter-NarrativesRoss, Genesis 12 April 2021 (has links)
No description available.
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292 |
Man & Machine: A Narrative of the Relationship Between World War II Fighter Advancement and Pilot SkillBurnett, Brian, II 18 May 2023 (has links)
No description available.
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293 |
Puerto Rico in Crisis: Intersectionality, Activism, and Transforming Globalized Human Rights from the GrassrootsWomack, Malia Lee January 2021 (has links)
No description available.
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294 |
The Surprising Role of Legal Traditions in the Rise of Abolitionism in Great Britain’s DevelopmentBuchsbaum, Robert Michael, III January 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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295 |
This is My Family: An ErasureRehman, Sadia 02 August 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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296 |
Intersectional Leadership: A Critical Narrative Analysis of Servant Leadership by Black Women in Student AffairsGraham, Daria-Yvonne J. 29 May 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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297 |
Structuring Legitimacy via Strategies of Leadership, Cooperation and Identity: The Comité de Motard Kisima's Engagement of Media and Communication for the Enactment of Motorcycle Taxi Work in LubumbashiMatthias, Nakia M. 17 September 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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298 |
Multiculturalism and the De-politicization of Blackness in Canada: the case of FLOW 93.5 FMMcKenzie, Kisrene 11 December 2009 (has links)
This thesis presents a case study of Canada’s first Black owned radio station, FLOW 93.5 FM, to demonstrate how official multiculturalism, in its formulation and implementation, negates Canada’s history of slavery and racial inequality. As a response to diversity, multiculturalism shifts the focus away from racial inequality to cultural difference. Consequently, Black self-determination is unauthorized. By investigating FLOW’s radio license applications, programming and advertisements, this thesis reveals just how the vision of a Black focus radio station dissolved in order to fit the practical and ideological framework of multiculturalism so that Blackness could be easily commodified. This thesis concludes that FLOW is not a Black radio station but instead is a multicultural radio station – one that specifically markets a de-politicized Blackness. As a result, multiculturalism poses serious consequences for imagining and engaging with Blackness as a politics that may address the needs of Black communities in Canada.
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299 |
Multiculturalism and the De-politicization of Blackness in Canada: the case of FLOW 93.5 FMMcKenzie, Kisrene 11 December 2009 (has links)
This thesis presents a case study of Canada’s first Black owned radio station, FLOW 93.5 FM, to demonstrate how official multiculturalism, in its formulation and implementation, negates Canada’s history of slavery and racial inequality. As a response to diversity, multiculturalism shifts the focus away from racial inequality to cultural difference. Consequently, Black self-determination is unauthorized. By investigating FLOW’s radio license applications, programming and advertisements, this thesis reveals just how the vision of a Black focus radio station dissolved in order to fit the practical and ideological framework of multiculturalism so that Blackness could be easily commodified. This thesis concludes that FLOW is not a Black radio station but instead is a multicultural radio station – one that specifically markets a de-politicized Blackness. As a result, multiculturalism poses serious consequences for imagining and engaging with Blackness as a politics that may address the needs of Black communities in Canada.
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300 |
Your Voice is My Favorite Sound: Lived Experiences of Royal Sapphires Members and Teachers at Regal AcademyKarikari, LaDreka Angela 07 August 2023 (has links)
No description available.
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