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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.
461

Nome aos bois. Zebus e zebuzeiros em uma pecuária brasileira de elite / Naming the oxen. Zebus and Zebuzeiros in the Brazilian cattle elite

Leal, Natacha Simei 10 October 2014 (has links)
Está é uma tese sobre homens e bois. Através de pesquisa de campo em feiras agropecuárias, centrais de inseminação artificial, laboratórios, fazendas e do exame de registros genealógicos, manuais zootécnicos e outros textos e documentos publicados ou de arquivo, são explorados sob uma perspectiva antropológica aspectos e conceitos do âmbito do parentesco, das biotecnologias, da economia, das políticas de Estado relacionados a um segmento particular da pecuária no Brasil: o gado de elite. A pecuária de elite é um ramo da bovinocultura que produz espécimes reprodutores desenvolvidos para melhorar a qualidade de espécimes de comuns, de corte, que são encaminhados aos frigoríficos. Ao mesmo tempo, esse ramo se realiza em alto grau de autonomia em relação à pecuária de corte, constituindo um mercado com regras e atores específicos. O trabalho se concentra sobre a narrativa de uma invenção brasileira, do Triângulo Mineiro o gado zebu , que como tantas outras invenções nacionais, se fez a partir de investimentos nas ideias de sangue, família e raça. Zebus são, por excelência, de elite no Brasil e sua constituição mobiliza conceitos de sangue, genes, genealogia, raça, mestiçagem, pureza (entre outros), que se consolidam ao passo que aos animais é atribuído valor de mercado. O mercado de gado de elite, que contemporaneamente mobiliza cifras milionárias através da venda de bovinos em leilões, do uso de biotecnologias e da venda de células reprodutivas (sêmen e embriões), determina o valor das reses e de seus criadores, de zebus e de zebuzeiros. A invenção e realização deste ramo da pecuária, mais que zootécnica, é sobretudo política, pois trata da consolidação de elites de bovinos e elites de criadores no Brasil. / This is a thesis about men and oxen. Through field research on agricultural fairs, artificial insemination centers, laboratories, farms and examining genealogical records, husbandry manuals, as well as other texts, published documents or archives. In this thesis, aspects of the framework and concepts of kinship, biotechnologies, the economy, government policies relating to a particular segment of livestock in Brazil - the cattle elite - will all be explored from an anthropological perspective. The cattle elite is a branch of breeding cattle that produces specimens developed to improve the quality of specimens of common cutting, which are sent to slaughterhouses. At the same time, this branch carries a high degree of autonomy in relation to beef cattle, constituting a market with specific rules and actors. The work focuses on the narrative of a Brazilian invention, from the Triângulo Mineiro the zebu cattle - which like so many other national inventions was made from investments in the ideas of blood, family and race. Zebu cattle are, per excellence, the cattle elite in Brazil, and its constitution mobilizes concepts of blood, genes, genealogy, race, miscegenation and purity (among others), which consolidate these animals market value. The cattle market elite - which simultaneously mobilizes millions in money by selling at auctions, by the use of biotechnology and by the sales of reproductive cells (semen and embryos), determining the value of the cattle and their owners, i.e the zebu and the zebuzeiros (zebu breeders). The invention and implementation of this branch of husbandry, more than zootechnical, is actually political, because it pertains to the consolidation of the elites of cattle and the elites of family breeders in Brazil.
462

De Sacramento a Boca do Monte: a formação patrimonial de famílias de elite na Província de São Pedro (Santa Maria, RS, século XIX)

Külzer, Gláucia Giovana Lixinski de Lima 04 May 2009 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2015-03-03T19:30:54Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 Previous issue date: 4 / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / O presente trabalho visa, através da utilização intensiva dos inventários post-mortem e demais fontes heterogêneas do município de Santa Maria da Boca do Monte, entre os anos de 1858 a 1889, analisar o grupo da elite regional de proprietários/criadores neste cenário rural de meados do século XIX. Baseados na contribuição teórica e metodológica da micro-história passamos a enxergar os inventários post-mortem como uma fonte que nos possibilitou perceber a sociedade estudada em movimento, ancorada pelos números. Assim, essa dissertação inclui-se na esteira das contribuições aportadas por esses estudos recentes e seus métodos. O objetivo deste trabalho é reconstituir as estratégias de uma família de proprietários/criadores, suas escolhas ao longo do tempo, abordando: a mobilidade espacial como estratégia famíliar, a formação do patrimônio, o processo de acumulação de capital, o acesso a propriedade da terra em um momento de expansão da fronteira agrária e a transmissão do patrimônio. Procuramos investigar os frag / The present work aims, through the intensive use of the post-death inventories and other heterogeneous sources from Santa Maria da Boca do Monte county, between the years from 1858 to 1889, analyze the group of the regional owners / creators elite in this rural scenery of century XIX middles. Based on the theoretical and methodological contribution of the micro-history, we start to see the post-death inventories like a source that made possible us to realize the studied moving society, anchored by numbers. Thus, this dissertation includes in line aportadas contributions by these recent studies and their methods. The this work is to rebuild the family strategies owners/creators, their choices over time, abordando: spatial mobility as famíliar strategy, training, heritage capital accumulation process, access to land ownership in a moment agrarian frontier expansion and the transmission of heritage. We try to investigate the fragments of Francisco José Pinto´s trajectory, owner of the biggest fortune of our lift
463

Muito além da praça José Bonifácio: as elites e os "outsiders" em Cachoeira do Sul pela voz do Jornal do Povo, 1930-1945

Selbach, Jeferson Francisco 30 March 2007 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2015-03-05T12:06:14Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 Previous issue date: 30 / Nenhuma / O intenso processo migratório brasileiro campo-cidade, visto nos anos 30-40, desencadeou impactos profundos no seio das relações sociais e cotidianas da cidade de Cachoeira do Sul (RS), alterando a convivência diária entre a elite moradora do espaço central que, de certa forma, cultuavam carisma grupal distintivo, cerrando fileiras e estigmatizando os não pertencentes ao grupo, os “outsiders”, migrantes “subalternos” ou todos aqueles que viviam do “lado de fora”. Nesta tese, busquei a dinâmica desta mudança no dia-a-dia da elite cachoeirense, considerando as transformações da diferenciação social praticada por esse grupo, procurei ver os estigmas que a elite lançava sobre os forasteiros, como se constituía a sociodinâmica dessa estigmatização, principalmente através das páginas do Jornal do Povo (JP), porta-voz da elite. Tentei compreender como o espaço urbano central da sede do município constituiu-se em campo de enfrentamento das forças simbólicas locais, no momento em que abrigou ou excluiu os habitantes d
464

The reproduction of elite mobilities in Washington D.C

Schubert, Felix January 2018 (has links)
In this thesis, I seek to analyse the reproduction of elite mobilities through participation in Study Internship Programmes (SIP) in Washington D.C. SIPs are programmes for both American as well as international students that come to Washington and participate in a programme that combines an academic track on specific topics with an internship. These programmes can be seen as exemplars of a specialised form of neoliberal education in which middle-class students attempt to acquire mobility capital in the hope of accelerating their future careers. With the help of in-depth interviews and ethnographic methods, I have gathered data about the SIPs which were analysed via textual analysis. I conducted interviews with SIP-alumni, with current SIP-students as well as stakeholders in these programmes. As a theoretical framework, I have utilised a mobilities perspective, along with ideas on individualisation and cosmopolitan capital to develop a framework for study-internship research. I argue that students go to Washington to acquire mobility and cosmopolitan capital, as this might offer a competitive edge. I explore how SIPs affect and transform its participants, their career paths and mobilities, as well as the city of Washington D.C itself as a place. My research showcases the layered identities of the participants through their mobilities, and how their mobilities are connected to the city of Washington D.C., and the key institutions involved. The research also demonstrates that SIPs are indicative of broader career patterns and mobility decision-making among young people in the West. Furthermore, my research indicates how integral the images of Washington D.C. and career-narratives are to the reproduction of elites and to Washington D.C.'s image of power for the SIP-participants to represent their success and aspirations.
465

Paulicéia de ontem: as revistas ilustradas e o viver urbano nas primeiras décadas do século XX

Braglia, Nádia Christina 12 August 2011 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2016-04-27T19:30:22Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Nadia Christina Braglia.pdf: 8111749 bytes, checksum: cfe47b79cff4fa596eb3c13dfc10b358 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2011-08-12 / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / This study reflects about new forms of sociabilities, habits and tastes appeared in the city of São Paulo between beginning of twenty century and the 1920 decade. Analysis advertisements and personal announcements that acted as transmitter in newspapers and periodicals such as: Vida paulista, A lua, Vida Moderna e A Cigarra, that circulated in the city in beginning of decade of twenty century. The study deliniates the geography of new spaces localized in the Triangle and its around, such like and to beyond the central region, and what forms these new spaces of leisure and sociabilities were divulged and inserted mainly in the daily life of cream of Paulistan s society and what ways they built an imaginary idea about the city that they wished to become modern and civilized such as the European standard / Este estudo reflete sobre as novas formas de sociabilidades, hábitos e gostos surgidos na Cidade de São Paulo entre o início do século XX e a década de 1920. A partir da análise dos anúncios e das notas sociais veiculadas nas revistas ilustradas, Vida paulista, A lua, Vida Moderna e A Cigarra que circularam na Cidade nas décadas iniciais do século XX, o estudo traça a geografia dos novos espaços localizados no Triângulo e em seu entorno, bem como, para além da região central e, de que forma esses novos espaços de lazer e sociabilidades foram divulgados e inseridos principalmente no cotidiano das elites paulistanas e, de que maneira construíram um imaginário sobre a Cidade que se desejava moderna e civilizada nos moldes europeus
466

Elite Persuasion and Religious Extremism: A Study Among Sunni and Shia Muslims in Northern India

Sharma, Kunaal January 2017 (has links)
In my dissertation, I explore four inter-related research areas that advance the study of elite influence, identity, and conflict. How does religion interact with changing political conditions over time to affect contemporary patterns of extremism? To what extent do extremist attitudes explain variation in extremist behavior? What does the relationship between these two variables, and the similarities and differences in their correlates, imply for theories of extremism and ethnic conflict more generally? The next two themes focus on the way in which anti-violence appeals by elites shape extremism among followers. How does anti-violence religious---as opposed to economic--persuasion by an elite affect extremism, and can it overcome a counterargument to the peace message by a peer? Finally, what explains variation in the effectiveness of clerical persuasion on extremist behaviors across religious groups? In the opening chapter, I ask how changing political conditions shape the capacity of religious elites to mobilize extremism. In what ways might changing conditions lead to differential effects within religious groups? I study these questions based on primary field research in Lucknow and analysis of secondary historical sources. I demonstrate how the rise and fall state-sponsored religion, government regulation of religious rituals, and heightened foreign sectarian conflict structured efforts by religious elites to change norms in ways that increasingly permitted violence. For the Shia, such changing political conditions interacted with elements of their constitutive political myth in ways that strengthened perceptions of victimization. The ensuing difference in perceived group status has placed unique constraints on the persuasiveness of present-day Shia clerics who propagate pro-peace norms to their followers. Taken together, the study offers important lessons for the relationship between political conditions and the transmission of religious ideas, the durability of identities, and the effectiveness of elite persuasion in conflict settings. Chapter 3 focuses on the relationship between extremist attitudes and behavior. Research on the factors associated with religious extremism have focused on either extremist attitudes or behavior. Yet to date, there is little empirical evidence on the relationship between extremist attitudes and behavior, including on whether they are associated with the same factors. To help inform research gaps, this study leverages a face-to-face survey of 480 Sunni and Shia Muslim youth in Lucknow's Old City that employed attitudinal and behavioral measures of extremism. The results offer some of the first evidence that extremist attitudes are significant predictors of extremist behaviors, but that the strength of the relationship is not as strongly as commonly expected. Second, the study argues that economic grievances are stronger predictors of extremist attitudes than of behavior, and thus challenges theoretical expectations from the conflict literature. Third, the study points to a model of extremism in which religious and psychological factors, rather than grievance or social network explanations, drive both extremist attitudes and behaviors. The fourth chapter turns attention to the causal effect of elite persuasion and bottom-up countermessaging on religious extremism. Can pro-peace persuasion by religious or economic elites reduce religious extremism? Will such effects survive counterarguments? This study uses an audio recording experiment to examine these questions in the context of religious extremism in northern India. Sunni and Shia young adult men were randomly assigned to listen to an audio message recorded by a real in-group cleric emphasizing norms discouraging violence or a real in-group shopkeeper emphasizing material considerations discouraging violence. Another treatment---listening to a counterargument to the peace message by an in-group member---tests counter-messaging. Results indicate a surprising pattern: religious persuasion increases extremism the Shia sample and reduces extremism for the Sunni sample. Although these effects do not reach statistical significance within each sample, the difference between sects of the marginal effects of religious persuasion and the counterargument message are significant. The results support a novel logic involving group victimization consistent with experimental results and qualitative evidence. The final chapter of the dissertation examines clerical persuasion and its impact on religious extremism. How does an anti-violence religious message by a cleric affect extremism? Do such appeals work differently across groups? I argue that exposure to such an appeal from an in-group cleric reduces extremism for members of a non-victimized group but not for members of a victimized group. The latter retain extremism to guard against anticipated threats. I present evidence from an audio recording experiment among 2,100 Sunni and Shia young adult men in Lucknow, the Indian city where sectarian violence is highest and the Shia perceive themselves as victimized. I randomly assigned subjects to listen to an anti-violence religious argument from either an in-group cleric; out-group cleric; both; or none. Results show that the in-group message significantly reduces extremist behaviors up to 8 hours later for Sunni but not Shia subjects. Additional analyses and qualitative research emphasize the plausibility of the victimization logic. Furthermore, the out-group message and the interaction do not significantly change behavior for either group. I argue that intergroup inequalities matter for understanding the effectiveness of elite persuasion and discuss policy implications.
467

Islamic Modernism in China: Chinese Muslim Elites, Guomindang Nation-Building, and the Limits of the Global Umma, 1900-1960

Chen, John January 2018 (has links)
Modern Chinese Muslims’ increasing connections with the Islamic world conditioned and were conditioned by their elites’ integrationist politics in China. Chinese Muslims (the “Hui”) faced a predicament during the Qing and Ottoman empire-to-nation transitions, seeking both increased contact with Muslims outside China and greater physical and sociopolitical security within the new Chinese nation-state. On the one hand, new communication and transport technologies allowed them unprecedented opportunities for transnational dialogue after centuries of real and perceived isolation. On the other, the Qing’s violent suppression of Muslim uprisings in the late nineteenth century loomed over them, as did the inescapable Han-centrism of Chinese nationalism, the ongoing intercommunal tensions between Muslims and Han, and the general territorial instability of China’s Republican era (1911-49). As a result, Islamic modernism—a set of positions emphasizing both reason and orthodoxy, and arguing that true or original Islam is compatible with science, education, democracy, women’s rights, and other “modern” norms—took on new meanings in the context of Chinese nation-making. In an emerging dynamic, ethos, and discourse of “transnationalist integrationism,” leading Chinese Muslims transformed Islamic modernism, a supposedly foreign body of thought meant to promote unity and renewal, into a reservoir of concepts and arguments to explain and justify the place of Islam and Muslims in China, and in so doing made it an integral component of Chinese state- and nation-building. “Islamic Modernism in China” argues that Chinese Muslims’ transregional engagement with Islamic modernism did not subvert but enabled the Chinese government’s domestic and foreign policies toward Muslims, and ultimately facilitated the nationalization of Muslim identity in modern China. From Qing collapse through the Second World War, urban coastal Chinese Muslim religious and political elites imported, read, debated, disseminated, and translated classic Islamic texts and modern Muslim print media, while establishing their own modernist schools and publications. Yet those same figures, through those same practices and institutions, increasingly wielded an image of Islamic authority and authenticity in support of the nationalist Guomindang government’s efforts to develop, integrate, and Sinicize China’s frontiers, including the predominantly Sufi Muslim communities of the Northwest. In the 1930s and early 1940s, integrationist Chinese Muslim elites further mobilized modernist narratives of Islam’s rationality, peacefulness, and past and present “contributions” to China. For example, they responded to Islamophobic misperceptions about halal by arguing that Islamic medicine was an important part of Chinese medicine. They also dispatched nationalistic goodwill delegations to the Middle East, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and China’s own frontiers during the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937-45), to pursue cultural cooperation and spread anti-Japanese propaganda. At the same time, in contrast to this instrumentalized Islam, certain Chinese Muslim scholars studying in Cairo instead articulated an expansive, democratized version of the Islamic concept of independent human reason (ijtihad) as the basis for a more inclusive vision of both Chinese nationalism and the global Islamic community (umma). The opportunity to pursue this or any other alternative to mere integrationism soon evaporated, however, as the renewed Chinese Civil War (1945-49) split the Chinese Muslim elites across the Mainland, Taiwan, and a variety of Muslim and non-Muslim countries. Thereafter, the Chinese Muslim elites largely became marginalized from high politics in the era of Cold-War and decolonization. Many of their once-contingent narratives of history and identity, however, have nevertheless been normalized as the canonical truth of Chinese Islam to this day, quietly informing China’s minority policies, foreign relations, and rhetoric of the “New Silk Road.” “Islamic Modernism in China” is a history of the subsumption of modern forms of mobility by modern structures of power. It narrates an assertion of difference in the context of multiple, partially overlapping integrations: the integration of a Han-centric idea of the Chinese nation-state, of an Arabo-centric idea of the Islamic world, and of a Eurocentric system of global infrastructures, institutions, networks, and knowledge. It de-parochializes the modern history of Chinese Muslims, showing how they epitomized aspirations and challenges common to Muslim minorities across many large non-Muslim societies and, to an extent, to modern Muslims everywhere. Using a wide range of new or under-studied archival and published sources in Chinese and Arabic, it connects questions of the meaning and scope of Islam, Islamic community, and Islamic modernism (scholarship on which tends to prioritize the Arab Middle East and relations with the West) to questions of religion and state in modern China (scholarship on which tends to prioritize popular spirituality and the official Confucian system, as well as relations with the West). As such, it presents Sino-Islamic transregional interactions beyond the lens of Western influence, yet also uncovers new trajectories by which Western concepts (“religion,” the “nation-state,” the “Islamic world”) became universalized. Overall, it moves beyond a circulation-based understanding of global encounters, and instead maps the contingent ways in which forms of mobility became pressed into the service of hegemonic processes of state- and nation-building: how flows of people and ideas created borders rather than simply crossing them.
468

Armenia : a country in search of leaders. An analysis of post-Soviet Armenian political elite and its national discourse

Ghaplanyan, Irina January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
469

Pushed towards the mainstream : A mixed method study of the West European radical left parties’ changing Eurosceptic positions.

Vaughn, Paulina January 2019 (has links)
No description available.
470

Attempt Progressions of Elite Male Raw Powerlifters

Travis, Spencer Kyle, Zourdos, Michael C., Bazyler, Caleb D. 14 February 2019 (has links)
No description available.

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