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Language interference and socioeconomic status as factors in the acquisition of standard oral English of Mexican American and Anglo migrant children /GarcÃa, Rodolfo January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
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Change and protest in the rural south: the Southern Tenant Farmers' Union, 1934-1936McKiven, Henry M. January 1983 (has links)
M. A.
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Influence of Acculturation and Individual Differences on Risk Judgments of Construction LaborersThomas, Chanel Tonya 26 September 2006 (has links)
In 2002 the number of reported nonfatal injury and illness cases in the construction industry involving days away from work was over 98,000 for European-Americans (non Hispanic) and 26,000 for Hispanics. Disproportionate to the number of injury and illness cases, the construction industry is comprised of 68% European-Americans, 7% African-Americans and 23% Hispanics (BLS, 2004a).
Based on the expected increase in employment of construction laborers and the increase in the number of injuries and fatalities among specific ethnic groups, a need exists to study disparities across cultural groups to determine the basis for injury and fatality differences between these ethnic groups. The purpose of this research was to contribute to the literature, an effective method for predicting the risk judgments of laborers employed by small construction firms. Predicting the risk judgments of laborers will assist in developing training programs to address these risk factors, which ultimately will reduce injury and fatality rates.
Thirty-six construction laborers , 18 European-American and 18 Hispanic, were recruited for the research. Both ethnic groups were divided into two groups; the control and experimental groups. The control groups viewed a generic concrete construction video and the experimental groups viewed a People-Based Safety video. Each of the participants completed a demographic form, questionnaires, and the narrative simulations (pre-test). Following the narrative simulations the participants rated the narrative simulations, watched a video designated by group, and completed the narrative simulations (post-test). The narrative simulations were used to assess their ability to make risk judgments based on the information presented in the video. The questionnaires completed measured various individual differences, and were administered to detect confounding factors that may not be directly attributed to ethnicity. These questionnaires included: Phinney's (1992) Multigroup Ethnic Identity Measure, Leonard, Hill, and Karners' (1989) Risk Perception Scale, Janicak's (1996) Accident Locus of Control Scale, Rooney and Osipow's (1992) Self-efficacy Measure, and Zohar's (1980) Safety Climate Measure. Participant prior exposure to incidents as well as experience in the construction industry was also included. These measures were used to determine if differences in risk perception, locus of control, experience, acculturation, incident exposure, education, self-efficacy, and safety climate had an influence on the ability to make safe risk judgments. Information on topics construction laborers would like included in safety training as well as the preferred method of training was obtained through the use of focus groups. Eleven participants from the experimental group were recruited for the focus groups; 5 European Americans and 6 Hispanics. One focus group was conducted for each ethnic group.
Six hypotheses were tested in this study: (1) there would be no difference in the risk judgments of European-American and Hispanic construction workers when given a choice of language, (2) more experienced construction workers would have more difficulty making safe judgments, (3) construction workers who have had more experience with safety related critical incidents in the workplace would have more difficulty making safe judgments, (4) construction workers who have lower levels of risk perception would have more difficulty making safe judgments, (5) construction workers who have an internal locus of control would have more difficulty making safe judgments than those who have an external locus of control, and (6) high acculturation participants would score higher on the narrative simulations than low acculturation participants following the video intervention. The first and fourth hypotheses were supported by the research. There were no significant differences found between the risk judgments of European-American and Hispanic construction workers, and risk perception was positively correlated to risk judgments. The remaining hypotheses were not supported by the research.
The major findings of the research are (1) there were no differences in the risk judgments of European-American and Hispanic construction laborers, (2) risk perception and safety climate were significant predictors of construction laborer risk judgments, and (3) the risk judgments of participants were significantly higher for individuals viewing a People-based Safety intervention. There are several advantages of having this information. First, the lack of differences between the two ethnic groups, demonstrates that both groups are able to make safe risk judgments when given the appropriate information in the correct form and language. Secondly, regression analysis using independent variables risk perception and safety climate, may be used to predict narrative simulation risk judgments. The positive relationship between risk perception and safety climate on safe risk judgments should encourage employers and trainers to increase employees' awareness of hazards on the job and increase employees' perception of the company safety climate. Hazards should be identified in addition to their consequences. Trainers should aim to increase workers' perception of risk by relying on past negative outcomes that have a personal nature even if they are infrequent events. Third, experience was positively correlated to participants' confidence in their risk judgments on the narrative simulations. Trainers should not exclude the more experienced employees during training. Continuous training will allow more experienced employees to re-familiarize themselves with old hazards and become aware of new hazards. It is just as important for more experienced employees to be updated on risks because they are more confident in how they react to hazardous situations. It is in the best interest of the company for the confident employees to be confident in safe risk judgments. / Master of Science
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Creating foreign policy locally migratory labor and the Texas border, 1943-1952 /Robinson, Robert Steven, January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 2007. / Full text release at OhioLINK's ETD Center delayed at author's request
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American Catholicism and farm labor activism the Farm Labor Aid Committee of Indiana as a case study /McLochlin, Dustin. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Bowling Green State University, 2008. / Document formatted into pages; contains iv, 67 p. Includes bibliographical references.
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Standing while Latino understanding day labor ordinances in California cities /Erickson, Emily J. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of California, San Diego, 2009. / Title from first page of PDF file (viewed July 2, 2009). Available via ProQuest Digital Dissertations. Includes bibliographical references (p. 92-96).
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Contested rights : the impact of game farming on farm workers in the Bushmen's River areaLuck, Kelly January 2004 (has links)
This thesis is an investigation of the impact of commercial game farming on former farm workers in the Bushman's River area of the Eastern Cape. In its examination of the broader economic and political changes that have facilitated a move from agriculture to game farming, it analyses how these changes affect farm workers. The main concern of the thesis is the ways in which farm workers (at the local level) respond to changes at the national and global level (legal and political changes, the advent of tourism, and the injection of foreign capital and businessmen into the area). Lack of knowledge about their rights under the current political dispensation, as well as the perceived need for mediation between themselves and foreign landowners, points to a general sense of powerlessness. Feelings of alienation from local government structures aimed at fulfilling this function indicate a significant gap between the statute at the national level and the local reality. Local reality is informed by a strong conservatism which is generated by African Independent Church structures and local Xhosa perceptions of manhood and respectability. This conservative discourse leads to a frame of reference which is largely informed by pre-1994 interactions with farmers and government. This results in a situation in which farm workers, largely unaware of their rights in the new dispensation, operate as they did in the past; waiting for landowners to decide their fate for them. What ensues is a lack of meaningful interaction with government and landowners, perpetuating their subjugation and cynicism as to whether government structures are in fact working in their interests. The thesis comes to three main conclusions. The first is that game farming has been negatively received by farm workers due to the associated threats of unemployment and eviction. The second is that despite high levels of subjugation, even the very poor are agents to some degree. The creation of a masculine identity which is internally articulated, as opposed to outwardly expressed, and the grounding of reputation in the family suggest that farm workers have developed mechanisms to deal with their disempowered position. Lastly, farm workers are in possession of social capital which has made it possible for them to deal with their low status in the societal hierarchy. This includes the Church, family and fellow community members. These coping strategies have however proved a disadvantage in the current era because they prevent direct communication with landowners, government and NGOs.
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Farm wages and working conditions in the Albany District, 1957-2008Roberts, Tamaryn Jean January 2010 (has links)
Agriculture is a major employer of labour in South Africa with about 8.8% of the total labour force directly involved in agricultural production (StatsSA, 2007a). Farm wages and working conditions in the Albany district were researched in 1957 by Roberts (1958) and 1977 by Antrobus (1984). Research in 2008, involving face-to-face interviews of a sample survey of 40 Albany farmers, was undertaken to update the situation facing farm labourers and allowed for comparisons with the work previously done. Farm workers were governed by common law until 1994 when the government intervened with legislation. The introduction of the Basic Conditions of Employment Act (1997) for farm workers, amended in 2002 to include minimum wage legislation, and the Extension of Security of Tenure Act (ESTA) of 1997 impacted the supply and demand of farm workers. Other impacts have been due to the Albany district experiencing an increase in the establishment of Private Game Reserves and game-tourism with a simultaneous decline in conventional farming. It was concluded from the survey conducted that minimum wage legislation decreased the demand for regular and increased the demand for casual labour, which incur lower costs including transaction costs, than their regular counterparts. The ESTA of 1997 contributed to a decreased number of farm residents, which had spin-off affects on the supply of labour. Farmers experienced a simultaneous price-cost squeeze, which furthermore decreased the demand for labour. Studying the working and living conditions showed that farm workers had limited access to educational and recreational facilities which negatively impacted the supply of labour.
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Changes and continuities in the labour process on commercial farms in post-Apartheid South Africa : studies from Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal ProvincesKheswa, Nomzamo Sybil January 2014 (has links)
This thesis examines the agricultural labour process on commercial farms in post-apartheid South Africa with a particular focus on systems of labour control on these farms. Considerable literature exists about the labour process in capitalist society but the capitalist labour process does not exist in any pure form. Rather, different labour processes exist and the specific form they take depends on spatial and temporal conditions. Additionally, labour processes are often economic sector-specific. Because of variation in capitalist labour processes, differences in systems of labour control (or labour control regimes) also arise. Historically, up until the end of apartheid in 1994, the labour control regime on commercial farms in South Africa was marked by a paternalistic despotism of a racialised kind. This in part reflected the fact that commercial farms were simultaneously sites of both economic production and social reproduction and, further, they were very privatised agrarian spaces largely unregulated (specifically with regard to labour) by the state. Since the end of apartheid, commercial farms have been subjected to multiple pressures. Notably, the South African state has strongly intervened in labour relations on commercial farms, and commercial farms have been subjected to ongoing neo-liberal restructuring. This has led to the prospects of changes in the prevailing labour control system on commercial farms. In this context, the thesis pursues the following key objective: to understand changes and continuities in the labour process on commercial farms – and particularly labour control systems – subsequent to the end of apartheid in South Africa. It does so with reference to four farms in Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal Provinces.
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Verhoudings tussen boere en plaaswerkers in post-apartheid Suid-Afrika : die wisselwerking tussen formalisering en paternalismeLoxton, Christine 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch University, 2015. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: An outcome of this thesis, done on farms in South-Africa in the Swartland area, is that
the labour structure in agriculture is still predominantly paternalistic and that
paternalism and empowerment coexist. This co-existence causes tension between
farmers and farm workers as it disrupts the relationship where farmers traditionally
had the authority and farm workers were subordinate, but in the modern farm setting
have a measure of independence. A qualitative approach was used to investigate how
farmers and farm workers perceived their relationship in the past and how they
experience it presently. Individual interviews were held with each farmer and focus
group discussions with workers on farms. The study discusses how farmers and farm
workers maintain paternalism on farms, in the context of the reduced support of the
state to white commercial farmers as well as the expansion and formalisation of
labour and tenure legislation of workers' rights.
The state acted as ‘patron’ to the farmers in the apartheid era, but the state’s patronage
to farmers came to an end with the political transition. Farmers feel frustrated and
miss the support they enjoyed previously. Legislation which challenges the power and
authority of farmers has been extended to farms and provides a framework for the
relationship between farmers and farm workers and establishes a context in which this
relationship occurs. This has brought about that the power and authority of the
“paternalistic” farmers have been exposed and challenged. These changes in farmers’
and farmworkers’ relationship with the state create uncertainties, changes and
adjustments in the relationship between farmers and farm workers on farms.
Farmers still take control of farms, regardless of any legislation. The farm workers
also still tend to define their position as depending on the farmer’s goodwill in
conjunction with formal legislation. However, although the workers are still
dependent on the farmer, they are also aware of their rights in the new democratic era
and they claim these rights. The “old paternalistic relationship” together with the
propagation of new legislation causes tensions as well as disruptions in the
relationship between famers and farm workers. But, forged in unequal relationships of
dependency and loyalty, farmers and farm workers keep commercial agriculture
going.
The information collected is intended to shed light on the complex relationships
between farmers and farm workers on farms. Hopefully this research on several farms
in the Western Cape, in the Swartland environment, can contribute to a better
understanding of the complex relationship between farmers and farm workers. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie studie, wat gedoen is op plase in Suid-Afrika in die Swartland-omgewing,
toon dat die arbeidsopset in die landbou oorwegend paternalisties is en dat
paternalisme en bemagtiging op plase saam bestaan. Hierdie saambestaan veroorsaak
spanning tussen die boere en plaaswerkers en lei tot ontwrigting in die verhouding
waar boere tradisioneel die outoriteit gehad het en die plaaswerkers ondergeskik was,
maar nou in die moderne plaasopset onafhanklik is. ’n Kwalitatiewe benadering is
gebruik om ondersoek in te stel na hoe boere en plaaswerkers die verhoudings met
mekaar in die verlede ervaar het en ook hoe hulle dit tans in die moderne plaasopset
ervaar. Daar is individuele onderhoude met die boere gevoer en fokusgroepe met die
plaaswerkers in hulle eie natuurlike omgewings gedoen. Die studie beredeneer hoe
beide boere en plaaswerkers paternalisme op plase in stand hou, ongeag die
verminderde ondersteuning van die staat aan wit kommersiële boere, asook die
uitbreiding en formalisering van arbeids- en verblyfregwetgewing om plaaswerkers se
regte te beskerm.
Die staat het in die apartheidsjare as “beskermheer” teenoor die boere opgetree, maar
daardie begunstiging van die staat aan die boere het met die politieke oorgang verval.
Boere voel gefrustreerd en mis die ondersteuning wat hulle vroeër ontvang het.
Wetgewing wat na plase uitgebrei is, verskaf nou sekere raamwerke waarbinne boere
en werkers moet optree en stel ook sekere eise wat die konteks bepaal. Dit het
veroorsaak dat die mag en outoriteit van die “paternalistiese boere” tot ’n mate
blootgelê en uitgedaag word. Dit veroorsaak verskeie onsekerhede, veranderinge en
aanpassings in die verhouding tussen boere en plaaswerkers op plase.
Boere neem nog altyd die beheer op plase ongeag wetgewing wat hulle beperk. Die
werkers is ook steeds geneig om hulle posisie te definieer as afhanklik van die boer se
welwillendheid, naas die formele wetgewing. Maar, alhoewel die plaaswerkers nog
altyd afhanklik van die boer is, is hulle tog as gevolg van wetgewing bewus van hulle
regte en maak hulle ook aanspraak daarop. Die “ou paternalistiese verhouding” en die
uitbreiding van formele wette wat boere beperk, veroorsaak dat spanning en
ontwrigting in die verhoudings tussen boere en plaaswerkers ontstaan. Maar, gesmee
in ongelyke verhoudings van afhanklikheid en lojaliteit hou boere en plaaswerkers die
kommersiële landbou aan die gang.
Die inligting wat versamel is beoog om lig te werp op die komplekse verhoudings
tussen boere en plaaswerkers op plase. Hopelik sal hierdie navorsing op enkele plase
in die Wes-Kaap, in die Swartland-omgewing, kan bydra tot ʼn beter begrip van die
komplekse verhouding tussen boere en plaaswerkers.
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