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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.
161

An Examination of the Relationship between Acculturation Level and PTSD among Central American Immigrants in the United States

Palmer, Sarita Marie 30 July 2010 (has links)
No description available.
162

La construction du sens dans les expositions muséales. Études de cas à Chicago et à Paris

Cristina, Castellano 07 June 2011 (has links) (PDF)
Dans cette thèse, j'ai montré les processus de négociation identitaire, les discours hégémoniques et les structures du sentiment qui opèrent au sein des expositions qui traitent le multiculturalisme et le métissage. J'ai étudié des expositions produites par des musées nationaux en France et aux États-Unis. Mes études de cas ont été développées au Musée National d'Art Mexicain de Chicago et au Musée du quai Branly à Paris entre 2006 et 2009. Mon analyse montre les processus qui interviennent dans la mise en scène d'un discours muséal complexe. L'étude place au centre de ses hypothèses trois dimensions initiales qui participent à la construction du sens dans les expositions : a) la production du sens, b) la circulation ou distribution du sens et c) la réalisation ou appropriation du sens. Dans la première partie de ma thèse, j'ai exploré les catégories de "sens et signification" à partir d'une approche philosophique. J'ai discuté la généalogie de ces notions avant de développer une approche culturaliste, notamment à partir de la théorie d'Antonio Gramsci, de Stuart Hall et de Raymond Williams, pour qui la signification n'est pas une donnée en soi mais une construction qui se développe à partir des luttes sociales, politiques et symboliques qui cherchent à contrôler les représentations et les croyances. Cette compréhension de la culture, en tant qu'espace de lutte d'interprétations, a ouvert la voie aux analyses de pouvoir et de discours au sein de l'univers muséal. J'ai développé les définitions de culture, occident, hégémonie, idéologies, intellectuelles et structures de sentiment afin de définir le cadre conceptuel qui sert de base théorique pour mes études de cas. Ensuite, j'ai présenté une étude minutieuse sur les origines et le développement des musées, du patrimoine et de la nation. Enfin, j'ai montré les débats contemporains en études culturelles des musées, les approches critiques et anthropologiques et l'importance de développer des études de cas concrètes à partir de cette discipline. La deuxième partie de la thèse présente la méthodologie employée ainsi que les études de cas. J'ai souligné l'importance de la transdisciplinarité comme méthode privilégiée pour l'analyse ainsi que les méthodologies employées pour l'étude des expositions : l'observation à l'intérieur et à l'extérieur du musée, la saisie des témoignages et des entretiens, l'usage des questionnaires et des formulaires. La sélection des musées et des expositions a été réalisée en fonction de la thématique des expositions et pas en fonction des collections ou des objets exposés. J'ai cherché à analyser des musées qui entretenaient un rapport hégémonique avec les sujets de l'exposition. Ceci afin de questionner les transferts culturels, les identités contemporaines en tension ou en conflit, et la cohabitation symbolique des sentiments d'appartenance. Aux États-Unis, j'ai analysé les expositions du Musée National d'Art Mexicain (NMMA) de Chicago. Les expositions étudiées furent : "La Mexicanidad" et "La présence de l'Afrique au Mexique". À Paris, j'ai analysé l'exposition Planète métisse produite par le Musée du quai Branly (MQB). Afin de comprendre la construction du sens des expositions, j'ai interrogé la communauté de production (directeurs, commissaires, comités et collectifs qui ont participé), la médiation et les messages à partir des artistes ou à partir de la propre mise en scène des objets d'exposition. Enfin, j'ai travaillé auprès d'une communauté d'interprètes afin de privilégier une analyse des discours en contexte et pas une méthode purement spéculative. Le résultat de mes analyses montre que les musées étudiés disposent des spécialistes qui légitiment scientifiquement la mise en scène discursive d'expositions, et que la fabrication ou production des sujets d'expositions est liée à des conjonctures politiques particulières. En effet, ces musées ont produit des expositions "engagées" en défendant une dimension culturelle et anthropologique. Avec ce geste, ils transformaient la muséographie classique de l'institution muséale. Par exemple, le NMMA de Chicago n'a pas seulement exposé des objets d'art. Il a sans nul doute proposé un discours de répercussion politique afin de démonter les frontières de race et d'ethnicité. À Paris, le MQB a exposé l'historicité du métissage planétaire. De cette manière, l'exposition interrogeait les discours sur l'identité nationale française, et contribuait au débat autour de la stigmatisation de la migration contemporaine. J'ai démontré, que la façon de sélectionner, d'identifier, de différencier, de hiérarchiser et d'exposer les objets, reflète des nouvelles pratiques culturelles, parfois innovatrices et même post-coloniales. Finalement, l'analyse sur le regard de la communauté des interprètes a fourni les résultats les plus originaux de ma recherche. J'ai montré que quand le visiteur parcourt l'exposition, il établit un accord plus ou moins harmonieux entre lui et le discours de l'institution. Si le visiteur "interroge" le sens de l'exposition, il le fait à partir des structures du sentiment qui dévoilent les identités ou liens d'appartenances des individus. En effet, dans mes études de cas, les expositions abordaient de manière explicite les problématiques concernant les différences culturelles et les identités. Cela amenait le visiteur à se situer à partir d'une circonstance individuelle précise, soit par rapport à sa nationalité, son origine, son genre ou son appartenance à une culture.
163

Family planning and sexual risk-taking among Mexican immigrant men : how does fatherhood matter?

Cancel-Tirado, Doris I. 08 December 2011 (has links)
Men are frequently left out of the picture in the study of family planning and sexual risk behavior. This approach means few programs and policies address men's family planning and sexual health issues. There is also a lack of understanding of the role fatherhood plays in men's development and in family planning and sexual health. For Mexican immigrant men, the picture is even worse given their disadvantaged position and the unique obstacles they face (e.g., language barriers, acculturation issues) that put them at risk for experiencing unintended pregnancies and contracting Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs). Grounded in symbolic interactionism and life course theory, I explored how social roles (e.g., partner, father), individual factors (e.g., education, cultural values), and health systems influence the family planning and sexual risk-taking experiences of young Mexican immigrant men paying particular attention to differences and similarities between fathers and nonfathers. To answer the research questions, a qualitative study was conducted using secondary data from the Latino Health Project: Men Only. The sample was comprised of 21 fathers and 25 nonfathers ages 18 to 30 (N = 46), all of whom had lived in the United States for 10 years or fewer, thus being considered recent immigrants. Data for the project were collected using a semi-structured interview guide with open-ended questions followed by directive probes. The analysis process used grounded theory methodology techniques (LaRossa, 2005). Key findings suggest that both fatherhood status and partners play an important role in men's experience with sexual and reproductive health, with partners playing a more influential role. Fatherhood plays a more active role in men's ideas about family planning while partners seem to play an influential role in men's actual behaviors such as engaging in family planning services and using birth control other than condoms. The influence that fatherhood and partners have on men's experiences with family planning and sexual risk-taking was shaped by a unique combination of accurate information, different levels of knowledge, and misinformation. Access to services was shaped by health systems that prevented men from seeking services due to documentation issues and economic barriers. Cultural factors such as machismo, marianismo, and personalismo also influenced some attitudes and behaviors related to birth control use, vasectomies, risk-taking, and services utilization. Findings suggest these men are exposing themselves and their partners to unintended pregnancies and sexually transmitted infections. Beyond these being public health concerns, it is crucial that researchers, policy makers, and service providers remember that current sexual risk behaviors have a direct impact on the fertility and family formation patterns of the fastest growing population in the United States. / Graduation date: 2012 / Access restricted to the OSU Community at author's request from Jan. 9, 2012 - Jan. 9, 2013
164

Minority Voices: The Representational Roles of African American and Latino Legislators during State Legislative Deliberations

Miller, Renita 16 September 2013 (has links)
In this dissertation I systematically examine African-American and Latino legislator behavior in a legislative setting. The project specifically examines whether and how minority legislators represent and influence African American and Latino policy interests during the legislative process. I perform an analysis of minority legislator participation rates on bills and develop an original measure of substantive representation using patterns in legislative speech of state representatives’ language during committee hearings. I build on existing theory in the representation literature and offer new hypotheses for expanding the scope of how substantive representation is defined and investigated, namely through an empirical investigation of the link between deliberation and descriptive representation. Second, I collect an original data set and develop an original measure of substantive representation to test these hypotheses with participation rates and a linguistic frame based content analysis approach of minority and non-minority representatives’ language on bills for racial perspectives during state legislative committee hearings on several policy issue areas including, but not limited to education, healthcare, and immigration. Third, I offer a critical test of hypotheses to test whether African American and Latino representatives’ (1) participate more when the legislation is deemed minority interest in comparison to their non-minority counterparts? (2) their behavior (or deliberation style) is different from non-minority legislators? (3) impact the deliberation style of non-minority legislators? The analysis draws on original data collected through committee hearing tapes and online video archives of Texas committee hearings in multiple policy areas, and the findings indicate that minority legislators do indeed provide a voice for minority constituents, providing more minority interest language on minority interest bills in comparison to their non-minority colleagues, especially when the legislation is threatening to minority populations. These results support the argument that minority legislators do indeed substantively represent minority constituents at levels greater than non-minority representatives during the legislative process.
165

Minority Voices: The Representational Roles of African American and Latino Legislators during State Legislative Deliberations

Miller, Renita 17 September 2013 (has links)
In this dissertation I systematically examine African-American and Latino legislator behavior in a legislative setting. The project specifically examines whether and how minority legislators represent and influence African American and Latino policy interests during the legislative process. I perform an analysis of minority legislator participation rates on bills and develop an original measure of substantive representation using patterns in legislative speech of state representatives’ language during committee hearings. I build on existing theory in the representation literature and offer new hypotheses for expanding the scope of how substantive representation is defined and investigated, namely through an empirical investigation of the link between deliberation and descriptive representation. Second, I collect an original data set and develop an original measure of substantive representation to test these hypotheses with participation rates and a linguistic frame based content analysis approach of minority and non-minority representatives’ language on bills for racial perspectives during state legislative committee hearings on several policy issue areas including, but not limited to education, healthcare, and immigration. Third, I offer a critical test of hypotheses to test whether African American and Latino representatives’ (1) participate more when the legislation is deemed minority interest in comparison to their non-minority counterparts? (2) their behavior (or deliberation style) is different from non-minority legislators? (3) impact the deliberation style of non-minority legislators? The analysis draws on original data collected through committee hearing tapes and online video archives of Texas committee hearings in multiple policy areas, and the findings indicate that minority legislators do indeed provide a voice for minority constituents, providing more minority interest language on minority interest bills in comparison to their non-minority colleagues, especially when the legislation is threatening to minority populations. These results support the argument that minority legislators do indeed substantively represent minority constituents at levels greater than non-minority representatives during the legislative process.
166

Underrepresentation of Hispanic/Latino Students Identified with Emotional Disturbance in IDEIA: What's the Teacher's Role?

Massa, Idalia 2011 August 1900 (has links)
Historically, Hispanic/Latino (H/L) students have been under-referred, under-identified, and under-served by the U.S. Special Education (SPED) system, particularly under the emotional behavioral disturbance (EBD) category. This finding is alarming given that numerous federal sources report that H/L students continue a disturbing trend of struggling academically as well as being at a higher risk for poor mental health outcomes such as elevated levels of depression, anxiety, and suicidality when compared to their peers. Unfortunately, the existing mental health and education literature on H/L students provides limited guidance in understanding the disproportionate underrepresentation of H/L in the EBD category of the SPED system; an underrepresentation well-documented in the report to congress on the implementation of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act (IDEIA). Using survey methods, the purpose of this study was to shed light on the possible mediating role teachers' perceptions have on the SPED referral and identification decisions by looking at teacher ratings of risk for EBD-like behaviors of students across behavioral conditions (i.e., internalizing versus externalizing types of behaviors) and across ethnic/racial groups (i.e., White, African Americans, and H/L students) using a response-to-intervention framework. Using the Qualtrics software, an online survey tool, 114 self-selected pre-service teachers were surveyed; data was collected and analyzed using a One-way Analysis of Variance. Two main effects and two interaction effects were explored: does the students' ethnic/racial background moderate the teachers' at risk score (ARS) regardless of the behavior displayed?; does the type of behavioral expression moderate the ARS regardless of ethnic/race?; is there an interaction effect between H/L students exhibiting internalizing behaviors that systematically results in a lower ARS and AA students exhibiting externalizing behaviors that systematically results in a higher ARS? Results indicated that (a) when compared to White, Hispanic/Latino students are indeed less likely to be perceived by the pre-service teachers as exhibiting EBD-like behaviors regardless of the behavior (externalizing, internalizing, or neutral) displayed, (b) externalizing behaviors was the strongest predictor for perceiving someone as at-risk for having EBD-like behaviors, and (c) no interaction effects were found.
167

The campus climate of a border HSI : redefining Latino student success

Cortez, Laura Jean 15 June 2011 (has links)
The number of Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs) is on the rise. Research suggests that institutions designated as HSIs graduate over fifty percent of Latinos enrolled in college (Santiago, 2006). However, few studies have examined the campus climate of HSIs and how such climate may influence the degree attainment of first-generation, Mexican American students. Considering the instrumental role HSIs have had in advancing the number of Latinos in postsecondary education, this study investigates the campus climate of an HSI along the U.S.-Mexico Border. By utilizing the theoretical frameworks of funds of knowledge (Moll, Amanti, Neff & Gonzalez, 1992) and organizational habitus (McDonough, 1997) this qualitative study involved first-generation, Mexican American students, faculty, and administrators from the University of Texas-Pan American (UTPA). Data collection methods included: student focus groups, individual interviews, observations, reflective notes and a review of relevant documents. Instrumentation used for this study incorporated a student questionnaire as well as pre-established interview questions. Findings revealed students’ perceptions of a Border HSIs, the experiences they describe as helpful in allowing them to obtain a degree; and the institutional characteristics faculty and administrators found critical in allowing first-generation, Mexican American students to persist. This study builds upon a pilot conducted in 2009-2010, that assessed Latino students’ perceptions of HSIs. The goal of this study is 1) to contribute to the literature on first-generation, Mexican American student success and 2) to further enrich our knowledge about the campus climate of Border HSIs and their role in degree attainment of Latinos. / text
168

The Experience of Job-Displaced Mexican-Americans From San Antonio, Texas Who Have Received Retraining

Mena, Diana 2012 August 1900 (has links)
What is the meaning of the Mexican-American's job displacement and participation in a training program? To answer this question, this study adopted hermeneutic phenomenology as a methodological approach. My intention was to search for deep meaning of job displacement followed by entering an educational program. Ten Mexican-American individuals who had been displaced from their job due to economic and trade reasons, and who later participated in a retraining program, were interviewed. Tentative themes were drawn from the analysis, and 15 thematic categories were confirmed after follow-up interviews. The themes were: Mexican-American Culture, Machismo, Self-determination, Resilience, Union Membership, Job Security, Have Someone Advocate for Their Rights, Job Displacement, Trade-related Closure, Breach of the Psychological Contract, Emotional Distress, Education and Retraining, Entrepreneurship and Problems with Workforce Benefits. The themes were expanded based on participants' words and then discussed through a post-analysis literature review. Recommendations were made to government and non-government organizations advocating for a potential change in policies. Recommendations were also provided to healthcare providers and to U.S. American workers. Finally, recommendations were made for future research.
169

Fake News: Latinos, Representacion, Ciudadanizo y Trump

Thieme, Grace 01 January 2018 (has links)
This thesis uses in-depth analysis of historical Los Angeles Times articles to trace the changing representations of the Latino community in the media. Focusing on themes of patriotism and citizenship, this thesis draws out the subtleties of syntax and semantics that silently influence public opinion. The Zoot Suit Riots and the Chicano Moratorium serve as the main historical backdrop, leading to a concluding exploration of Donald Trump’s campaign rhetoric surrounding immigration and the Latino community.
170

Os sentidos da música Roma Antiga / The senses of music in Ancient Rome

Mendes, Michel 08 June 2010 (has links)
Orientador: Patricia Prata / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Estudos da Linguagem / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-16T18:28:03Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Mendes_Michel_M.pdf: 1980432 bytes, checksum: 7dae04659b4468d1ee392cb54bb5d947 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2010 / Resumo: O trabalho tem por objetivo apresentar algumas considerações acerca da música na Roma Antiga, a partir de excertos de obras de autores latinos dos séculos II a.C. a II d.C. (como Plauto, César, Cícero, Quintiliano, Sêneca, Vitrúvio, entre outros). Embora não tratem especificamente do tema, os textos selecionados deixam transparecer certas impressões dos romanos a respeito da música e podem ajudar a montar pelo menos parte do cotidiano musical dessa civilização. A partir dos excertos, discutimos o funcionamento e a utilização dos instrumentos musicais na guerra, na mitologia e nas práticas religiosas, bem como tecemos breves comentários sobre a tradução proposta modernamente para os nomes desses instrumentos. Por fim, analisamos a presença da música no teatro de Plauto, através do estudo de excertos das peças do autor que mostram os músicos em ação ou que expressam a opinião das personagens acerca deles e de breves apontamentos sobre questões referentes à musicalidade das falas das personagens / Abstract: This work presents some considerations about music in Ancient Rome, drawing upon excerpts of works by various Roman authors from the second century B.C. to the second century A.D. (such as Cicero, Quintilian, Julius Caesar, Seneca, Vitruvius, and Plautus, among others), who, although not always specifically treating music, reveal in their writing distinctive impressions about music held by Romans, and which, in turn, can help us in the attempt to reconstruct at least part of everyday musical practices of this civilization. From the excerpts, it is possible to identify the operational features of the musical instruments found in war, mythology and worship, and, consequently, to comment briefly on the modern translations put forward for designating these instruments. Lastly, we analyze the presence of music in the dramaturgy of Plautus, through excerpts from his plays which reveal musicians in action, or which express the characters' opinions about them, thereby revealing some interesting questions about musicality in the words of his characters / Mestrado / Linguistica / Mestre em Linguística

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