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IN PLAIN SIGHT: THE LGBT COMMUNITY IN THE KANSAS FLINT HILLSHaddock, Brandon January 1900 (has links)
Doctor of Philosophy / Department of Geography / Lisa M. Harrington / This research examines the intersections of sexuality and gender identity and how differing socio-cultural networks are important to how we can begin to address multiple issues affecting rural America. The overarching question of the research was: How do sexuality and gender identity minorities living in rural areas experience or perceive where they live and the community networks that they navigate? Subtopics included the factors that contribute to an LGBT individual living in the Flint Hills, whether individual sexual and gender identities and perception affect concepts of location and community, and how one’s sexuality or gender identity affects the lived experience in a rural region. A multi-disciplinary approach based on Geography and LGBT Studies, using interviews and surveys of distinctive rural populations in the Flint Hills of Kansas, was applied.
Five focus groups and 31 individual interviews yielded information about LGBT community concerns in the Flint Hills. A broader region was represented through an electronic survey which accessed a large population anonymously through a variety of social networking sites. The survey yielded 119 complete responses.
Discrimination was a concern and sense of community was important. Many individuals acknowledged that they had a system of navigation of rural environments: where to go, to whom to speak openly, how to blend in to the larger population. Despite fears that were expressed, there was a sense of resilience among participants related to living in a relatively rural region. A sense of queer community and an acknowledgement of a rural community were important. Community connections are a major factor contributing to the individual’s lived experience and perception of the Flint Hills. For most of the participants, identity as a rural LGBT person or as part of the (relatively) rural queer community is important. There is a strong affinity to what individuals view as rural, and they view rural as being different from urban landscapes and communities.
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In plain sight: the LGBT community in the Kansas Flint HillsHaddock, Brandon Harley January 1900 (has links)
Doctor of Philosophy / Department of Geography / Lisa M. Harrington / This research examines the intersections of sexuality and gender identity and how differing socio-cultural networks are important to how we can begin to address multiple issues affecting rural America. The overarching question of the research was: How do sexuality and gender identity minorities living in rural areas experience or perceive where they live and the community networks that they navigate? Subtopics included the factors that contribute to an LGBT individual living in the Flint Hills, whether individual sexual and gender identities and perception affect concepts of location and community, and how one’s sexuality or gender identity affects the lived experience in a rural region. A multi-disciplinary approach based on Geography and LGBT Studies, using interviews and surveys of distinctive rural populations in the Flint Hills of Kansas, was applied.
Five focus groups and 31 individual interviews yielded information about LGBT community concerns in the Flint Hills. A broader region was represented through an electronic survey which accessed a large population anonymously through a variety of social networking sites. The survey yielded 119 complete responses.
Discrimination was a concern and sense of community was important. Many individuals acknowledged that they had a system of navigation of rural environments: where to go, to whom to speak openly, how to blend in to the larger population. Despite fears that were expressed, there was a sense of resilience among participants related to living in a relatively rural region. A sense of queer community and an acknowledgement of a rural community were important. Community connections are a major factor contributing to the individual’s lived experience and perception of the Flint Hills. For most of the participants, identity as a rural LGBT person or as part of the (relatively) rural queer community is important. There is a strong affinity to what individuals view as rural, and they view rural as being different from urban landscapes and communities.
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The path to harmony: the roles of rural reforms in achieving social harmony in ChinaWong, Yee-wah., 黃綺華. January 2009 (has links)
published_or_final_version / China Development Studies / Master / Master of Arts in China Development Studies
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Doctor without borders : he's a physician who covers huge stretches of rural Texas -- and whose work provides key lessons about the fate and future of rural health care in AmericaGarcia-Ditta, Alexa Nicole 1986- 14 October 2014 (has links)
Dr. Jim Luecke, a rural family physician in Alpine, Texas, is one of six doctors responsible for thousands of patients across a sprawling 25,000 square foot remote region of the state. He is a community doctor that travels between three towns to treat patients with various illnesses, injuries and income levels. But his type of general medicine is a dying practice in Texas, especially in rural areas. Texas, with a primary care and family physician shortage likely to get worse over the next several years, faces continued obstacles in providing access to quality healthcare in some of its most isolated areas. Luecke, while he embodies some of the challenges that come with practicing rural medicine, is in some ways an exception to those challenges. / text
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Surplus appropriation and accumulation by rural households in India : A case study based on fieldwork in Uttar PradeshSrivastava, R. S. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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The importance of spatial representations in residential migration to rural England in the 1980s : a quest for 'sophisticated simplicity' in a postmodern worldHalfacree, Keith Harold January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
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From yankees to queÌbeÌcois : nation-building and national identity in Quebec's eastern townshipsCanning, John Gordon January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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Impacts of devaluation on urban rural interactions : a computable general equilibrium model for the Ethiopian economyGelana, Ayele January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
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Population mobility and the urbanisation of rural communities : a case study of the Glens of AntrimMcNaughton, Mary G. January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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Changing patterns of accessibility and mobility in sixteen parishes in east Kent, 1973-1982Hull, Andrew Peter January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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