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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.
341

[en] NOTHING IS GOING ON AND THEY COME AND TERRORIZE US: POLICE REPRESSION AND IDENTITY CONSTRUCTIONS PROTESTORS NARRATIVES FROM JUNE 2013 / [pt] NÃO TÁ ACONTECENDO NADA E ELES PASSAM PRA TOCAR UM TERROR: REPRESSÃO POLICIAL E CONSTRUÇÕES IDENTITÁRIAS EM NARRATIVAS DE MANIFESTANTES DE JUNHO DE 2013

ETYELLE PINHEIRO DE ARAUJO 03 February 2016 (has links)
[pt] Este trabalho objetiva investigar a relação entre as identidades que os manifestantes das Jornadas de Junho de 2013, no Rio de Janeiro, reivindicam para si e os episódios de violência policial ocorridos durante os protestos. Tais episódios se iniciaram após o aumento da tarifa de transporte. Com a intensa repressão da polícia, as manifestações ganharam expressiva adesão popular e houve uma diversificação das reivindicações. Compreendemos essas manifestações como parte dos movimentos que se espalharam pelo mundo a partir de 2011, tendo a crise da representatividade como importante motivação para a indignação (Castells, 2013). Este estudo se alinha à Análise de Narrativa (Bastos 2005; Bastos e Biar, 2015) e à metodologia qualitativa interpretativista de pesquisa (Denzin e Lincoln, 2000), com uma dimensão autoetnográfica (Reed-Danahay, 2001). Os dados foram gerados com entrevistas em profundidade com dois manifestantes presentes nas principais atividades de ocupação do espaço público no período. Partindo do modelo laboviano, identificamos as narrativas e os elementos que os manifestantes tornam relevantes nas avaliações que fazem sobre personagens e ações narradas. Concebendo a narrativa como forma de organização da experiência (Bruner, 1973), a análise foi orientada pela visão socioconstrucionista do discurso e das identidades (Moita Lopes, 2003). Na análise, percebemos que os manifestantes constroem suas identidades partindo do sentido que atribuem à violência policial em suas narrativas. Nesse processo, reivindicam identidades que os projetam numa luz favorável. Concebemos essa violência como choque moral (Jasper, 1997) que produziu indignação para além do aumento da tarifa e levou mais indivíduos, inclusive os nossos entrevistados, a participar das manifestações em junho de 2013. / [en] This study aims to investigate the relationship between the identities of the protesters of the Jornadas de Junho in Rio de Janeiro claim for themselves and episodes of police violence that occurred during the protests. Such episodes began after the increase of the transport levy. With the intense repression of the police, the protests have gained significant popular support and the claims became diversified. We understand these protests as part of the movements that have spread across the world since 2011, taking the crisis of representation as an important motivation to indignation (Castells, 2013) This study aligns itself with the Narrative Analysis (Bastos 2005; Bastos and Biar 2015) and interpretative qualitative research methodology (Denzin and Lincoln, 2000), with a autoethnography dimension (Reed-Danahay, 2001). The data were generated from in-depth interviews with two protesters present in the occupation of public spaces in the period. Starting from the labovian model we identified the narratives and the elements that protesters made relevant in their assessments about characters and narrated actions. Conceiving the narrative as a way of organizing the experience (Bruner, 1973), the analysis was guided by social constructionist view of discourse and identities (Moita Lopes, 2003). In the analysis, we noticed that protesters construct their identities starting from the meaning attached by then to the police violence in the narratives. In the process, claim identities that show then in a favorable light. We conceive this violence as moral shock (Jasper, 1997) which produced outrage beyond the tariff increase and took more individuals, including our respondents to participate in the protests of June.
342

A Rhetorical Analysis of Two Anti-Civil War Speeches of Clement Laird Vallandingham

Gilsdorf, William O. January 1960 (has links)
No description available.
343

A Rhetorical Analysis of Two Anti-Civil War Speeches of Clement Laird Vallandingham

Gilsdorf, William O. January 1960 (has links)
No description available.
344

The Good and the Bad Sides of the Protest: Framing Abortion Rights Protests in Photojournalism

Díaz González Vázquez, Greta 07 1900 (has links)
In both Mexico and the U.S., abortion rights protests have been taking place in recent years, but while Mexico is moving forward with the legalization of abortion, the U.S. is going in the opposite direction with the overturning of Roe v. Wade. Through framing, journalists select salient information, shaping audiences' understandings of social movements. The protest paradigm suggests that due to journalistic norms and routines, journalists tend to focus on disruptive acts, which can stigmatize the protest. Additionally, scholars have stated that men and women photojournalists have different approaches to covering certain topics. This cross-national research combined a content analysis of photographs in U.S. and Mexican media with in-depth interviews with photojournalists to determine if photojournalists in each country are reproducing the protest paradigm and if there are gendered differences in how they photograph abortion rights protests. The results revealed that women and men photograph differently, with women capturing more intimate photos; however, photojournalists' gendered experiences are also influenced by how protesters perceive them. Furthermore, the study suggests that photojournalists from both countries are questioning objectivity and are attempting to move away from the protest paradigm. This research provides valuable insights into visual framing theory, protest news coverage, and gendered norms in photojournalism.
345

An Analysis of the Constitutionality of the "Combating Violence, Disorder and Looting and Law Enforcement Protection Act of Florida"

Brown, Paul Wesley 01 January 2021 (has links)
This thesis will examine the Combating Violence, Disorder and Looting and Law Enforcement Protection Act of Florida's discriminatory nature, vague provisions, and constitutional violations under the First and Fourteenth Amendments. In carrying out this examination, this thesis will analyze case law, law reviews, bill analysis as provided by the Florida legislature, and similar legislation that has been proposed both by other states as well as on the federal level.
346

Praxis, Student Protest, and Purposive Social Action: The Humanist Marxist Critique of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia, 1964-1975

Zabic, Sarah D. 21 July 2010 (has links)
No description available.
347

Framing Protest: News Coverage of the Tea Party and Occupy Wall Street Movements

Zinser, William J., Jr. 23 October 2014 (has links)
No description available.
348

Witnessing Violence, (Re)Living Trauma: Online Performance Interventions in theDigital Age

Altomonte, Jenna A. 12 June 2017 (has links)
No description available.
349

Stratied modernity, protest, and democracy in cross-national perspective

Kolczynska, Marta Joanna January 2017 (has links)
No description available.
350

Dammed and the Damned: Draining the Bucket Dry

Steiger, Carla 14 July 2010 (has links)
No description available.

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