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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.
221

Identidade étnico-racial e universidade : a dinâmica da visibilidade da temática afrodescendente e as implicações eurodescendentes, em três instituições de ensino superior no sul do país

Pinheiro, Adevanir Aparecida 14 September 2011 (has links)
Submitted by Mariana Dornelles Vargas (marianadv) on 2015-03-18T18:12:45Z No. of bitstreams: 1 identidade_etnico.pdf: 4196495 bytes, checksum: 0248ef21e29eedeee3c9bdc1a1c63368 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2015-03-18T18:12:45Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 identidade_etnico.pdf: 4196495 bytes, checksum: 0248ef21e29eedeee3c9bdc1a1c63368 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2011-09-14 / Nenhuma / A tese busca averiguar a visibilidade da Educação das Relações Étnico-Raciais na implantação da legislação concernente, em universidades de caráter comunitário no sul do Brasil, sendo uma do Vale do Rio Ivaí, no Paraná, uma do Vale do Rio Itajaí, em Santa Catarina e uma do Vale do Rio dos Sinos, no Rio Grande do Sul. Na pesquisa realizada, mediante análise de documentos oficiais, de atividades acadêmicas e de falas de entrevistados, nas três instituições, ao mesmo tempo em que se constataram alguns importantes indícios da visibilidade da temática e da inclusão dos afrodescendentes, deparou-se também com a real realidade da relação entre brancos e negros, em cada um dos três contextos, expressa em resistências à inclusão desta temática e de seus sujeitos, que se misturam com os avanços havidos. Estas resistências são disseminadas e focadas, com maior ou menor intensidade, e dizem respeito a cada contexto. Trabalhando questões relativas à exclusão/inclusão, à identidade, à visibilidade/invisibilidade, ao controle por reações e olhares, e às oportunidades, o estudo ajuda a constatar (ou desvendar): 1) dificuldades muito específicas vividas pela população afrodescendente, sobretudo, envolvendo processos sutis que excluem ou retardam a participação desta população nas decisões sociais, educacionais, inclusive nas decisões concernentes à sua própria identidade; 2) a percepção repetida de que afrodescendentes organizam trabalhos, criam possibilidades e condições, apresentam metodologias e projetos, mas, no final, a branquitude ou a branquidade acaba se apoderando e assumindo o protagonismo, com ou sem a participação desses; 3) o papel importante exercido pelas pastorais da Igreja Católica, nos três contextos, com destaque também ao forte papel exercido pelo diálogo inter-religioso em uma das instituições. A pesquisa, também, ajuda a verificar 1) a existência de processos históricos muito diferentes, comparando os três contextos, do movimento negro e, consequentemente, das relações étnico-raciais, assim como sua repercussão na maior ou menor sintonia das instituições pesquisadas com a temática em pauta; 2) a existência diferenciada de dinâmicas institucionais internas a cada uma das instituições, considerando a sua história institucional e as decisões oficiais recentes no que concerne às iniciativas em prol da institucionalização da Educação das Relações Étnico- Raciais. A constatação geral é de que existe um bom início de esforço pela inclusão e emancipação, mas há muito a fazer, pois prevalecem resistências e silêncios que às vezes se expressam em reações carregadas de sutileza e frieza. O estudo tem como referência na sua construção teórica aportes de Kwame Anthony Appiah, Florestan Fernandes, Alberto Melucci, Vron Ware, Maria Aparecida Bento, Kabenguele Munanga, Paulo Freire, Petronilha Beatriz Gonçalves da Silva e Silva, Nilma Lino Gomes, Frantz Fanon e outros. Dele resulta, de forma renovada, a partir das três instituições e seus contextos, a convicção de que a inclusão dos afrodescendentes é uma questão de ética e moral no que diz respeito a direitos sociais e de identidade étnico-racial, frente a uma dívida histórica da sociedade brasileira, quese deixou embalar em seu berço esplêndido de branquidade. / This dissertation seeks to determine the visibility of the Education of Racial-Ethnic Relations in the implementation of the concerning legislation in southern Brazil community colleges, being one from Vale do Rio Ivaí, in the State of Paraná, another from Vale do Rio Itajaí, in the State of Santa Catarina, and another one from Vale do Rio dos Sinos, in the State of Rio Grande do Sul. In the research conducted by analysis of official documents, academic activities and interviewees speeches in the three institutions, while some important clues of visibility of the issue and of the inclusion of African descent people were found, one faces also the real reality of the relationship between blacks and whites in each of the three contexts, expressed as resistance to the inclusion of this subject and its subject, mixed with advances that has taken place. These resistances are widespread and focused, with more or less intensity, are related to each context. Taking into consideration subjects related to exclusion/inclusion, identity, visibility/invisibility, control by reactions and perceptions, and the opportunities, this paper helps to find or unveil 1) very specific difficulties experienced by people of African descent, especially involving subtle processes that exclude or hinder the participation of these people in social, educational decisions, including in the ones concerning their own identity; 2) the repeated perception that African descent people organize work, create opportunities and conditions, provide methodologies and projects, but in the end the whiteness end up taking hold and taking the leading role, with or without their participation; 3) the important role played by the Catholic Churchs pastoral organizations, in the three contexts, highlighting also the strong role played by inter-religious dialog institutions. The research also helps determine 1) the existence of very different historical processes, comparing the three contexts, of the black movement and, consequently, of ethnic-racial relations, as well as its impact with more or less consistency of the institutions researched in the issue in question, 2) the differentiated existence of internal institutional dynamics to each college, considering its institutional history and its official recent decisions regarding the initiatives for the institutionalization of the Education of Racial-Ethnic Relations. The general finding is that there is a good start to struggle for inclusion and empowerment, but there is much to do, because it is prevailing resistance and silences that sometimes manifest themselves in reactions loaded with finesse and coolness. The study is referred in its theoretical construction inputs by Kwame Anthony Appiah, Florestan Fernandes, Alberto Melucci, Vron Ware, Maria Aparecida Bento, Kabenguele Munanga, Paulo Freire, Petronilha Beatriz Gonçalves da Silva e Silva, Nilma Lino Gomes, Frantz Fanon and others. It results, from the three institutions and their contexts, the belief that the inclusion of African descent people is a matter of ethics and morality with regard to social rights and ethno-racial identity, compared to a historical debt of the Brazilian society, which left his pack in splendid cradle of whiteness.
222

White college students' cross-racial involvement in multicultural organizations and the shaping of white consciousness

Shingle, Michael E. 04 April 2012 (has links)
This qualitative study explored the experiences of self-identified White students currently enrolled at a predominantly White institution who were cross- racially involved for at least ten weeks in a multicultural association, club, or organization that had students of color as the racial majority. This study also examined students' consciousness of Whiteness and the development of students' White identities based on their cross-racial experiences. Utilizing a sample of 4 students in concert with a review of relevant literature, the principal findings of this research are that cross-racially involved students have heightened awareness of difference based on race, including their own White racial identity. Although racial tension exists between individuals' White identities and the collective organization’s multicultural identity, White students who were more deeply involved in multicultural organizations indicated that they (a) had a higher sense of belonging with their peers of color, (b) became more conscious of their Whiteness both inside and outside of their multicultural organizations to a certain degree, and (c) desired to more completely understand their ethnic heritage. Findings from this study can contribute towards literature on the development of racial justice allies in college. In order to influence racial justice ally development at a predominantly White institution, findings from this research suggest that student affairs administrators should encourage White students to engage in multicultural organizations so they can understand how their Whiteness "shows up" for others including the impact of privilege and oppression in a multicultural society. / Graduation date: 2012
223

"Our Generation Had Nothing to Do with Discrimination": White Southern Memory of Jim Crow and Civil Rights

Lavelle, Kristen Marie 2011 May 1900 (has links)
The ways in which white Americans understand the racial landscape and their own racial identities are not well understood. Through the lens of the racial past, in this study I investigate how memory operates within the white racial frame, the dominant white-centric worldview, to uphold systemic racism and to maintain whites’ collective and individual identities. Through a narrative analysis of original in-depth interviews conducted with 44 ordinary white southerners – lifetime residents of Greensboro, North Carolina – who lived through the legal segregation and civil rights eras, this research demonstrates the interviewees’ contemporary investment in positive notions of the white self and white society. The respondents' autobiographical narratives of life during legal segregation, a time of overt white supremacy, are typified by nostalgia for a childhood era of safety, security, and "good" race relations. Interviewees' narratives of the civil rights era, including nonviolent student sit-in protests for which Greensboro is known and school desegregation, have themes of disruption, danger, and white victimization. Overall, respondents portray Jim Crow segregation as a calm and peaceful time and the civil rights era as chaotic and harmful to whites, at the same time as they acknowledge, to a limited extent, the unfairness of Jim Crow's blatant racial inequalities. In this work I propose the concepts white victimology, white protectionism, and white moral identity. I argue that white victimology – whites' perception, largely imagined, of their own racial victimization – is a major ideological and emotional facet of the white racial frame, whereby whites dismiss the historical and contemporary reality of white racism. My analysis demonstrates that white victimology is a primary way in which whites assert themselves, individually and collectively, as racial innocents and "good" people. In this work I also conceptualize the dynamic of white protectionism, explanatory and rhetorical ways in which whites "rescue" white acquaintances and family members from potential accusations of racism. Ultimately, I argue that whites' investment in perpetuating white dominance and upholding the white racial frame occurs through white moral identity-making, myriad active and subtle ways that whites continue to construct themselves positively and construct people of color, especially black Americans, negatively.
224

Entre a serra e o mar: memória, cultura, tradição e ancestralidade no ensinar-aprender entre as gerações do Quilombo da Fazenda - Ubatuba/SP / Among the mountain range and the sea:memory, culture, tradition and ancestrality in teaching-learning among generations of Quilombo da Fazenda Ubatuba-SP

Carolina dos Santos Bezerra Perez 17 March 2014 (has links)
A presente pesquisa teve como objetivo realizar uma descrição densa (GEERTZ, 2008) partindo das narrativas e memórias da comunidade quilombola do Sertão da Fazenda da Caixa, situada na cidade de Ubatuba, Litoral Norte do Estado de São Paulo, sobre o seu passado, futuro e presente, compreendendo o seu patrimônio material e imaterial, suas referências culturais e a influência do seu universo sociocultural e simbólico em sua prática educativa. A pesquisa, de cunho etnográfico, buscou compreender, por meio do estudo, pesquisa e análise da memória, das narrativas, dos mitos e da resistência quilombolas, as estratégias de sobrevivência material e simbólica criadas por essa comunidade na construção de seu imaginário, que estrutura: seu sentido de etnicidade, como também o desenvolvimento da relação do ensinar e do aprender entre as diferentes gerações; sua relação com a construção de uma identidade quilombola; e o papel das gerações mais velhas na iniciação das gerações mais novas na cultura do grupo, compreendendo o sentido da educação na comunidade e a relação que a mesma estabelece e estabeleceu com a instituição escolar. Evidenciou, ainda, os diversos tipos de racismos sofridos por essas populações, bem como a dessimetria existente entre a cultura oral e a escrita, que termina por impossibilitar uma gestão compartilhada do território e a utilização dos seus recursos naturais. Os resultados podem subsidiar três importantes eixos de ações de políticas públicas: a) auxiliar na efetiva implantação das leis 10.639/03 e 11.645/06, tanto na formação de professores como na reformulação do currículo escolar, que passa a ser revisto para incluir a temática da História e Cultura Afro-brasileira, Africana e Indígena em todas as escolas públicas e particulares do país; b) subsidiar o reconhecimento do patrimônio material e imaterial das comunidades quilombolas/caiçaras, dando visibilidade à sua cultura, às formas de transmissão da educação, do conhecimento e da memória comunitária, que lhes permitem identificar-se como quilombolas; c) balizar o trabalho de pesquisa sobre a temática identitária dos grupos quilombolas, com implicações no campo jurídico, na questão da demarcação de terras. / This research aimed to perform a thick description (Geertz, 2008) based on the stories and memories of quilombola community of Sertão da Fazenda da Caixa, in Ubatuba city, northern coast of São Paulo, featuring its past, future and present, including its tangible and intangible heritage, its cultural references and the influence of its sociocultural and symbolic universe in its educational practice. The research, which has an ethnographic approach, tried to understand through specific studies, research and analysis of narratives memory, myths and quilombola resistance, material and symbolic survival strategies created by this community to build its imagination, which comprises: its sense of ethnicity, as well the development of the relationship of teaching and learning between different generations; its relationship to the construction of a quilombola identity and the role of older generations in the initiation of the younger ones in group\'s culture, including the education meaning in the community and the relationship that it establishes and established with the school institution. This paper also emphasized the various types of racism suffered by the mentioned populations as well the existing unsymmetrical relationship between oral culture and the written one, which precludes a shared land management and the use of its natural resources. The obtained results can support three important axes of public policy actions: a) to help the effective implementation of 10.639 / 03 and 11.645 / 06 laws, both to improve teacher training and the overhaul of the school curriculum, which is on revision to include the History and Afro-Brazilian Culture, African and Indigenous themes in all public and private schools in the country; b) to support the recognition of the tangible and intangible heritage of quilombola comunity, giving visibility to its culture, forms of education transmission, knowledge and community memory that allow them to identify themselves as quilombolas; c) to guide the research efforts on the theme of quilombola groups identity, with implications for the legal area, on the land demarcation issue.
225

Art Power : tactiques artistiques et politiques de l’identité en Californie (1966-1990) / Art Power : Artistic and political tactics of the identity in California (1966-1990)

Blanc, Emilie 15 November 2017 (has links)
En 1966, le Black Power Movement, qui influence de nombreux mouvements sociaux de libération, signale un changement de paradigme dans l’activisme aux États-Unis désigné par la terminologie de « politiques de l’identité ». Si, en affirmant la nécessité d’une analyse politique des discriminations, celles-ci en appellent à de profonds changements dans la société, elles imprègnent aussi les arts visuels et génèrent des mutations importantes quant à la définition de l’art et au rôle de l’artiste aux États-Unis. En s’emparant des politiques de l’identité, les artistes incorporent leurs engagements dans leurs pratiques, créent des formes d’expression originales et remettent en cause la validité du canon. Par une étude de cas sur la Californie entre 1966 et 1990, combinée à une approche chronologique et comparative, ce travail de recherche explore les rencontres entre les arts visuels et les politiques de l’identité, et plus largement la relation entre art et politique dans un contexte culturel moins exploré que la scène artistique de New York, afin d’analyser en quoi elles s’avèrent essentielles pour saisir les pratiques artistiques postérieures et les discours sur les identités. Cette thèse en histoire de l’art, pour laquelle les études culturelles et les théories féministes ont constitué des apports fondamentaux, propose ainsi d’établir des convergences artistiques autour de thématiques liées à des problématiques centrales des politiques de l’identité et, dans le même temps, à souligner de nouvelles approches dans le domaine de l’art, de la politique et de la théorie / In 1966, the Black Power Movement, which influenced numerous other social liberation movements, signaled a paradigm shift in American activism designated by the term “identity politics.” By affirming the necessity for a political analysis of discrimination, identity politics called for profound changes in society, which also influenced the visual arts, resulting in important changes regarding the definition of art and the role of the artist in American society. By drawing on this new politics of identity, these artists incorporated activism into practice, creating original forms of expression and challenging the validity of the canon. This research project explores the encounters between visual arts and identity politics, as well as the broader relationship between art and politics, through a chronological and comparative case study of California from 1966 to 1990—a cultural context much less studied than the New York scene—in order to determine its importance for later artistic practices and discourses on identity. This thesis in Art History, to which cultural studies and feminism have made fundamental contributions, therefore proposes to establish artistic convergences around themes linked to the central premises of identity politics while at the same time highlighting new approaches in the fields of art, politics and theory
226

The relationship of racial identity, psychological adjustment, and social capital, and their effects on academic outcomes of Taiwanese aboriginal five-year junior college students.

Lin, Chia Hsun 05 1900 (has links)
The study was conducted during November and December 2006, and the participants were Taiwanese aboriginal students at five-year junior colleges in Taiwan. Five hundred students from twenty junior colleges were recruited, and completed data for 226 students were analyzed. The data were collected by scoring the responses on six instruments which measured Taiwanese aboriginal junior college students' potential social capital, racial identity development, academic outcome (expected grade) and their psychological adjustment (stress, social support, self-esteem, and academic engagement). The instruments were designed to gather information on the following: (a) potential social capital scale; (b) multigroup ethnic identity measure; (c) racial identity attitude scale; (d) perceived stress scales; (e) self-esteem scale; (f) social support scale; (g) academic engagement scale; (h) academic outcome (expected grade). This quantitative design used SPSS 12 to analyze the data. Independent t-tests, Pearson correlation coefficient, regression model, ANOVA, ANCOVA were applied in the study. Results from this study indicate racial identity affects academic outcome with the covariate of psychological adjustment. This finding contradicts previous research that racial identity cannot affect students' psychological adjustment and academic achievement in higher education. For social capital, the study provides encouraging evidence that social capital is directly, significantly correlated with academic outcomes and that students with broader social networks develop better academic outcomes. Further, when students encounter challenges and conflicts, the broader social network assets are covariates with the positive psychological adjustment to lead to the greater academic outcomes. For racial identity, a higher perception of racial identity does not directly affect academic outcome in this research. This conforms to previous research that racial identity does not have much influence on Taiwanese aboriginal college students to fit in the Han dominant academic environment.
227

Do Racially Literate Faculty (even) Exist?: A Narrative Study among White Faculty Members at a Predominately White Institution

Jones, Shannon Nicole 13 October 2021 (has links)
No description available.
228

High Achieving Black Students’ Mathematics Identities in the High School to CollegeTransition in STEM

Ayisi, Elizabeth O. 23 May 2022 (has links)
No description available.
229

At What Cost: The Patterns of Persistence of First-Generation, Urban, Black Female, College Students

Walker, Kenyona N. 01 October 2020 (has links)
No description available.
230

Cross-Race Relationships as Sites of Transformation: Navigating the Protective Shell and the Insular Bubble

Geiger, Karen Audrey 15 November 2010 (has links)
No description available.

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