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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.
41

Le tatouage comine mode d'expression individuelle dans la société occidentale

Joanisse, Benoît January 2009 (has links)
Abstract not available.
42

Beyond constraining and enabling : on how social structure orients action in organisations

Cardinale, Ivano January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
43

Chief inhabitants and their areas of influence : local ruling groups in Essex and Suffolk parishes, 1630-1720

French, Henry Richards January 1993 (has links)
Recent studies of the social structure of seventeenth and early eighteenth century English society have laid much emphasis upon the collective identity of a 'middle sort of people' existing as a definable group between the gentry and the poor. This view is apparently sa~ctioned by contemporary usage of the term by commentators describing trades, occupations and landholders of moderate prospenty, particularly during and after the civil war period. However, this thesis argues that no consistent connection has been established between this apparently contemporary terminology, and a well-defined set of occupational or income categories. In particular, the term 'middle sort' does not appear to have been employed in the area of northern Essex and southern Suffolk examined in this thesis. Instead, the social order is repeatedly categorised as being divided between 'chief inhabitants' and other 'inhabitants'. The thesis explores the implications of this alternative language by examining the social position and identities of the principal inhabitants of the area. Chapter One establishes that the area of northern Essex and southern Suffolk studied in the thesis functioned as a distinct economic entity, due to its participation in the production of woollen cloth. This also produced a distinctive social structure. The area was distinguished by the high levels of poverty and households dependent solely on the cloth trade. The middle ranks of these parishes were also swelled by the rewards from this trade, when compared to neighbouring agricultural parishes. Chapter Two establishes that within this economic region the status of the 'chief inhabitants' was restricted to the immediate hinterland extending five to ten miles around each town. In this area, in which, the majority of land holdings, business contacts and familial connections were maintained, the 'chief inhabitants' were the most important, socially influential residents. They possessed a status which was dependent upon the existence of such a truncated social milieu, in which they were not overshadowed by their actual social superiors among the gentry. Chapter Three examines how this ruling status was manifested in parish office holding. It shows that the group which termed itself 'chief inhabitants' represented a number of the highest officers in each parish. Such people often formed ruling cliques, through their control � of parish or borough forums, which acted as the institutional expression of their elite status in the locality. Chapter Four extends this analysis by looking at personal wealth as recorded in probate inventories. It shows that a scale existed, broadly corresponding to the hierarchy displayed in the possession of local office. The owners of the newer, status-carrying items of furniture or decoration tended to be among the wealthiest group of office holders. The thesis argues that this . most socially visible group of 'chief inhabitants' was expressing its aspirations to gentility through such ostentatious consumption.: This was a means of consolidating their social position, and extending their role as a local elite. The final chapter concentrates on this highest group. By examining a variety of individual cases, it shows how this drive for gentility marked a desire to extend the status as a 'chief inhabitant' within a truncated social scale. It was not the expression of patterns of stereotypical 'middle class' behaviour, as some studies have claimed, despite its similarity to the consumption and acquisition patterns of the later eighteenth century. This chapter shows how this gentility was combined with local standing and occup~tions to produce the hybrid 'gentlemen-tradesmen' so ridiculed by Defoe at this ' I time. This thesis finds little evidence for the existence of a widely-based ' middling' identity in the seventeenth century. Instead, it argues that a different social identity existed, in which this 'middle sort' actually saw itself as the social elite within heavily restricted social and geographical spheres. It argues that the recognition of this identity brings us closer to an understanding of the social perspectives and position of such groups in this period.
44

La problématique du développement rural intégré : le projet de Saint Michel-de-l'Attalaye (Haïti).

Bourgoignie, Marie-Noëlle. January 1990 (has links)
Abstract Not Available.
45

Le totalitarisme et le politique chez Hannah Arendt.

Moreault, Francis. January 1990 (has links)
Abstract Not Available.
46

Le développement à l'Île Maurice : la croissance économique et la classe ouvrière.

Juggoo, Barathlall. January 1994 (has links)
Abstract Not Available.
47

Absentéisme scolaire : une affaire de classes.

Gratton, Francine. January 1991 (has links)
Abstract Not Available.
48

Finding the back of the Net: Football and identities in the age of the Internet.

Kemp, Stuart Christopher. January 2001 (has links)
Given the increased use of the Internet in communications, entertainment and merchandizing, there are a number of issues that arise regarding how these functions impact the identities of those who use the medium. Although sport on the Internet is shown to be highly integrated with traditional media forms and consequently reflective of them, this research examines communications less contingent upon corporate influence and more impacted by characteristics of community. In addition to the influences of traditional media and modern commodified sport, the comparative case studies used by this examination present a number of other elements that impact the identities of those who affiliate themselves with professional sport online. Specifically, by doing a survey of the users of two e-mail discussion lists and having observed their message postings for a year, this study provides an understanding of how both 'local' and 'global' identities are sustained and/or formed online. The 'sportified' identities examined are shaped by the histories, activities and general character of Southampton F.C., and Manchester United F.C., which represent 'local' and 'global' identities respectively.
49

La participation communautaire et le discours sur le développement durable : l'étude de Revelstoke en Colombie-Britannique.

Graves, Sophie Dupuis January 1997 (has links)
L'environnement naturel fut avant les annees 1980, la victime des consequences du developpement economique qui n'a pas considere, ou tres peu, son impact ecologique. La relation alienante qu'entretient l'etre humain avec son environnement a occasionne sa domination sur la nature. L'integrite des espaces naturels sera maintenue seulement lorsque nous reussirons a etablir un equilibre entre les activites de developpement et leur viabilite environnementale. La notion de viabilite s'applique dans des conditions ou les capacites de chaque element social, environnemental et economique sont prises en consideration. Il nous faut imaginer de nouvelles facons de developper nos communautes et etablir des methodes telles la participation du public, la prise de decisions par consensus et l'integration des inquietudes environnementales aux questions de developpement, pour que la durabilite du developpement soit assuree. Nous ne pouvons plus mettre de cote l'environnement car il fait partie d'un plus grand ecosysteme qui joue un role fondamental pour le developpement. Pour examiner les methodes mises en place pour effectuer le developpement durable au Canada nous utiliserons le cas de Revelstoke en Colombie-Britannique, exemple d'un micro-projet de developpement durable. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
50

The maturity concept of student groups of middle-class American culture

Grau, Albert F January 1960 (has links)
Abstract not available.

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