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Sustainability, Empowerment, and Resident Attitudes toward Tourism: Developing and Testing the Resident Empowerment through Tourism Scale (RETS)Boley, Bertram Bynum 17 September 2013 (has links)
Research on resident attitudes towards tourism and sustainability are two of the most ubiquitous and important topics within tourism research. This study sought to contribute to these fields of research in four specific ways. First, this study suggested Weber's theory of formal and substantive rationality as a theory capable of explaining the complexity inherent in resident attitudes toward tourism because of its incorporation of the economic and non-economic factors influencing rationality. The inclusion of Weber as a theoretical framework is also presented as a theory useful for bringing Social Exchange Theory (SET) back to its original focus on 'all' the costs and benefits associated within the host/guest relationship.
The second and third contributions of the study stem from taking the previously conceptual constructs of psychological, social, and political empowerment and developing them into reliable and valid measurement scales. After validation, the three sub-scales were tested in a Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA), which demonstrated them to be construct valid based upon tests of convergent, discriminant, and nomological validity. These scales were subsequently included as antecedents to residents' perceptions of tourism's impacts, as well as their overall support for tourism in a Structural Equation Model (SEM) analysis. The SEM analysis found all three dimensions of empowerment to have significant relationships with perceptions of tourism's positive and negative impacts with the construct of psychological empowerment being the only empowerment dimension to have a direct and significant relationship with 'support for tourism'.
Lastly, the study expanded these areas of research through conducting the study across three counties with varying emphasis placed on sustainable tourism. Floyd, Botetourt, and Franklin County, Virginia were selected for sampling based upon their homogeneity in regards to tourism product, per capita tourism expenditures and economic condition and their heterogeneity in regards to emphasis on sustainable tourism. Nine hundred surveys were distributed across the three counties with 703 ultimately used in the analysis. The results partially confirmed the hypothesis that resident attitudes toward tourism differ by a county's emphasis on sustainable tourism. Future research needs to further investigate sustainable tourism's influence on residents' attitudes toward tourism. / Ph. D.
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Ambivalent Modernity: Scientists in Film and the Public EyeEvans, Stacy 01 September 2010 (has links)
Scientists are widely regarded as high status individuals, who are smarter than the vast majority of the population. Science holds a very high status as a discipline, both within and outside of academe. This notwithstanding, popular stereotypes of scientists are often highly negative, with the image of the socially inept or even mad scientist being commonplace. This apparent contradiction is worth exploring. Additionally, we see the label scientific being used to justify pseudoscience and other results that are flatly contradicted by the bulk of scientific research (e.g., links between vaccines and autism). This is not due, as some argue, only or even primarily to a lack of understanding of science. Ultimately, there are two "sciences": science defined by the scientific methodology of the scientists, and the broader cultural use of science as a truthteller without real use of scientific methodology. This dichotomy is wrapped up in both the nature of modernity and the idea of post-modernity. This research uses a content analysis of film to examine the nature of stereotypical portrayals of scientists, and a factor analysis of NSF survey data to investigate the complex attitudes towards science and scientists.
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The Impact of Media on Attitudes toward Women and Sexual Attitudes in Emerging AdultsPatrick, Melissa 01 December 2013 (has links)
The purpose of this research was to explore the relationship between exposure to media variables and emerging adults' attitudes toward women and sex. Previous research indicated that exposure to media variables can influence the thoughts, behaviors, and attitudes of those exposed. The current study examined how age at exposure to media variables impacted attitudes about sex and attitudes toward women. Six-hundred and ninety four college students were given a questionnaire containing an attitudes toward women scale, a sexual attitudes scale, and a media viewing questionnaire. ANOVAS and linear regressions were performed on the data and results for the study were significant. Results indicated that age of media exposure impacted sexual attitudes and attitudes toward women.
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Effect of Injecting Drug Users' HIV Status on Treatment Providers' Acceptance of Harm Reduction InterventionsBonar, Erin E. 26 June 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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Exploring Attitudes toward People Who Stutter: A Mixed Model ApproachHughes, Stephanie 09 July 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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The Conceptual Adequacy of the Drug Attitude Inventory For Measuring Youth Attitudes Toward Psychotropic Medications: A Mixed Methods EvaluationTownsend, Lisa Dawn 22 July 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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THE IMPACT OF AN ATTITUDE TOWARD MATHEMATICS ON MATHEMATICS PERFORMANCESchenkel, Benjamin D. 08 May 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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Linking Lives: Improving Intergenerational Relations Through Service-LearningGibbons, Hailee M. 03 November 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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An Exploration of Behavioral Health Workers’ Attitudes Toward Treating People Without HomesSpieth, Russell E. 10 September 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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Normative Beliefs, Financial Strains, and IPV in Young AdulthoodCopp, Jennifer E. 07 October 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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