Results for ' Working class families'

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  1.  27
    Observations of a Working Class Family: Implications for Self-Regulated Learning Development.Stephen Vassallo - 2012 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 48 (6):501-529.
    Guardians have been implicated in the development of children's academic self-regulation. In this case study, which involved naturalistic observations and interviews, the everyday practices of a working class family were considered in the context of self-regulated learning development. The family's practices, beliefs, dispositions and home structures were not aligned with conditions recognized as supporting self-regulated learning development. It is suggested that for the family to adapt or adjust home practices in a way that supports their children's self-regulation means (...)
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  2.  11
    Forming “friendships” with working-class families: social workers and care in the interwar period in France, between vocation and training.Lola Zappi - 2019 - Clio 49:93-113.
    L’objet de cet article est de se demander comment les assistantes sociales de l’entre-deux-guerres envisagent les enjeux de la relation de care qui les lie aux usagers des services sociaux. Les assistantes ont en effet un rôle double : prendre soin des familles populaires mais aussi les surveiller et les contrôler. Comment concilient-elles ces impératifs paradoxaux en cherchant la « bonne distance » avec leur public? Pour répondre à cette question, nous nous tournons vers les archives de la formation professionnelle. (...)
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  3.  13
    "Family Support for Individual Effort": The Experience of Schooling in Mexican WorkingClass Families.Claudia Lucy Saucedo Ramos - 2003 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 31 (2):307-327.
  4.  12
    Fertility and Deprivation: A Study of Differential Fertility amongst Working Class Families in Aberdeen. by Askham Janet. (Cambridge University Press, 1975.) Price £4.90. [REVIEW]Helen Roberts - 1976 - Journal of Biosocial Science 8 (4):371-372.
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  5.  16
    Working-Class Job Loss, Gender, and the Negotiation of Household Labor.Marie Cornwall & Elizabeth Miklya Legerski - 2010 - Gender and Society 24 (4):447-474.
    Scholars see the gendered division of household labor as a stronghold of gender inequality. We explore changes in household labor and gender relations when conservative, working-class families experience employment disruptions. Using data from 49 qualitative interviews conducted with men and women following the forced unemployment of breadwinning husbands, we observe some change in gendered household labor but conclude that a significant degendering of housework is thwarted by institutional-, interactive-, and individual-level processes. At the institutional level, the lack (...)
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  6.  10
    Gender, class, family, and migration: Puerto Rican women in chicago.Maura I. Toro-Morn - 1995 - Gender and Society 9 (6):712-726.
    Using in-depth interviews with women in the Puerto Rican community of Chicago, this article explores how migration emerged as a strategy for families across class backgrounds and how gender relations within the family mediate the migration of married working-class and middle-class Puerto Rican women. The women who followed their husbands to Chicago participated in another form of labor migration, since some wives joined their husbands in the paid economy and those who did not contributed with (...)
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  7. Media and Middle Class Moms: Images and Realities of Work and Family.[author unknown] - 2009
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  8.  29
    Connectivity and Patriarchy among Urban WorkingClass Arab Families in Lebanon.Suad Joseph - 1993 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 21 (4):452-484.
  9.  27
    Working-Class Women and Republicanism in the French Revolution of 1848.Judith DeGroat - 2012 - History of European Ideas 38 (3):399-407.
    Following the February Revolution in 1848, working-class women as well as men attempted to hold the government to its promise of the right to work, through street demonstrations, individual and collective demands for work, and participation in the national workshops that had been established in an attempt to address the problem of unemployment in the capital. In the process, these activists articulated what scholars have labelled as a democratic socialist vision of republicanism. In June of 1848, women participated (...)
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  10.  47
    Beyond the Family Economy: Black and White Working-Class Women during the Great Depression.Lois Rita Helmbold - 1987 - Feminist Studies 13 (3):629.
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  11.  3
    Working Class Women, Gambling and the Dream of Happiness.Emma Casey - 2008 - Feminist Review 89 (1):122-137.
    This paper offers an account of the relationship between gender, class and notions of happiness. It draws on recent research conducted into the experiences of working class women who play the UK National Lottery. In particular, it explores the notion that gambling offers working class women the opportunity to dream of the ‘good life’ – of enhancing their lives and of making ‘improvements’ to their own and their families’ well-being. In this paper, the discourse (...)
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  12.  47
    Beyond Public Spaces and Private Spheres: Gender, Family, and Working-Class Politics in India.Leela Fernandes - 1997 - Feminist Studies 23 (3):525.
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  13.  18
    Beyond the Double Day: Work and Family in Working-Class Women's Lives. [REVIEW]Sandra Morgen - 1990 - Feminist Studies 16 (1):53.
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  14.  3
    Book Review: Media and Middle Class Moms: Images and Realities of Work and Family. [REVIEW]Jean-Anne Sutherland - 2011 - Gender and Society 25 (5):669-671.
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  15.  5
    Book Review: The Changing Landscape of Work and Family in the American Middle Class. Edited by Elizabeth Rudd and Lara Descartes. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2008, 330 pp., $38.95. [REVIEW]Susan Cody-Rydzewski - 2010 - Gender and Society 24 (2):267-269.
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  16.  12
    Resisting Despair: Narratives of Disruption and Transformation Among White Working-Class Women in a Declining Coal-Mining Community.Jennifer M. Silva & Kait Smeraldo Schell - 2020 - Gender and Society 34 (5):736-759.
    In this article, we examine how white working-class women reimagine gender in the face of social and economic changes that have undermined their ability to perform normative femininity. As blue-collar jobs have disappeared, scholars have posited that white working-class men and women have become increasingly isolated, disconnected from institutions, and hopeless about the future, leading to a culture of despair. Although past literature has examined how working-class white men cope with the inability to perform (...)
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  17. For the Family?: How Class and Gender Shape Women’s Work.[author unknown] - 2011
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  18. Reshaping the Work–Family Debate: Why Men and Class Matter.[author unknown] - 2010
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  19.  11
    The Way Class Works: Readings on School, Family, and the Economy.Lois Weis (ed.) - 2007 - Routledge.
    Since the 1980s, the relationship between social class and education has been overshadowed by scholarship more generally targeting issues of race, gender, and representation. Today, with the global economy deeply immersed in social inequalities, there is pressing need for serious class-based analyses of schooling, family life and social structure. The Way Class Works is a collection of twenty-four groundbreaking essays on the material conditions of social class and the ways in which class is produced "on (...)
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  20. Chapter outline.A. Personal, Corporate Indispensability, B. Personal, Corporate Infallibility, A. God—Humanism, C. Family—Career, D. Work—Leisure, E. Interdependence—Independence, I. Thrift—Debt & J. Absolute—Relative - forthcoming - Moral Management: Business Ethics.
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  21.  30
    Gender, Work-Family Responsibilities, and Sleep.Anthony R. Bardo, Rachel A. Sebastian & David J. Maume - 2010 - Gender and Society 24 (6):746-768.
    This study adds to a small but growing literature that situates sleep within gendered work— family responsibilities. We conducted interviews with 25 heterosexual dual-earner working-class couples with children, most of whom had one partner who worked at night. A few men suffered disrupted sleep because of their commitment to being a coparent to their children, but for most their provider status gave them rights to longer and more continuous sleep. By contrast, as they were the primary caregiver during (...)
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  22.  7
    Book Review: Reshaping the Work–Family Debate: Why Men and Class Matter. [REVIEW]Marjukka Ollilainen - 2012 - Gender and Society 26 (3):519-520.
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  23.  6
    Work-family policies:: Corporate, union, feminist, and pro-family leaders' views.Richard Tate, Karolyn Godbey, Myrna Courage, Sandra Seymour & Patricia Yancey Martin - 1988 - Gender and Society 2 (3):385-400.
    American leaders in four realms were studied to assess their views on the helpfulness to workers with family obligations of employers' policies and services. The realms were corporate management, labor unions, the pro-family movement, and the feminist movement. The data were analyzed by leadership realm and gender in relation to policies of two types: scheduling and work arrangements and services and benefits. Gender accounted for the respondents' views better than class or social movement did. Except for feminist men, the (...)
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  24.  3
    Book Review: For the Family?: How Class and Gender Shape Women’s Work by Sarah Damaske. [REVIEW]Kathryn D. Linnenberg - 2013 - Gender and Society 27 (4):596-598.
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  25.  17
    Bridging cultural differences in teaching computer ethics: an example using personal portfolios.Christina B. Class - 2012 - Acm Sigcas Computers and Society 42 (2):5-14.
    When a professor from Middle Europe teaches Computer Ethics in the Middle East using a textbook from the US, cultural differences become apparent. A main challenge lies in avoiding cultural imperialism during teaching. In order to meet this challenge, personal portfolios have been used for course work. The course design as well as portfolio tasks are presented and experiences are discussed. Based on our experiences we recommend applying this approach to equally overcome effects of group dynamics in similar courses as (...)
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  26.  7
    “Women’s Work”: Welfare State Spending and the Gendered and Classed Dimensions of Unpaid Care.Anthony Kevins & Naomi Lightman - 2021 - Gender and Society 35 (5):778-805.
    This study is the first to explicitly assess the connections between welfare state spending and the gendered and classed dimensions of unpaid care work across 29 European nations. Our research uses multi-level model analysis of European Quality of Life Survey data, examining childcare and housework burdens for people living with at least one child under the age of 18. Two key findings emerge: First, by disaggregating different types of unpaid care work, we find that childcare provision is more gendered than (...)
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  27.  10
    The aminoacyl‐tRNA synthetase family: Modules at work.M. Delarue & D. Moras - 1993 - Bioessays 15 (10):675-687.
    The combined use of molecular and structural biology techniques has proved very efficient in elucidating structure‐function relationships in aminoacyl‐tRNA synthetases. Our present understanding of this family of enzymes is based on two main unifying principles: (i) division into two different classes, corresponding to two different modes of ATP binding and attachment of the activated amino acid to the last nucleotide of tRNA (either 2′OH or 3′OH of the ribose) by two different catalytic mechanisms and two structural domains with completely different (...)
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  28.  3
    Between paid and unpaid work: Gender patterns in supplemental economic activities among white, rural families.Margaret K. Nelson - 1999 - Gender and Society 13 (4):518-539.
    This article explores gender differences in three varieties of economic activities that supplement regular employment and housework: entrepreneurial moonlighting, self-provisioning, and casual exchanges with the members of other households. Drawing on data gathered through a random survey and interviews conducted with a white, rural, working-class population, gender differences were found in the content of these activities, their location, the time devoted to them, the degree to which they were delineated from other activities, and the opportunities they provided for (...)
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  29.  39
    Joan C. Williams: Reshaping the work-family debate. Why men and class matter: Harvard University Press, Cambridge Massachusetts, 2010, 293 pp. ISBN 978-0-674-05567-4. [REVIEW]Maureen Spencer - 2011 - Feminist Legal Studies 19 (2):197-199.
  30.  8
    Job Loss and Attempts to Return to Work: Complicating Inequalities across Gender and Class.Sarah Damaske - 2020 - Gender and Society 34 (1):7-30.
    Drawing on data from 100 qualitative interviews with the recently unemployed, this study examines how participants made decisions about attempting to return to work and identifies how class and gender shape these decisions. Middle-class men were most likely to take time to attempt to return to work, middle-class women were most likely to begin a deliberate job search, working-class men were most likely to report an urgent search, and working-class women were most likely (...)
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  31.  2
    The missing links of the European gender mainstreaming approach: Assessing work–family reconciliation policies in the Italian Mezzogiorno.Mita Marra - 2012 - European Journal of Women's Studies 19 (3):349-370.
    This article examines how the EU gender mainstreaming approach has addressed work and family reconciliation across Southern Italian regions, to foster a more egalitarian and socially inclusive development. Drawing upon a survey of women of different socioeconomic backgrounds and in-depth interviewing of regional policy-makers, this article assesses what gender equality policies do and don’t do for work–family reconciliation within the Italian Mezzogiorno. Findings show that while poor women may be stigmatized as inadequate mothers, middle-class women are pushed to join (...)
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  32.  15
    Fathering, Class, and Gender: A Comparison of Physicians and Emergency Medical Technicians.Naomi Gerstel & Carla Shows - 2009 - Gender and Society 23 (2):161-187.
    Using a multimethod approach, this article examines the link between class and masculinities by comparing the way two groups—professional men and working-class men —practice fatherhood. First, the authors show that these two groups practice different types of masculinity as they engage in different kinds of fatherhood. Physicians emphasize “public fatherhood,” which entails attendance at public events but little involvement in the daily care of their children. In contrast, EMTs are not only involved in their children's public events (...)
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  33.  6
    Cultural Capital as Class Strength and Gendered Educational Choices of Chinese Female Students in the United Kingdom.Siqi Zhang & Xiaoqing Tang - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    The present qualitative study analyzes how cultural capital, gender, class, and family involvement impact Chinese female students’ aspirations of studying in the United Kingdom. We investigated how these factors facilitate or limit female students’ choice of study destination, as well as choices of subject and program. Data were gathered through participant observation and semi-structured interviews in a British university. A total of 25 young Chinese female students from different subject areas took part in the semi-structured interviews. Out of those, (...)
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  34.  9
    Universal Credit, Lone Mothers and Poverty: Some Ethical Challenges for Social Work with Children and Families.Malcolm Carey & Sophie Bell - 2022 - Ethics and Social Welfare 16 (1):3-18.
    This article critically evaluates and contests the flagship benefit delivery system Universal Credit for lone mothers by focusing on some of the ethical challenges it poses, as well as some key implications it holds for social work with lone mothers and their children. Universal Credit was first introduced in the United Kingdom (UK) in 2008, and echoes conditionality-based welfare policies adopted by neoliberal governments internationally on the assumption that paid employment offers a route out of poverty for citizens. However, research (...)
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  35.  12
    Race and class bias in qualitative research on women.Marianne L. A. Leung, Elizabeth Higginbotham & Lynn Weber Cannon - 1988 - Gender and Society 2 (4):449-462.
    Exploratory studies employing volunteer subjects are especially vulnerable to race and class bias. This article illustrates how inattention to race and class as critical dimensions in women's lives can produce biased research samples and lead to false conclusions. It analyzes the race and class background of 200 women who volunteered to participate in an in-depth study of Black and White professional, managerial, and administrative women. Despite a multiplicity of methods used to solicit subjects, White women raised in (...)
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  36. A Family Meal as Fiction.Josep E. Corbi - 2020 - Organon F: Medzinárodný Časopis Pre Analytickú Filozofiu 27:82-105.
    at seek to identify the necessary and sufficient conditions for a work to count as fiction. She argues that this goal cannot really be achieved; instead, she appeals to the notion of genre to distinguish between fiction and nonfiction. This notion is significantly more flex- ible, since it invites us to identify standard—but not necessary—and counter-standard features of works of fiction in light of our classificatory practices. More specifically, Friend argues that the genre of fiction has the genre of nonfiction—and (...)
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  37.  31
    Basil Bernstein: Class, Codes and Control.Basil Bernstein - 2003 - Routledge.
    Basil Bernstein rarely had a good press in the forty-odd years in which he presented his developing theories to the public. Early admiration for his sociolinguistic 'discoveries' - of codes which regulate, at a deep-structural level, family beliefs and behaviours and relationships, as well as surface utterances - turned quite quickly into a suspicion that his description of social class difference amounted to a declaration of working class deficit. Although Bernstein's writings, particularly in the 1990s, became opaque (...)
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  38.  7
    World Class Initiatives and Practices in Early Education: Moving Forward in a Global Age.Louise Boyle Swiniarski (ed.) - 2014 - Dordrecht: Imprint: Springer.
    This book offers current international initiatives, developed for working with children from "Birth to Eight" by a diverse group of noted professional authors. Their readings present an overview of early education as it evolved from the Froebelian kindergarten to today's practices in various Early Education settings around the globe. The international voices of the authors represent a balanced perspective of happenings in various nations and lend a conversational approach to each chapter. The chapters analyze the Universal Preschool Education movement (...)
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  39.  6
    Gendered and classed performances of ‘good’ mother and academic in Greece.Maria Tsouroufli - 2020 - European Journal of Women's Studies 27 (1):9-24.
    The enduring significance of gender and how it intersects with class in the organization of parenting, domestic and professional work has been obscured in contemporary neoliberal contexts. This article examines how Greek academic women conceptualize and enact motherhood and the classed and gendered strategies they adopt to reconcile ‘good’ motherhood with notions of the ‘good’ academic professional. It draws on semi-structured interviews about the career narratives of 15 women in Greek medical schools in the aftermath of the Greek recession. (...)
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  40.  5
    Family, Friends, and Cancer: The Overwhelming Effects of Brain Cancer on a Child’s Life.Lynne Scheumann - 2014 - Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics 4 (1):23-25.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Family, Friends, and Cancer:The Overwhelming Effects of Brain Cancer on a Child’s LifeLynne ScheumannOur son was diagnosed with a medulloblastoma at the old age of 13. The “lucky” part for him was his brain was almost fully developed at this age as opposed to most “medullo” patients. While this was a benefit to him it was also one of the hardest things for him.He went into surgery a highly (...)
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  41.  15
    “It's Like a Family”: Caring Labor, Exploitation, and Race in Nursing Homes.Rebekah M. Zincavage & Lisa Dodson - 2007 - Gender and Society 21 (6):905-928.
    This article contributes to carework scholarship by examining the nexus of gender, class, and race in long-term care facilities. We draw out a family ideology at work that promotes good care of residents and thus benefits nursing homes. We also found that careworkers value fictive kin relationships with residents, yet we uncover how the family model may be used to exploit these low-income careworkers. Reflecting a subordinate and racialized version of being “part of the family,” we call for an (...)
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  42.  6
    Negotiating power, identity, family, and community: Women's community participation.Naomi Abrahams - 1996 - Gender and Society 10 (6):768-796.
    Women's community participation re community and identity. In this article, the author explores the collective identities that are built around motherhood, rape-crisis work, Latino empowerment, and political activism for 39 Anglo and 11 Latina women. The reflexive relationship between communities and identities in relation to class background, gender, age, generation, and race-ethnicity are examined. It is argued that women embrace—as well as negotiate—cultural expectations of mothers, homemakers, and elders through their community participation. The author explores work in the community (...)
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  43.  6
    A “Major Career Woman”?: How Women Develop Early Expectations about Work.Sarah Damaske - 2011 - Gender and Society 25 (4):409-430.
    Using data from 80 in-depth qualitative interviews with women randomly sampled from New York City, I ask: how do women develop expectations about their future workforce participation? Using an intersectional approach, I find that women’s expectations about workforce participation stem from gendered, classed, and raced ideas of who works full-time. Socioeconomic status, race, gender, and sexuality influenced early expectations about work and the process through which these expectations developed. Women from white and Latino working-class families were evenly (...)
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  44.  38
    Bodies at Home and at School: Toward a Theory of Embodied Social Class Status.Sue Ellen Henry - 2013 - Educational Theory 63 (1):1-16.
    Sociology has long recognized the centrality of the body in the reciprocal construction of individuals and society, and recent research has explored the influence of a variety of social institutions on the body. Significant research has established the influence of social class, child-rearing practices, and variable language forms in families and children. Less well understood is the influence of children's social class status on their gestures, comportment, and other bodily techniques. In this essay Sue Ellen Henry brings (...)
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  45.  11
    P-points, MAD families and Cardinal Invariants.Osvaldo Guzmán González - 2022 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 28 (2):258-260.
    The main topics of this thesis are cardinal invariants, P -points and MAD families. Cardinal invariants of the continuum are cardinal numbers that are bigger than $\aleph _{0}$ and smaller or equal than $\mathfrak {c}.$ Of course, they are only interesting when they have some combinatorial or topological definition. An almost disjoint family is a family of infinite subsets of $\omega $ such that the intersection of any two of its elements is finite. A MAD family is a maximal (...)
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  46.  18
    Collected Works of Charlotte Wolff.Charlotte Wolff - 2015 - Routledge.
    Charlotte Wolff was born in Riesenburg, West Prussia into a middle-class Jewish family. She studied philosophy and then medicine at several German universities, completing her doctorate in Berlin in 1926. Working in various institutions over the next few years, she was also interested in psychotherapy and had a small private medical and psychotherapeutic practice. In 1933 she was forced to leave Germany because of the Nazi regime, and settled for a few years in Paris. As a German refugee (...)
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  47.  15
    Intuitionistic formal theories with realizability in subrecursive classes.Anatoly Petrovich Beltiukov - 1997 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 89 (1):3-15.
    A family of formal intuitionistic theories is proposed with realizability of proved formulas in several subrecursive classes, e.g. Grzegorczyk classes, polynomial-time computable functions class, etc. xA) Algorithm extraction forxyA is shown for various classes of bounded complexity. The results on polynomial computability are closely connected to work on the Bounded Arithmetic by S. Buss.
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  48.  19
    Intercultural communication in child and family health: insights from postcolonial feminist scholarship and three‐body analysis.Julian Grant & Yoni Luxford - 2008 - Nursing Inquiry 15 (4):309-319.
    Concerns about intercultural communication practices in child and family health were raised during a South Australian ethnographic study. The family partnership model was observed as a universal pedagogic tool introduced into the host organisation in 2003. It has a role in shaping and reshaping cultural production within child health practice. In this study, we draw on insights from postcolonial feminist scholarship together with three‐body analysis to critique the theoretical canons of care that inform intercultural communication in the child and family (...)
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  49. Navigating Epistemic Pushback in Feminist and Critical Race Philosophy Classes.Alison Bailey - 2014 - Apa Newsletter on Feminism and Philosophy 14 (1):3-7.
    My contribution to this conversation sets out to accomplish two things: First, I offer a definition of epistemic pushback. Epistemic pushback is an expression of epistemic resistance that occurs regularly in classroom discussions that touch our core beliefs, sense of self, politics, or worldv iews. Epistemic pushback is structural: It broadly characterizes a family of cognitive, affective, and verbal tactics that are deployed regularly to dodge the challenging and exhausting chore of engaging topics and questions that scare us. It can (...)
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  50.  24
    La mémoire des familles populaires.Pierre Périer - 2003 - Cahiers Internationaux de Sociologie 115 (2):205-227.
    Dans les représentations dominantes, les formes et contenus de la mémoire empruntent largement à la culture et au style de vie des groupes dont l’existence, à travers l’héritage, la filiation, les biens et symboles accumulés, s’enracine loin dans le passé et obéit à un ensemble de codes et rituels précisément identifiés. Dès lors, s’intéresser à la mémoire des familles populaires et ouvrières implique un décentrement temporel et une attention à l’égard de productions symboliques dégagées des contraintes et références ordinaires. Ainsi (...)
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