Results for 'Rebecca Farrington'

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  1.  19
    In critique of moral resilience: UK healthcare professionals’ experiences working with asylum applicants housed in contingency accommodation during the COVID-19 pandemic.Louise Tomkow, Gabrielle Prager, Kitty Worthing & Rebecca Farrington - 2024 - Journal of Medical Ethics 50 (1):33-38.
    This research explores the experiences of UK NHS healthcare professionals working with asylum applicants housed in contingency accommodation during the COVID-19 pandemic. Using a critical understanding of the concept of moral resilience as a theoretical framework, we explore how the difficult circumstances in which they worked were navigated, and the extent to which moral suffering led to moral transformation. Ten staff from a general practice participated in semistructured interviews. Encountering the harms endured by people seeking asylum prior to arrival in (...)
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  2. Two Kinds of Unknowing.Rebecca Mason - 2011 - Hypatia 26 (2):294-307.
    Miranda Fricker claims that a “gap” in collective hermeneutical resources with respect to the social experiences of marginalized groups prevents members of those groups from understanding their own experiences (Fricker 2007). I argue that because Fricker misdescribes dominant hermeneutical resources as collective, she fails to locate the ethically bad epistemic practices that maintain gaps in dominant hermeneutical resources even while alternative interpretations are in fact offered by non-dominant discourses. Fricker's analysis of hermeneutical injustice does not account for the possibility that (...)
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  3. Against simulation: The argument from error.Rebecca Saxe - 2005 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 9 (4):174-79.
  4.  40
    Realism and children's early grasp of mental representation: belief-based judgements in the state change task.Rebecca Saltmarsh, Peter Mitchell & Elizabeth Robinson - 1995 - Cognition 57 (3):297-325.
  5.  16
    Susceptibility and Resilience, a Fig Tree and a Scream.Rebecca Saunders - 2024 - Philosophies 9 (3):68.
    Analyzing two key figures in Elif Shafak’s novel The Island of Missing Trees—a schoolgirl’s scream and a narrating fig tree—this essay analyzes the intersection between susceptibility and resilience, particularly as these terms are developed in psychology, trauma studies, and ecology. I argue that the novel’s resonant scream critiques the discourse of psychological resilience on multiple counts: its inadequacy as a response to complex trauma, its focus on autonomous individuals, its assumption that responsibility for resilience rests on victims rather than perpetrators (...)
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  6. The ontology and temporality of conscience.Rebecca Kukla - 2002 - Continental Philosophy Review 35 (1):1-34.
    Philosophers have often posited a foundational calling voice, such that hearing its call constitutes subjects as responsive and responsible negotiators of normative claims. I give the name ldquo;transcendental conscience to that which speaks in this founding, constitutive voice. The role of transcendental conscience is not – or not merely – to normatively bind the subject, but to constitute the possibility of the subject's being bound by any particular, contentful normative claims in the first place. I explore the ontological and temporal (...)
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  7.  24
    Environmental management strategies in agriculture.Rick Welsh & Rebecca Young Rivers - 2011 - Agriculture and Human Values 28 (3):297-302.
    There is a large literature on technology adoption and environmental management in agriculture. Included in this literature are debates about the role world view or attitudinal variables play in adoption decisions, and whether smaller farms or larger farms exhibit superior environmental performance or differ in commitment to environmental values. In this paper we attempt to extend the literature in this area by proposing and measuring discrete environmental management approaches among sixty-six farmers in Northern New York. Using key informants interviews, purposeful (...)
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  8.  31
    Divide and conquer: a defense of functional localizers.Rebecca Saxe, Matthew Brett & Nancy Kanwisher - 2010 - In Stephen José Hanson & Martin Bunzl, Foundational Issues in Human Brain Mapping. Bradford. pp. 25--42.
    This chapter presents the advantages of the use of functional regions of interest along with its specific concerns, and provides a reference to Karl J. Friston related to the subject. Functionally defined ROI help to test hypotheses about the cognitive functions of particular regions of the brain. fROI are useful for specifying brain locations and investigating separable components of the mind. The chapter provides an overview of the common and uncommon misconceptions about fROI related to assumptions of homogeneity, factorial designs (...)
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  9.  44
    Theorizing risk attitudes and rationality using agent based modeling.Rebecca Sutton Koeser & Lara Buchak - unknown
    This poster presents results from applying agent-based modeling to an exploration of risk attitudes and rational decision making in the context of group interaction. We are also interested in the place of agent-based modeling and computational philosophy within the computational humanities. Computational philosophy has not typically been included in Digital Humanities; computational work has been done using philosophy texts as a source for analysis (Kinney 2022; Malaterre et al. 2021; Fletcher et al. 2021; Zahorec et al. 2022), but there are (...)
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  10. Aquinas on the vice of sloth: Three interpretive issues.Rebecca DeYoung - 2011 - The Thomist 75 (1):43-64.
    Defining the capital vice of sloth (acedia) is a difficult business in Thomas Aquinas and in the Christian tradition of thought from which he draws his account. In this article, I will raise three problems for interpreting Aquinas's account of sloth. They are all related, as are the resolutions to them I will offer. The three problems can be framed as questions: How, on Aquinas's account, can sloth consistently be categorized as, first, a capital vice and, second, a spiritual vice? (...)
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  11.  12
    Understanding Value and the Value of Understanding in AI Medical Decision Support Systems.Rebecca C. H. Brown - 2025 - Philosophy and Technology 38 (1):1-4.
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  12.  13
    The Concept of Health-Promoting Collaboration—A Starting Point to Reduce Presenteeism?Rebecca Komp, Simone Kauffeld & Patrizia Ianiro-Dahm - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Background: Since presenteeism is related to numerous negative health and work-related effects, measures are required to reduce it. There are initial indications that how an organization deals with health has a decisive influence on employees’ presenteeism behavior.Aims: The concept of health-promoting collaboration was developed on the basis of these indications. As an extension of healthy leadership it includes not only the leader but also co-workers. In modern forms of collaboration, leaders cannot be assigned sole responsibility for employees’ health, since the (...)
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  13.  64
    Affect and non-uniform characteristics of predictive processing in musical behaviour.Rebecca S. Schaefer, Katie Overy & Peter Nelson - 2013 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 36 (3):226-227.
    The important roles of prediction and prior experience are well established in music research and fit well with Clark's concept of unified perception, cognition, and action arising from hierarchical, bidirectional predictive processing. However, in order to fully account for human musical intelligence, Clark needs to further consider the powerful and variable role of affect in relation to prediction error.
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  14.  39
    The Dispositional Account of Emotional Expression.Rebecca Rowson - 2024 - The Philosophical Quarterly.
    I propose that accounts of emotional expression can be divided into primary and secondary quality accounts. Primary quality accounts of expression take behaviour to express emotion only if certain perceiver-independent facts about the behaviour or behaving subject obtain. I argue that views of this kind get the extension of expression wrong. I argue instead that behaviour expresses emotion just in case it is disposed to appear to express emotion to standard observers under standard conditions.
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  15. The Point of Change: Marxism/Australia.Carole Ferrier & Rebecca Pelan - forthcoming - History/Theory.
     
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  16.  52
    Awareness and unawareness of thought disorder.John McGrath & Rebecca Allman - 2000 - Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry 34 (1):35-42.
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  17.  8
    Enhancing Animals is “Still Genetics”: Perspectives of Genome Scientists and Policymakers on Animal and Human Enhancement.Rebecca L. Walker, Zachary Ferguson, Logan Mitchell & Margaret Waltz - forthcoming - AJOB Empirical Bioethics.
    Background: Nonhuman animals are regularly enhanced genomically with CRISPR and other gene editing tools as scientists aim at better models for biomedical research, more tractable agricultural animals, or animals that are otherwise well suited to a defined purpose. This study investigated how genome editors and policymakers perceived ethical or policy benefits and drawbacks for animal enhancement and how perceived benefits and drawbacks are alike, or differ from, those for human genome editing. Methods: We identified scientists through relevant literature searches as (...)
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  18.  12
    Juan Rulfo’s El Llano en llamas (1953) as Literary Expression of Agrarian Protest.Rebecca Kaewert - 2024 - Substance 53 (3):110-127.
    The history of Mexico in the first half of the 20th century is almost completely dominated by the Mexican Revolution (1910–1920/40). Revolutionary events continue to shape Mexican society up to the present day. Due to the unequal distribution of resources and land and political instability, persistent social tensions have developed, resulting primarily from a collective impoverishment accompanied by de facto lawlessness, violence, and oppression of the Mexican rural population, and a rising elite in the cities. Mexican author Juan Rulfo (1917–1986) (...)
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  19.  29
    “Hypothetical Machines”: The Science Fiction Dreams of Cold War Social Science.Rebecca Lemov - 2010 - Isis 101 (2):401-411.
  20.  7
    Illuminating the care/repair nexus in the ‘pandemic era’, and the potential for care beyond repair in Danish poultry production.Rebecca Leigh Rutt & Alberte Skriver Møller - forthcoming - Agriculture and Human Values:1-18.
    Examining the Danish poultry industry in a time of rising outbreaks of infectious disease (the so-called ‘pandemic era’) including avian influenza, this study documents the often-unseen harms resulting from current dominant forms of response. Inspired by multispecies studies and ethnography, we pay attention to entangled human and more-than-human worlds. Specifically, we document the multifarious ways in which responses to worsening avian influenza alter the everyday lives of birds in production, their farmers, and public veterinarians. We also show how such changes (...)
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  21.  9
    Can Rights be Enough?Rebecca Ploof - 2024 - Global Justice: Theory Practice Rhetoric 14 (2):121-146.
    The climate crisis is beset by depoliticization. Couched as an issue that experts must solve through technological or technocratic knowledge, discussion about how to address environmental degradation is not amenable to democratic action or dissensus. This paper argues that approaching climate change through a human rights framework risks reinscribing such depoliticization and that this is politically hazardous. Human rights discourse can impede the demos’ exercise of power, obscure exercises of hegemony, and, via a fixed notion of progress, discourage normative contestation. (...)
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  22.  8
    A Woman Who Defends All the Persons of Her Sex: Selected Philosophical and Moral Writings.Domna C. Stanton & Rebecca M. Wilkin (eds.) - 2010 - London: University of Chicago Press.
    During the oppressive reign of Louis XIV, Gabrielle Suchon was the most forceful female voice in France, advocating women’s freedom and self-determination, access to knowledge, and assertion of authority. This volume collects Suchon’s writing from two works—_Treatise on Ethics and Politics_ and _On the Celibate Life Freely Chosen; or, Life without Commitments _—and demonstrates her to be an original philosophical and moral thinker and writer. Suchon argues that both women and men have inherently similar intellectual, corporeal, and spiritual capacities, which (...)
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  23.  11
    The call of the final frontier?Catherine A. Salmon & Rebecca L. Burch - 2022 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 45:e295.
    The target article is focused on locating the popularity of imaginary worlds in our adaptations for exploration. This commentary touches on developmental influences, vicarious enjoyment, the challenging of societal mores, plot, and whether men and women are drawn to the same features in the same ways.
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  24.  30
    Indiana University Northwest F200 Examining Self as a Teacher Teaching Philosophy November, 2004.Mrs Rebecca J. Sanders - forthcoming - Teaching Philosophy.
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  25.  49
    To What Extent Does or Should a Woman's Autonomy Overrule the Interests of Her Baby? A Study of Autonomy-related Issues in the Context of Caesarean Section.Rebecca Brione - 2015 - The New Bioethics 21 (1):71-86.
    Approaches to supporting autonomy in medicine need to be able to support complex and sensitive decision-making, incorporating reflection on the patient's values and goals. This should involve deliberation in partnership between physician and patient, allowing the patient to take responsibility for her decision. Nowhere is this truer than in decisions around pregnancy and Caesarean section where maternal autonomy can seem to directly conflict with foetal interests. Medical and societal expectations and norms such as the expectations of a ‘mother’, constraints of (...)
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  26.  76
    Reid on the moral sense.Rebecca Copenhaver - 2011 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 41 (S1):80-101.
    Some interpret Reid’s notion of a moral sense as merely analogical. Others understand it as a species of acquired perception. To understand Reid’s account of the moral sense, we must draw from his theory of perception and his theory of aesthetic experience, each of which illuminate the nature and operation of the moral faculty. I argue that, on Reid’s view, the moral faculty is neither affective nor rational, but representational. It is a discrete, basic, capacity for representing the real moral (...)
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  27.  12
    A Disability Critique of the Comparative View.Rebecca Mueller, Amber Knight, Sandy Sufian & Rosemarie Garland-Thomson - 2024 - American Journal of Bioethics 24 (8):40-42.
    In “Reasons and Reproduction: Gene Editing and Genetic Selection,” McMahan and Savulescu (2024) contest the common notion that embryo selection is a morally better way of avoiding genetic condition...
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  28.  61
    Masters of miniaturization: Convergent evolution among interstitial eukaryotes.Rebecca J. Rundell & Brian S. Leander - 2010 - Bioessays 32 (5):430-437.
    Marine interstitial environments are teeming with an extraordinary diversity of coexisting microeukaryotic lineages collectively called “meiofauna.” Interstitial habitats are broadly distributed across the planet, and the complex physical features of these environments have persisted, much like they exist today, throughout the history of eukaryotes, if not longer. Although our general understanding of the biological diversity in these environments is relatively poor, compelling examples of developmental heterochrony (e.g., pedomorphosis) and convergent evolution appear to be widespread among meiofauna. Therefore, an improved understanding (...)
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  29.  11
    Merleau-Ponty's Cézanne as Misfit Artist.Rebecca Longtin - 2024 - Puncta 7 (1):100-121.
    This paper explores Cézanne’s art through the lens of disability gain. Disability gain defies the ability-disability binary, which defines disability as a lack of ability, by emphasizing what is gained through different disabilities. Central to my discussion are (1) Tobin Siebers’s description of modern art as vitally and thematically disabled and (2) Rosemarie Garland-Thomson’s concept of misfitting, which allows for a phenomenological account of disability that emphasizes the depth of awareness and creative world-making possibilities that are gained through disability. By (...)
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  30. Nurses’ Perspectives on the Dismissal of Vaccine-Refusing Families from Pediatric and Family Care Practices.Michael J. Deem, Rebecca A. Kronk, Vincent S. Staggs & Denise Lucas - 2020 - American Journal of Health Promotion 34 (6):622-632.
     
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  31.  19
    Testing the Treatment Integrity of the Managing Cancer and Living Meaningfully Psychotherapeutic Intervention for Patients With Advanced Cancer.Susan Koranyi, Rebecca Philipp, Leonhard Quintero Garzón, Katharina Scheffold, Frank Schulz-Kindermann, Martin Härter, Gary Rodin & Anja Mehnert-Theuerkauf - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    IntroductionThe Managing Cancer and Living Meaningfully therapy for patients with advanced cancer was tested against a supportive psycho-oncological counseling intervention in a randomized controlled trial. We investigated whether CALM was delivered as intended ; whether CALM therapists with less experience in psycho-oncological care show higher adherence scores; and whether potential overlapping treatment elements between CALM and SPI can be identified.MethodsTwo trained and blinded raters assessed on 19 items four subscales of the Treatment Integrity Scale covering treatment domains of CALM. A (...)
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  32. The M event paradox and the specious present: An analysis and refutation of Mctaggart's 2nd argument.Rebecca Lloyd-Waller - 2011 - Analysis and Metaphysics 10:101-112.
     
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  33.  24
    Social Problem or Medical Condition? A Response to Krugman’s Proposal.Barbara Katz Rothman & Rebecca Tiger - 2008 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 19 (4):350-352.
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  34.  4
    Animals in Irish Society: Interspecies Oppression and Vegan Liberation in Britain's First Colony.Rebecca Jenkins - 2024 - Journal of Animal Ethics 14 (2):221-223.
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  35.  5
    ‘Sneaky’ Persuasion in Public Health Risk Communication.Rebecca C. H. Brown - forthcoming - Ratio.
    This paper identifies and critiques a tendency for public health risk communication to be ‘sneakily’ persuasive. First, I describe how trends in the social and health sciences have facilitated an approach to public health risk communication which focuses on achieving behaviour change directly, rather than informing people's decisions about their health behaviour. I then consider existing discussions of the merits of informing versus persuading in public health communication, which largely endorse persuasive approaches. I suggest such accounts are unsatisfying insofar as (...)
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  36.  15
    Epistemically Unjust Environments as a Threat to Academic Freedom.Rebecca M. Taylor - 2023 - Philosophy of Education 79 (1):112-117.
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  37.  10
    “Safer to plant corn and beans”? Navigating the challenges and opportunities of agricultural diversification in the U.S. Corn Belt.Rebecca Traldi, Lauren Asprooth, Emily M. Usher, Kristin Floress, J. Gordon Arbuckle, Megan Baskerville, Sarah P. Church, Ken Genskow, Seth Harden, Elizabeth T. Maynard, Aaron William Thompson, Ariana P. Torres & Linda S. Prokopy - 2024 - Agriculture and Human Values 41 (4):1687-1706.
    Agricultural diversification in the Midwestern Corn Belt has the potential to improve socioeconomic and environmental outcomes by buffering farmers from environmental and economic shocks and improving soil, water, and air quality. However, complex barriers related to agricultural markets, individual behavior, social norms, and government policy constrain diversification in this region. This study examines farmer perspectives regarding the challenges and opportunities for both corn and soybean production and agricultural diversification strategies. We analyze data from 20 focus groups with 100 participants conducted (...)
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  38.  9
    The Fertility Fix: the Boom in Facial-matching Algorithms for Donor Selection in Assisted Reproduction in Spain.Rebecca Close - forthcoming - The New Bioethics:215-231.
    This article reads the uptake of facial-matching algorithms by fertility clinics in Spain through the lens of ‘the fertility fix’: a software fix to the social reconfiguration of kinship and a fixed capital investment made by competing fertility companies and firms. ‘The fertility fix’ is proposed as a critical, ethical lens through which to situate algorithmic facial-matching in assisted reproduction in the context of the racial politics of the face and phenotype and the spatial politics of market expansion. While an (...)
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  39. Holy Fear.Rebecca DeYoung - 2012 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 86 (1):1-22.
    In this essay I will contend that there is something called holy fear, which expresses love for God. First I distinguish holy fear from certain types of unholy fear and from the type of fear regulated by the virtue of courage. Next, relying on the work of Thomas Aquinas, I consider the roles love and power play in holy and unholy fear and extend his analysis of the passion of fear by analogy to the capital vices. I conclude that this (...)
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  40.  9
    Philip Ball. The Modern Myths: Adventures in the Machinery of the Popular Imagination.Rebecca L. Burch & Catherine Salmon - 2022 - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture 6 (1):93-96.
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  41. Philosophy of mind in the early modern and modern ages.Rebecca Copenhaver (ed.) - 2018 - New York: Routledge.
    Where is my mind?: locating the mind metaphysically in Hobbes / Amy M. Schmitter -- The Cambridge Platonists: material and immaterial substance / Jasper Reid -- Descartes' philosophy of mind and its early critics / Antonia LoLordo -- Consciousness and reflection: the later Cartesians / Steven Nadler -- Malebranche on mind / Julie Walsh -- Cavendish and Conway on the individual human mind / Karen Detlefsen -- Locke and metaphysics of "state of sensibility" / Vili Lähteenmäki -- Spinoza on thinking (...)
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  42.  57
    A defense of a unificationist theory of explanation.Rebecca Schweder - 2005 - Foundations of Science 10 (4):421-435.
    This paper defends a unificationist theory of explanation. I first explore the notion of understanding entrenched by the unificationist. Then I present an overview of various kinds of causal statements and explanations. It is claimed that only genuine causal law statements have explanatory power. Finally, I attempt to fit causal explanations into the unificationist theory of explanation. In this way, I try to provide an account of how causal explanations provide understanding of the phenomena that they explain.
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  43.  42
    A Unificationist Theory of Scientific Explanation.Rebecca Schweder - unknown
    What is the relation between scientific explanation and understanding? The thesis investigates a notion of understanding that is believed to be central to scientific explanation. The role of understanding in explanation is double: it is both an essential component, as well as a criterion, by which we select bona fide explanations from non-explanations. The model of explanation that is outlined in the thesis is a version of the unificationist model of explanation. In the thesis, this model is compared to Hempel's (...)
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  44.  17
    Social and cultural bonds left to “the mercy of the winds:” an agricultural transition.Rebecca E. Shelton & Hallie Eakin - 2020 - Agriculture and Human Values 38 (3):693-708.
    In 2004, the agricultural economies of many rural communities in the United States were impacted by the cessation of a price-support and supply-control program for tobacco production. Tobacco was not only an important livelihood, but also was central to social and cultural life. Using a social–ecological systems lens and the adaptive cycle metaphor, we examine the reorganization of agriculture in communities that previously produced tobacco under the program. Specifically, we seek to understand how transitional policy that provided financial support to (...)
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  45.  1
    When Tragedy Becomes Banal.Rebecca Rozelle-Stone - 2022 - The Conversation.
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  46.  9
    A Book to Burn and a Book to Keep : Selected Writings.Haun Saussy, Rebecca Handler-Spitz & Pauline Lee (eds.) - 2016 - Cambridge University Press.
    Li Zhi's iconoclastic interpretations of history, religion, literature, and social relations have fascinated Chinese intellectuals for centuries. His approach synthesized Confucian, Buddhist, and Daoist ethics and incorporated the Neo-Confucian idealism of such thinkers as Wang Yangming. The result was a series of heretical writings that caught fire among Li Zhi's contemporaries, despite an imperial ban on their publication, and intrigued Chinese audiences long after his death. Translated for the first time into English, Li Zhi's bold challenge to established doctrines will (...)
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  47.  32
    Anna Bellavitis & Nicole Edelman (dir.), Genre, femmes, histoire en Europe.Rebecca Rogers - 2013 - Clio 37:284-284.
    Depuis une décennie, le terme genre se banalise dans les travaux historiques en français et son utilisation ne génère plus de longues justifications. Tel est le constat qu’on peut tirer de ce volume collectif réunissant chercheur-e-s et doctorant-e-s lors de l’université européenne d’été « Semaine de Haute formation du Doctorat international en Histoire des femmes et des identités de genre à l’époque moderne et contemporaine » en septembre 2008. La réunion, à l’Université Paris Ouest Nanterre...
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  48.  16
    Anne Cova & Bruno Dumons (dir.), Destins de Femmes. Religion, culture et société (France.Rebecca Rogers - 2015 - Clio 41:338-338.
    Ces deux ouvrages, de format différent, partagent la volonté de faire sortir de l’ombre des trajectoires de femmes à la croisée de la vie publique et de la vie privée. Ils participent à l’essor d’une démarche de type prosopographique qui s’affirme en ce moment avec la publication en trois volumes aux Éditions des femmes du Dictionnaire universel des créatrices (sous la direction de Béatrice Didier, Antoinette Fouque et Mireille Calle-Gruber, 2013) et celle, prévue en 2015, du Dictionnaire des...
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  49.  31
    Anne Cova (ed.), Comparative Women’s History, New Approaches.Rebecca Rogers - 2008 - Clio 27:258-259.
    Dès ses débuts, l’histoire des femmes a privilégié la comparaison comme moyen de comprendre les spécificités de la subordination féminine dans des contextes nationaux différents. L’introduction historiographique de ce court recueil coordonné par Anne Cova témoigne de l’importance, depuis les années 1970, des travaux comparatifs portant sur des questions aussi diverses que la montée de l’État providence, le féminisme, le rapport entre féminisme et maternité, entre femmes et fascismes, genre et...
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  50.  20
    Barbara Reeves-Ellington, Domestic Frontiers. G.Rebecca Rogers - 2018 - Clio 48:272-275.
    Élégamment écrit, l’ouvrage de Barbara Reeves-Ellington raconte une histoire de rencontres improbables entre protestantes américaines et habitant.e.s des Balkans ottomans au xixe siècle. À partir d’une série d’études de cas centrées sur la Bulgarie, avec un dernier chapitre où l’action se situe à Constantinople, l’historienne détaille le rôle des femmes dans l’action missionnaire et l’impact de leur action tant dans les Balkans qu’au sein du mouvement missionnaire aux États-Unis. Puisant dans...
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