Results for 'Village communities'

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  1.  4
    A Study on the Village Community in the Joseon Dynasty - Focus on the Gohyeon Hyangyak -. 김상현 - 2024 - Journal of the Daedong Philosophical Association 108:29-64.
    본 연구의 목적은 조선이 건국된 지 100년도 되기 전인 1475년부터 실시되어 현 재까지 500년이 넘게 지속되고 있는 고현향약을 통시적 관점에서 분석하는 것이다. 고현향약은 현존하는 향약 가운데 가장 오랜 기간 존속된 향약이기 때문에 조선시대 마을공동체의 모습을 규명하는 데 매우 중요한 자료이다. 이와 같은 고현향약을 통시 적 관점에서 정밀하게 분석할 수 있다면 우리는 전통적인 마을공동체 모습에 대해 좀 더 정확하게 파악할 수 있을 것이고, 이와 같은 연구를 통해 우리 사회의 바람직한 지 역자치조직의 모델도 제시할 수 있을 것이다. 고현향약 관련 선행 연구가 몇 (...)
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  2.  21
    Tracing village communities: unknown inscriptions from the church of St. Philip, Ano Poula, Mani.Panayotis S. Katsafados & Sharon E. J. Gerstel - 2024 - Byzantinische Zeitschrift 117 (1):137-156.
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  3.  24
    Where is the Breughel Village? Community and the radical tradition.Sudipta Kaviraj - 2021 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 47 (4):408-425.
    This article notes the revival of interest in the idea of community in recent debates in political theory. It argues that one of the clearest presentations of the problem was in Hegel, taken up by the radical tradition from Marx. It analyses the further elaboration of the structure of the problem in Marx but argues that there is a baffling difficulty because the answer to the problem of community comes in the form of the state – an apparatus least likely (...)
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  4. Maine on Village Communities.John Robson - 1990 - In Writings on India. University of Toronto Press. pp. 213-238.
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  5.  3
    Legal Studies of Village-Owned Enterprises as Legal Entities for the Prosperity of Village Communities.Endang Sutrisno, Deni Yusup Permana, Ratnasari & Abdurokhim - forthcoming - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture:933-939.
    A business entity established and owned by a village is designed to support the community in meeting their daily needs, enhancing their knowledge, and providing business and employment opportunities. This requires an institution capable of managing these activities effectively. The institution in question must be able to generate profits because the potential within a village is intended to promote the welfare of the local community. This study examines village institutions functioning as economic entities, commonly known as (...)-Owned Enterprises (BUMDes). The study also explores the legal status of these entities and their role in implementing programs aimed at building a prosperous society. The research findings confirm that BUMDes, as regulated by Government Regulation Number 11 of 2021 and the Regulation of the Minister of Villages, Development of Disadvantaged Regions, and Transmigration Number 3 of 2021, have legal entity status. This means that these institutions are recognized and regulated by law, allowing them to engage in business activities legally, while also being responsible for adhering to applicable laws and regulations. The village government wholly owns these business institutions, and their mission is to manage and develop the village's economic potential. Additionally, BUMDes are intended to create jobs, enabling village communities to meet their basic needs, increase their income, and advance the local economy. The legal framework governing these institutions must be a focus for stakeholders to ensure the creation of legal justice, certainty, and benefits. (shrink)
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  6.  5
    Power dynamics and the VillageTalk app: Rural mediatisation and the sense of belonging to the village community as communicative figuration.Nicole Zerrer - forthcoming - Communications.
    Rural mediatisation defines the simultaneous transformation of rural community life and its media environment, particularly in the digital age. Typical rural problems such as declining meeting places are being addressed by developing village-specific communication apps. Due to the so-called “urban bias,” not much is known about rural mediatisation, and theoretical concepts are also lacking. This study addresses this research gap by analysing three German village communities, where a village communication app has been introduced. For this analysis, (...)
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  7.  16
    Engaging Jungian function-orientations in a hermeneutical community: Exploring John 11: 1–17.Leslie J. Francis, Greg Smith, Adam J. Stevenson & Andrew Village - 2023 - HTS Theological Studies 79 (1):11.
    Working within the sensing, intuition, feeling, thinking (SIFT) approach to biblical hermeneutics, the present study invited a hermeneutical community of 23 type-aware participants to explore the account of the Death of Lazarus as reported in John 11: 1–17 within type-alike groups differentiated according to the participants’ dominant function-orientation. Five groups were constituted differentiating: introverted sensing, introverted intuition, extraverted intuition, introverted and extraverted feeling and introverted and extraverted thinking. These five groups generated distinctive readings of the narrative that were characteristic of (...)
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  8.  21
    A study of heredity in an isolated village community.J. W. McFeeters - 1941 - The Eugenics Review 33 (3):73.
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  9.  7
    Marketization, participation, and communication within New Zealand retirement villages: a critical—rhetorical and discursive analysis.George Cheney & Mary Simpson - 2007 - Discourse and Communication 1 (2):191-222.
    The retirement village sector1 is one part of the increasingly marketized `aged-care' services in New Zealand and in many other parts of the industrialized world. While critical researchers have examined organizational and residents' representations of aging, retirement, and retirement communities in the context of `the market', there is no research that examines communication related to residents' enactment of participation within these settings with respect to these processes of marketization. We aim to refine, complicate, and extend what we might (...)
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  10. (1 other version)Villages, Local and Global: Observations on Computer‐Mediated and Geographically Situated Communities.Samuel Oluoch Imbo - 2002 - In Philip Alperson, Diversity and Community: An Interdisciplinary Reader. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
     
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  11.  13
    African Culture of Communication in the Global Village: The Experience of Ogba People in Rivers State Nigeria.Uche A. Dike - 2013 - Open Journal of Philosophy 3 (1):122.
    The contemporary world today has evolved into a global village. This civilization owes its existence to fast means of communication systems. Thus the global world is knighted into one political economy. Distances are reached under seconds. Notwithstanding the fast means of communication gadgets in our time, African traditional means of communication has survived the test of time. What then has been the connection of Africa traditional means of communication and politics? The answer to this question, specifically as operative in (...)
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  12. Wendy Davies, Small Worlds: The Village Community in Early Medieval Brittany. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1988. Pp. x, 226; 32 maps, figures. $30. [REVIEW]Julia M. H. Smith - 1990 - Speculum 65 (3):650-651.
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  13. Acoustic communities represented : sound preferences in the Scottish village of Dollar.Heikki Uimonen - 2017 - In Christine Guillebaud, Towards an anthropology of ambient sound. New York, NY: Routledge.
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  14. Pro-community altruism and social status in a Shuar village.Michael E. Price - 2003 - Human Nature 14 (2):191-195.
    Reciprocity theory (RT) and costly signaling theory (CST) provide different explanations for the high status of pro-community altruists: RT proposes that altruists are positively and negatively sanctioned by others, whereas CST proposes that altruists are attractive to others. Only RT, however, is beset by first- and higher-order free rider problems, which must be solved in order for RT to explain status allocations. In this paper, several solutions to RT’s free rider problems are proposed, and data about status allocations to Ecuadorian (...)
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  15.  21
    Quality of Life and Community Wellbeing of Members Associated With Village Savings and Loans Associations as a Model of Sharing Economy in the Least Developing Countries: A Case of Mzuzu City in Northern Malawi, Southern Africa.Xue-Lian Wu, George N. Chidimbah Munthali, Mastano N. Woleson Dzimbiri, Abdur Rahman Aakash, Muhammad Rizwan, Yu Shi, Gama Rivas Daru & Wegayehu Enbeyle Sheferaw - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    This study was aimed at examining the impacts of the Sharing economy on the individual and community Quality of Life and wellbeing by looking at their associated influencing factors using Village Savings and Loans Associations as a model of sharing economy in Malawi. An online community-based cross-sectional study design was conducted from November 2020 through January 2021. In the survey, 402 Village Savings and Loans Associations members from the Mzuzu City area participated, recruited using snowball and respondent-driven sampling (...)
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  16.  5
    Pro-community altruism and social status in a Shuar village.Michael E. Price - 2003 - Human Nature 14 (2):191-208.
    Reciprocity theory (RT) and costly signaling theory (CST) provide different explanations for the high status of pro-community altruists: RT proposes that altruists are positively and negatively sanctioned by others, whereas CST proposes that altruists are attractive to others. Only RT, however, is beset by first- and higher-order free rider problems, which must be solved in order for RT to explain status allocations. In this paper, several solutions to RT’s free rider problems are proposed, and data about status allocations to Ecuadorian (...)
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  17.  33
    Comunitatile catolice din Moldova Studiu de caz - Satele cu populatie romano - catolica din vecinatatea orasului Roman / Catholic Moldavian Communities. Case Study: Roman-Catholic Villages near Roman.Cerasela Maria Virlan-–Blaj - 2002 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 1 (3):167-172.
    The existence of Catholic communities in Moldavia has raised questions not for the Orthodox population from neighbourhood but mostly for the Hungarian and Romanian history researchers. The term „csangos” was first used in 1783 by Petru Zold, a priest, in order to describe these communities and the term remained as such in the Hungarian historyography (and in the last decade it has also been borrowed by the Romanian historyography) but is not accepted and used by the majority of (...)
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  18.  3
    Cities and villages in the religious conflict circle: Socio-demographic factors of communal and sectarian conflict in West Java, Indonesia.Adon N. Jamaludin - 2021 - HTS Theological Studies 77 (4):7.
    This article analyses the forms of religious conflict in cities (urban areas) and villages (rural areas) in Indonesia. The main locus of this study is in 11 regencies and cities in West Java, a province with the highest ranking of violations of religious freedom in Indonesia for the last two decades (2000–2020). These regencies and cities include: Bekasi Regency, Bekasi City, Bogor Regency, Bogor City, Tasikmalaya Regency, Bandung Regency, Bandung City, Kuningan Regency, Garut Regency, Cianjur Regency and Cimahi City. The (...)
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  19. Persons in community : ubuntu in the global village.Ronald Nicolson - 2008 - In Persons in community: African ethics in a global culture. Scottsville, South Africa: University of KwaZulu-Natal Press.
     
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  20.  28
    Community Conflict and Social Control: Crime and Justice in the Ramsey Abbey Villages.Barbara A. Hanawalt - 1977 - Mediaeval Studies 39 (1):402-423.
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  21.  33
    Use of woodland resources within and across villages in a Zimbabwean communal area.Alois Mandondo - 2001 - Agriculture and Human Values 18 (2):177-194.
    A topical issue in natural resource management is that of scale, in particular, the organizational entry-point to community-based systems of natural resource management. This study investigated access to woodland resources from the perspective of the relevance of units (traditional villages) enjoying policy attention and the nature of boundaries of resource management units as espoused in academic debates. The relevance of the boundaries was investigated from the perspective of flow of resources across boundaries of the recommended units, and resource use relations (...)
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  22. (1 other version)From Village to Global Contexts: Ideas, Types, and the Making of Communities.D. A. Masolo - 2002 - In Philip Alperson, Diversity and Community: An Interdisciplinary Reader. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 88–115.
     
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  23.  21
    Community of Communication" vs. "Global Village.Chris Nagel - 2003 - Glimpse 4:53-57.
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  24.  39
    Village India: Studies in the Little Community.S. C. Dube & McKim Marriott - 1956 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 76 (3):196.
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  25.  12
    Extending the global village: Emotional communication in the online age.Ross Buck - 2014 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 37 (1):79-80.
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  26.  71
    Ethical Challenges that Arise at the Community Interface of Health R esearch: Village R eporters’ Experiences in Western K enya.Tracey Chantler, Faith Otewa, Peter Onyango, Ben Okoth, Frank Odhiambo, Michael Parker & Paul Wenzel Geissler - 2013 - Developing World Bioethics 13 (1):30-37.
    Community Engagement (CE) has been presented by bio-ethicists and scientists as a straightforward and unequivocal good which can minimize the risks of exploitation and ensure a fair distribution of research benefits in developing countries. By means of ethnographic fieldwork undertaken in Kenya between 2007 and 2009 we explored how CE is understood and enacted in paediatric vaccine trials conducted by the Kenyan Medical Research Institute and the US Centers for Disease Control (KEMRI/CDC). In this paper we focus on the role (...)
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  27.  36
    Village Life in Old China; A Community Study of Kao Yao, YünnanVillage Life in Old China; A Community Study of Kao Yao, Yunnan.E. H. S. & Cornelius Osgood - 1963 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 83 (4):526.
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  28.  59
    Village Plaza”—The Idea Study of a Complex Community Scene.Andras Szabo - 2009 - World Futures 65 (5-6):372-382.
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  29.  34
    Turning Queer Villages into Ghost Towns: A Community Perspective on Conversion Therapies.Jason Behrmann & Vardit Ravitsky - 2014 - American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 5 (1):14-16.
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  30. Cross-Boundary Impacts of Ecological Changes on the Livelihood of Communities in three villages in Stung Treng province, Cambodia.Narith Por - 2023 - Cambodia: My Village. Edited by Narith Por.
    The research focused on the cross-boundary impacts of ecological changes on the livelihood of communities in three villages in Stung Treng province, Cambodia. The research objectives were to analyze river ecological changes and their drivers, and to explore the impacts of these changes on the livelihood of the communities. The research was conducted in Kraom, Kaoh Snaeng, and Tonsang villages. The study found that there have been significant changes in the environment of these villages. The fishery resources have (...)
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  31.  15
    It Takes a (Virtual) Village: Exploring the Role of a Career Community to Support Sensemaking As a Proactive Socialization Practice.Darren Good & Kevin Cavanagh - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  32. Rousseau and the Redemptive Mountain Village: The Way of Family, Work, Community, and Love.Mark Cladis - 2001 - Interpretation 29 (1):35-54.
     
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  33.  12
    From a Space of Government to a Place of Politics : Theoretical Exploration of Conditions of ‘Apartment Communities or Villages’. 김현 - 2018 - Journal of the Society of Philosophical Studies 121:149-178.
    이 글의 목적은 ‘아파트 공동체’를 ‘마을 만들기 운동’의 한 유형으로 이해하고, 아파트를 중심으로 마을 공동체를 활성화할 수 있는 이론적⋅실천적 방안을 제안하는 것이다. 이를 위해 이 글은 ‘치안과 통치’, ‘인정’, ‘공동체와 장소’, ‘거버넌스 마을과 계쟁의 마을’이라는 몇 가지 개념 쌍을 주요 분석 도구로 채택한다.BR 이 글은 다음과 같은 논의를 담고 있다. 이글의 2장은 현대 프랑스 철학자 자크랑시에르(J. Rancière)의 개념들에 입각해 한국의 아파트 건설사를 ‘치안’과 ‘통치’의 관철과정으로 규정한다(2). 이 글의 3장은 ‘인정’ 개념을 통해 아파트 공동체의 가능 조건을 철학적으로 탐색한다. 공동체주의자 찰스 테일러(Ch. (...)
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  34.  69
    Digital’nye derevenščiki/digital villagers: Russian online projects from the countryside.Henrike Schmidt - 2011 - Studies in East European Thought 63 (2):95-109.
    The rapid growth of the Russian Internet offers great advantages, especially for geographical and cultural peripheries. Nevertheless, the locational inequality in Internet usage within the country has not yet been bridged. Meanwhile, some Russian villagers living in the countryside have started to ‘blog back’ to the metropolitan centres. How is the Russian village represented in these accounts by digital’nye derevenščiki ? What power relations are characteristic of villagers and townspeople, as they meet in online forums and blogs? The case (...)
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  35.  2
    Inequitable Community Reciprocity in the Kalomba Tradition in Indonesia.Umar Nain - forthcoming - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture:691-705.
    This research aims to analyze and describe the unequal social reciprocity in the kalomba tradition, the implications and sustainability of the kalomba tradition. This research was conducted in Tanah Towa Village, Kajang District, Bulukumba Regency, South Sulawesi, Indonesia. Tanah Towa Village was chosen because the kalomba tradition is still strongly maintained and implemented as a traditional obligation and this tradition is specifically found in Kajang District. This research uses a qualitative approach with an ethnographic strategy. Data collection techniques (...)
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  36.  12
    Fear, Truth, Writing: From Paper Village to Electronic Community.Alison Leigh Brown - 1995 - State University of New York Press.
    This book describes and examines the fear of exposure one faces when creating for cultural consumption.
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  37. Adopt a Dalit village - Ravulapally, India: Annual progress report for the year 2014.Jd Veeraswamy & Gogineni - 2015 - Australian Humanist, The 118:14.
    Veeraswamy, JD; Gogineni, Babu As part of the Adopt a Dalit Village Project the following awareness programs were organized to help bring the Dalits of Ravulapally out of a life of superstition and to point them to a life of scientific temper. This was done through various activities, all of which were aimed to provide an overall boost to the human development of the community, by involving them in their own growth, in such a manner as to build capacity (...)
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  38.  22
    Norm-Supporting Emotions: From Villages to Complex Societies.Cristina Bicchieri & Erik Thulin - 2017 - In Thomas Christiano, Ingrid Creppell & Jack Knight, Morality, Governance, and Social Institutions: Reflections on Russell Hardin. Cham: Springer Verlag. pp. 327-349.
    How do socially imposed rules develop into internalized pro-social codes? In the article “From Bodo Ethics to Distributive Justice”, Russell Hardin discusses one of the central themes of his work: How we “export” social order from a small, insular community to a large, anonymous society. In Bodo’s small village, everyone knows everyone else, interactions are face-to-face, and people live relatively isolated from other communities. In this context, the social norms developed by the community are easily enforceable. But what (...)
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  39.  34
    African Environmental Ethics: Keys to Sustainable Development Through Agroecological Villages.George Middendorf, Joseph Fortunak, Bekele Gutema, Enrico Wensing, John Tharakan, Flordeliz Bugarin & Charles Verharen - 2021 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 34 (3):1-18.
    This essay proposes African-based ethical solutions to profound human problems and a working African model to address those problems. The model promotes sustainability through advanced agroecological and information communication technologies. The essay’s first section reviews the ethical ground of that model in the work of the Senegalese scholar, Cheikh Anta Diop. The essay’s second section examines an applied African model for translating African ethical speculation into practice. Deeply immersed in European and African ethics, Godfrey Nzamujo developed the Songhaï Centers to (...)
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  40.  21
    Taking stock of oral history archives in a village in KwaZulu-Natal province, South Africa: Are preservation and publishing feasible?Acquinatta N. Zimu-Biyela - 2022 - HTS Theological Studies 78 (3).
    In South Africa, the way oral history archives of rural villagers are managed calls for attention as it can limit the inclusivity, visibility, accessibility and socio-economic development of rural communities, especially the younger generation. This article reports on a study that aimed to unpack some of the opportunities and challenges regarding the preservation and publishing of oral history archives faced by a village community in the KwaZulu-Natal province. In addition, the study aimed to determine what the community knew (...)
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  41. Religion and Its Educational Function in the Contemporary Global Village.Ramezan Mhadavi Azadboni - 2024 - Dialogue and Universalism 34 (3):13-24.
    The quality of intersubjective communication in today's world, which is different from the past world, due to the development of communication tools and technology is so wide and deep that spatial distances have become almost unaffected. Then the question arises if we can talk about the educational function of religion in such a world. The general explanation of this function is that the religious educational system realizes educational goals by keeping people away from particular conditions and places which are against (...)
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  42.  30
    From the global village to the pluriverse? 'Other' ethics for cross-cultural qualitative research.Patricia M. Martin & Corrine Glesne - 2002 - Ethics, Place and Environment 5 (3):205 – 221.
    This article, which stems from separate research projects pursued by each author in Oaxaca, Mexico, explores conducting fieldwork through the lenses of community autonomy , and hospitality . Engaging with these concepts made us question how the process of research can contradict cultural ethics that operate within fieldwork locations, as well as consider how such concepts may inform a more ethical set of inquiry practices. Such a set of alternative ethics can provide, furthermore, means for negotiating situations marked by interculturality, (...)
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  43.  12
    Barrio: Photographs From Chicago's Pilsen and Little Village.Paul D'Amato & Stuart Dybek - 2006 - University of Chicago Press.
    A colorful assortment of photographs captures barrio life in Pilsen, Chicago's largest Mexican neighborhood, and in nearby Little Village, revealing the public and private worlds of the inhabitants of the city's Mexican community.
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  44.  26
    Communication Across Maternal Social Networks During England’s First National Lockdown and Its Association With Postnatal Depressive Symptoms.Sarah Myers & Emily H. Emmott - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12:648002.
    Postnatal/postpartum depression (PND/PPD) had a pre-COVID-19 estimated prevalence ranging up to 23% in Europe, 33% in Australia, and 64% in America, and is detrimental to both mothers and their infants. Low social support is a key risk factor for developing PND. From an evolutionary perspective this is perhaps unsurprising, as humans evolved as cooperative childrearers, inherently reliant on social support to raise children. The coronavirus pandemic has created a situation in which support from social networks beyond the nuclear family is (...)
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  45.  26
    Public Health, Visual Rhetoric, and Latin America: Steinbeck’s The Forgotten Village.Sebastian Williams - 2024 - Journal of Medical Humanities 45 (1):1-15.
    This essay analyzes the visualization of Euro-American medicine and indigenous healing in John Steinbeck’s 1941 documentary-drama _The Forgotten Village_. The movie juxtaposes film and medical discourse as exemplifications of modern, visual culture by showing excerpts from hygiene films and foregrounding medical imagery (e.g., bacteria cultures). The film displaces indigenous medicine by privileging a Euro-American medical model, and the gaze of oppression is perpetuated through humanitarian medical intervention. In short, disease is not simply a material fact but embedded in discourses about (...)
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  46.  14
    The End of the Village: Planning the Urbanization of Rural China.Nick R. Smith - 2021 - University of Minnesota Press.
    How China’s expansive new era of urbanization threatens to undermine the foundations of rural life Since the beginning of the twenty-first century, China has vastly expanded its urbanization processes in an effort to reduce the inequalities between urban and rural areas. Centered on the mountainous region of Chongqing, which serves as an experimental site for the country’s new urban development policies, The End of the Village analyzes the radical expansion of urbanization and its consequences for China’s villagers. It reveals (...)
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  47.  59
    Social networks and information access: Implications for agricultural extension in a rice farming community in northern Vietnam. [REVIEW]Lan Anh Hoang, Jean-Christophe Castella & Paul Novosad - 2006 - Agriculture and Human Values 23 (4):513-527.
    Village communities are not homogeneous entities but a combination of complex networks of social relationships. Many factors such as ethnicity, gender, socio-economic status, and power relations determine one’s access to information and resources. Development workers’ inadequate understanding of local social networks, norms, and power relations may further the interests of better-off farmers and marginalize the poor. This paper explores how social networks function as assets for individuals and households in the rural areas of developing countries and influence access (...)
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  48.  19
    The feminisation of poverty: A study of Ndau women of Muchadziya village in Chimanimani Zimbabwe.Terence Mupangwa - 2023 - HTS Theological Studies 79 (3):11.
    Poverty statistics in many countries of the developing world, with Zimbabwe being no exception, continue to show a gender-skewed trend, with women more than men increasingly being more affected. This is worrying, considering the fact that it is women who are the majority, and they carry the brunt of the burden for most household duties. Zimbabwe adopted the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and yet women continue to be hit hard by poverty. This was a qualitative study involving interviews and focus (...)
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  49.  12
    Community Empowerment Under Powerful Government: A Sustainable Tourism Development Path for Cultural Heritage Sites.Beiming Hu, Furong He & Lingshan Hu - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Community participation is the core of sustainable tourism development; however, it encounters obstacles at government-controlled heritage sites in China. This paper examines the status quo of community participation and residents’ empowerment perception through 25 in-depth interviews and 168 questionnaires in the Miao ethnic heritage site of Xijiang Village in southwest China, the findings reveal that: The phenomenon of disempowerment focuses on the political and economic aspects, rather than the social and psychological aspects; Spatial difference affects empowerment perception; and Residents (...)
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  50.  25
    Postnational technollaboration within the postbiotanical village (an Apophenoetic Prophecy).Max Kazemzadeh - 2013 - Technoetic Arts 11 (3):253-261.
    Postnational, or after or more than national, is a world that connects the international with the local. Technollaboration, is how creative digital communities use technology to improve methods and environments for collaboration. Postbiotanical, after or more than biotanical, represents the future of human-centric collectives around farming and urban living and sustainability. Village, is ambiguous and raises the question how large is local, and how does a village-centric view impact the way we treat each other? Art traditionally functions (...)
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