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  • 1
    UID:
    b3kat_BV048273586
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: World Bank E-Library Archive
    Content: Uganda currently hosts th ...
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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  • 2
    UID:
    b3kat_BV048273247
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: World Bank E-Library Archive
    Content: In recent years, the world has seen a sharp rise in violence based on sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI) in countries affected by fragility, conflict and violence (FCV). Today, consensual same-sex sexual acts and other aspects of SOGI remain criminalized in many of the countries experiencing the most pressing humanitarian crises, and those with the largest numbers of refugees and internally displaced people. In light of this, this discussion paper analyzes some of the development and protection challenges that sexual and gender minorities cope with in FCV-affected environments. The paper devotes special attention to the intersections between SOGI-based exclusion and access to basic services; to the challenges experienced by sexual and gender minorities in conditions of forced displacement; and to sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV) as a frequently used weapon against these vulnerable groups. This paper contributes to the evidence base related to the most vulnerable in FCV-affected environments, and knowledge on SOGI-based exclusion vis-a-vis the development-humanitarian-peace nexus
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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  • 3
    UID:
    b3kat_BV049080872
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (43 Seiten)
    Content: Forced displacement has disrupted Syrian refugees' lives and exposed them to new communities and norms. This paper assesses how gender norms shape the lives of Syrian refugee adolescent girls in Jordan, using nationally representative data. Factor analysis is used to summarize a variety of beliefs and behavioral aspects of norms: gender role attitudes, justification of domestic violence, decision making, and mobility. The paper compares these outcomes by sex, nationality, and for adolescents versus adults. It complements the data on individual beliefs and behaviors with family and community beliefs and behaviors as proxies for others' expectations and behaviors. The paper then examines how own, family, and community gender norms relate to two key adolescent outcomes: domestic work and enrollment in school. The findings show that while gender role attitudes are similar across generations and nationalities, Syrian adolescent girls are particularly restricted in their mobility. Nonetheless, they have similar educational outcomes as boys and, after accounting for differences in socioeconomic status, as Jordanian girls. While gender inequality in domestic work is substantial, higher levels of own and mother's decision making predict lower domestic workloads, illustrating the linkages between different dimensions of gender norms and social and economic outcomes
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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  • 4
    UID:
    b3kat_BV048265807
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (37 p)
    Content: Violent conflict, a pervasive feature of the recent global landscape, has lasting impacts on human capital, and these impacts are seldom gender neutral. Death and destruction alter the structure and dynamics of households, including their demographic profiles and traditional gender roles. To date, attention to the gender impacts of conflict has focused almost exclusively on sexual and gender-based violence. The authors show that a far wider set of gender issues must be considered to better document the human consequences of war and to design effective postconflict policies. The emerging empirical evidence is organized using a framework that identifies both the differential impacts of violent conflict on males and females (first-round impacts) and the role of gender inequality in framing adaptive responses to conflict (second-round impacts). War's mortality burden is disproportionately borne by males, whereas women and children constitute a majority of refugees and the displaced. Indirect war impacts on health are more equally distributed between the genders. Conflicts create households headed by widows who can be especially vulnerable to intergenerational poverty. Second-round impacts can provide opportunities for women in work and politics triggered by the absence of men. Households adapt to conflict with changes in marriage and fertility, migration, investments in children's health and schooling, and the distribution of labor between the genders. The impacts of conflict are heterogeneous and can either increase or decrease preexisting gender inequalities. Describing these gender differential effects is a first step toward developing evidence-based conflict prevention and postconflict policy
    Additional Edition: Buvinic, Mayra Violent Conflict and Gender Inequality
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 5
    UID:
    gbv_1851416374
    Format: 1 online resource (239 pages)
    ISBN: 9781000388701
    Series Statement: Routledge Humanitarian Studies
    Content: Cover Page -- Half Title Page -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents Page -- List of figures Page -- List of tables Page -- List of contributors Page -- Foreword Page -- Acknowledgements Page -- List of abbreviations Page -- 1 Leaving no one behind: exploring the experiences of adolescents in humanitarian settings -- 2 'We are not allowed': barriers to Rohingya refugees' educational and economic opportunities -- 3 'We are not accepted here': intersecting vulnerabilities of internally displaced adolescents in Ethiopia -- 4 'There is nothing else to aspire to in our life': exploring the psychosocial wellbeing of married Syrian refugee girls in Lebanon -- 5 'They tell me that I can write and read, so no need for school': challenges in realising international commitments to refugee education in Jordan -- 6 'I no longer have a hope of studying': gender norms, education and wellbeing of refugee girls in Rwanda -- 7 'Why should I stay in the classroom?': drivers of school dropout among stateless Palestinian adolescents in Jordan -- 8 No one should accept a miserable life like that!': exploring the drivers of and entrypoints for reducing violence against adolescent refugees in Gaza -- 9 'It's the fear that is killing us, not the actual disease!': Covid-19: An unfolding crisis for adolescents in humanitarian settings -- 10 Concluding reflections: towards an agenda for policy, practice and research -- Index.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9780367764630
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 9780367764630
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books.
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  • 6
    UID:
    b3kat_BV039981771
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    Content: The Burundi collection provides historical, cultural and economic information on Burundi culture and society, circa 1907-1998. Documents that discuss the colonial period cover important themes including physical geography and material culture, ethnicity and social structure, law and custom, and gender roles and cultural ideals. Other documents deal with political processes and important historical events in the post independence period including the politics of genocide in the Great Lakes region. This includes R. Lemarchand's analysis of the genocide of Hutu by Tutsi in Burundi (1972), of Tutsi and Hutu by Hutu in Rwanda (1994) and of Hutu by Tutsi in Congo (1996-1997). Also included is a book by a professional anthropologist who lived among Burundian Hutu refugees in Tanzania. Malkki focuses on the ways the displacement of these Hutu refugees led to the creation of "essentialist" ethnic identities and the horrible violence generated both in Burundi and neighboring countries
    Note: The Barundi: an ethnological study of German East Africa - Hans Meyer - 1916 -- - The structure of the Barundi community: (Ruanda-Urundi Territory, Central Africa) - George Smets - 1946 -- - The study of native court records as a method of ethnological inquiry - R DeZ. Hall - 1938 -- - Culture Summary: Barundi - Albert Trouwborst - 2010 -- - Women of Burundi: a study of social values - Ethel M. Albert - 1963 -- - Purity and exile: violence, memory, and national cosmology among Hutu refugees in Tanzania - Liisa H. Malkki - 1995 -- - Genocide in the Great Lakes: which genocide? whose genocide? - RenT Lemarchand - 1998
    Language: English
    Subjects: Ethnology
    RVK:
    Keywords: Burundi
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  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Paris : OECD Publishing
    UID:
    gbv_1853063363
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (337 Seiten) , Diagramme
    ISBN: 9789264825833
    Content: OECD countries continue to face persistent gender inequalities in social and economic life. Young women often reach higher levels of education than young men, but remain under-represented in fields with the most lucrative careers. Women spend more time on unpaid work, face a strong motherhood penalty, encounter barriers to entrepreneurship and fare worse in labour markets overall. They are also under-represented in politics and leadership positions in public employment. These elements permeate many policy areas and economic sectors - from international trade and development assistance to energy and the environment - in which policy often lacks a strong gender focus. Violence against women, the most abhorrent manifestation of gender inequality, remains a global crisis. This publication analyses developments and policies for gender equality, such as gender mainstreaming and budgeting, reforms to increase fathers' involvement in parental leave and childcare, pay transparency initiatives to tackle gender pay gaps, and systems to address gender-based violence. It extends the perspective on gender equality to include foreign direct investment, nuclear energy and transport. Advancing gender equality is not just a moral imperative; in times of rapidly ageing populations, low fertility and multiple crises, it will strengthen future gender-equal economic growth and social cohesion
    Note: Women at work in OECD countries -- The labour market integration challenges of Ukrainian refugee women -- Global goals in gender equality -- Improving policy implementation to end gender-based violence -- Foreword -- Gender gaps in Vocational Education and Training (VET) and adult learning -- Governance tools and evidence to promote inclusive decision making -- Gender equality in public leadership -- Gender balance in the nuclear sector -- Mainstreaming gender equality -- Tax systems and gender -- Gender differences in financial literacy and resilience -- Supporting equal parenting: Paid parental leave -- Addressing gender disparities in access to finance for business creation -- Gender gaps in entrepreneurship remain -- Gender differences in career expectations and feminisation of the teaching profession -- Women entrepreneurs and international trade -- Ensuring the availability, quality and affordability of childcare -- The gender wage gap and the role of firms -- Gender diversity in energy -- The gender gap in school engagement and retention -- Harnessing foreign direct investment for gender equality -- Gender mainstreaming in environmental policies -- Assessing gender equality in transport policies -- Pay transparency to close the gender wage gap -- Participation and performance of girls and boys in education -- Women and the social economy -- Executive summary -- Gender gaps in asset-backed pension arrangements -- Gender diversity on boards and in senior management -- Systems and legal frameworks to address gender-based violence -- Legal frameworks, institutional design and strategic planning for gender mainstreaming -- The potential of digitalisation for women's economic empowerment in MENA countries -- Improving gender equality in public employment -- Teleworking through a gender lens.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9789264757721
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9789264728011
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9789264672833
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Agir ensemble pour l'égalité des genres (version abrégée) : Quelles priorités ? ISBN 9789264729100
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9789264942424
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9789264702035
    Language: English
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    London : I.B. Tauris | London : Bloomsbury Publishing (UK)
    UID:
    gbv_1880852411
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (208 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed
    ISBN: 9780755644834
    Content: Based on four years of field research in Palestinian camps in Jordan - including unique interviews with Palestinian refugee women, aid workers, and representatives of international organisations and NGOs in Jordan - the book reveals the extraordinary layers of discrimination suffered by Palestinian women from Syria displaced to Jordan. The women's experiences show them caught between settler colonialism, militarism, nationalism, refugees' global governance and gender regimes that subjected them to multiple forms of structural gender-based violence. The book argues for a feminist analysis of settler colonialism's epistemic violence of anti-Palestinianism to expose the history and geopolitics of intersecting oppressive systems that work through and upon gendered bodies of Palestinian refugee women in humanitarian settings. The book also highlights how local women's groups and frontline workers attempt to fill service gaps. Using a rich theoretical lens to understand the experiences of women in refugee camps, this book attempts to decolonise issues around migration, displacement, refugees and women. Previous work on the Syrian refugee crisis has overlooked the very particular experiences of Palestinian refugee women, which has weakened feminist analysis of gendered processes of humanitarianism, and feminist transnational and intersectional solidarity. This book offers a vital critique of how feminists' adoption of a universality-based analysis of the Syrian refugee crisis has contributed to the further marginalisation of Palestinian refugee women from Syria
    Note: Acknowledgement Introduction: Anti-Palestinianism: Epistemic Violence of Settler Colonialism Chapter1: Nakba: A Juncture-Point In History - Gender & Displacement. Chapter 2: Legacy of Jordan's Entanglement with the Settler-Colonial Project in Palestine. Chapter 3: Governance of Refugees: Life-long Precarity and Anti-Palestinian Policies. Chapter 4: The Palestinian Condition: Gendering Multiplicities of Dispossession. Chapter 5: Masculinist Manoeuvring: Doing Gender or Righting Wrongs. Chapter 6: Multi-Layered Misrecognition, Claims for Justice, and GBV. Conclusion: Epistemic Violence, Intersectionality and Decoloniality of Feminist Knowledge. References.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9780755644803
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9780755644810
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9780755644827
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9780755644841
    Language: English
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  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    [London, England] : Zed Books | [London, England] : Bloomsbury Publishing
    UID:
    gbv_1801651833
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (252 Seiten)
    Edition: First edition
    Edition: Also published in print
    ISBN: 9780755639021 , 0755639022 , 9780755639007 , 9780755639014 , 9780755638994
    Content: "Recent years have seen increased scholarly and media interest in the movement of LGBTIQ+ persons, particularly those seeking protection in Europe and North America. While this has helped focus attention on the plight of individuals facing persecution, it has also reinvigorated racist tropes about sexual or gender rights in the Global South. In the case of Africa, the existence of anti-LGBTIQ+ laws and the prevalence of hetero-patriarchal discourses are regularly cited as evidence of the continent's inescapable savagery. Colonial notions of an uncivilised continent in need of salvation have been repackaged and repurposed for the twenty-first century, with LGBTIQ+ migrants serving as the ultimate case in point"--
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index , Introduction -- 1.ATTRIBUTION ORDER? - Framing African Queer and Trans Mobilities: Absences, Presences and Challenges -- Complicating Migration Narratives -- 2.Yara Ahmed - Labyrinthine Wanderings: Queering Mobility in Impossible Geographies -- 3.John Marnell - Telling a Different Story: On the Politics of Representing African LGBTQ Migrants, Refugees and Asylum Seekers -- 4.Caio Simöes de Araüjo - Along the Pink Corridor: Histories of Queer Mobility Between Maputo and Johannesburg (Ca. 1900-2020) -- Barriers to Protection: Ethical, Procedural and Legal Challenges -- 5.Agathe Menetrier - An Ethical Dilemma: When Research becomes 'Expert Testimony' -- 6.Marien Gouyon - 'Sheep in a Pen': How the Externalisation of EU Borders Impacts the Lives of Gay Refugees in Morocco -- 7.Charlotte Walker-Said - Homophobia as Public Violence: Politics, Religion, Identity and Rights in the Lives of Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Asylum Seekers from Cameroon -- The Digital and the Transnational -- 8.Godfried Asante - 'Where is Home?' -- Negotiating Comm(unity) and Un/Belonging Among Queer African Migrants on Facebook -- 9.B Camminga - What is Private about 'Private Parts'? On Navigating the Violence of the Digital African Trans Refugee Archive -- 10.Gonca Sahin - Ties that Matter: Queer Ways of Surviving a Transit Country -- Bordering in Action: Identity, Belonging and Wellbeing -- 11.Emanuel Munyarukumbuzi, Margaret Jjuuko and James Maingi Gathatwa - 'Kindness is a Distant and Elusive Reality': Charting the Impacts of Discrimination on the Mental and Sexual Wellbeing of LGBT Refugee Youth in Kenya -- 12.Verena Hucke - Differential Movements: Lesbian Migrant Women's Encounters with, and Negotiations of, South Africa's Border Regime -- 13.Florent Chossiëre - Debunking the Liberation Narrative: Rethinking Queer Migration and Asylum to France , Also published in print
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9780755638987
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe
    Language: English
    Keywords: Subsaharisches Afrika ; LGBT ; Mobilität ; Electronic books ; Aufsatzsammlung
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  • 10
    UID:
    gbv_1877047384
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (384 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed
    ISBN: 9781350349193
    Series Statement: Bloomsbury Handbooks
    Content: This book is the first international reference work to showcase the diversity of ways of using Bourdieu's sociological toolkit in educational research. Written by scholars based in Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Indonesia, Hong Kong, the UK, and the USA, the handbook provides a unique and cutting-edge picture of how Bourdieu has been both used and adapted in educational research globally. The book will be useful for those who may only have a cursory knowledge of Bourdieu's tools as well as those who are already familiar with Bourdieu's work. The chapters cover a wide range of topics including educational leadership, teacher preparation, space/place, educational policy, literacy education, marginalised students, and student mobility
    Note: Introduction: Applying Bourdieu in Educational Research, Garth Stahl (University of Queensland, Australia), Guanglun Michael Mu (University of South Australia, Australia), Pere Ayling (University of Suffolk, UK), Elliott Weininger (SUNY, USA) Part I: Advancing Bourdieu's Conceptual Models 1. Multiplicity and Educational Reproduction: Building the Intersection of Social Structures into Bourdieu's Model, Will Atkinson (University of Bristol, UK) 2. An Invitation to Bourdieusian Space Analysis: Applying Pierre Bourdieu's Theory to Geospatial Research in Education, Ee-Seul Yoon (University of Manitoba, Canada) 3. Coupling Bourdieu and Barad: Exploring the Vitality of Cross-Cutting Conceptual Meetings, Pamela Burnard (University of Cambridge, UK) and Garth Stahl (University of Queensland, Australia) 4. Bourdieu and Sayad's Multilingual Disposition and Practical Research Skills: Postmonolingual Theorising as a Method of Transknowledging, Michael Singh and LI Xiao Lí (Western Sydney University, Australia) 5. From Symbolic Domination to the Coloniality of Power: Contributions to the Study of Educational Inequalities, Joel Windle (University of South Australia, Australia) and Gabriel Nascimento (Universidade Federal do Sul da Bahia, Brazil) Part II: Critiquing Habitus in Educational Research 6. The Examination-Driven Education and the Examination Habitus, Yi Huang (Guangdong University of Foreign Studies, China) 7. Theorising the Practice of Educational Assessment in the Field of Higher Education: Why Introducing and Developing the Concept of Assessment Capital Is of Pivotal Importance?, Fuad Arif Fudiyartanto (Sunan Kalijaga State Islamic University, Indonesia) and Stephen Dobson (Central Queensland University in Queensland, Australia) 8. The Role of Narrative Inquiry in Understanding Habitus Formation and STEM Learner Identities, Yating Hu (University of Queensland, Australia) 9. The Instability of Becoming a Teacher: The Interactions Between Habitus and Field in Teacher Preparation, Stephanie C. Sanders-Smith (University of Illinois, USA) 10. The Field of Educational Reform Pedagogy: Shifting Novice Science Teachers' Habitus to Transform Instructional Practices, Heather McPherson (McGill University, Canada) Part III: Problematising Classification, Symbolic Violence and Misrecognition 11. Bourdieu as an Education Consultant: A Sociological Inquiry into Hong Kong's Stratified Education System, Aaron Koh (The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong) 12. Towards a Different Kind of Social Distinction? Educational Refusal and the Low Desire Youth Subculture in Contemporary China, Jinting Wu (University at Buffalo, USA) 13. Symbolic Violence and the Classroom, Cecilia Muldoon and Carol Fuller (University of Reading, UK) 14. Misrecognition, the "Science of Reading," and the Ongoing Struggle for the Legitimate Discourse of the Field of Reading Education, Lara J. Handsfield (Illinois State University, USA), Deborah MacPhee (Illinois State University, USA) and Patricia C. Paugh (University of Massachusetts, USA) Part IV: Bourdieu and Intersectional Theorizing: Class, Gender, and Race 15. Class Notes: Drawing on Bourdieu's Theories in Writing an Analytic Autoethnography, Mary Jane Curry (University of Rochester, USA) 16. Bourdieu, Reflexivity and Educational Research: Deciphering the Self in Researching Working-Class Girlhood and Social Mobility, Sarah McDonald (University of South Australia, Australia) 17. Educating/ion for Change? School, Sex and Surfing Research With Bourdieu, lisahunter (Monash University, Australia) 18. Biting Back at Educational Leadership Scholarship through Feminist Advancements of Bourdieu, Jane Wilkinson (Monash University, Australia) and Katrina MacDonald (Deakin University, Australia) 19. Female Refugee Students Seeking 'Distinction' in Higher Education: Gendered Aspirations and Rethinking How Habitus Informs Practice, Hannah Soong (University of South Australia, Australia) 20. The Invisible Barriers of Structured and Structuring Structures for Marginalised Students and Academics in Higher Education, Troy Heffernan (University of Manchester, UK) 21. Expanding Bourdieu's Habitus to Race: 'Racialised Habitus' in Homology of Fields, Dan Cui (Brock University, Canada) Part V: Bourdieu, Mobilities and Global Educational Inequalities 22. Researching Global Policy Trends through English Language Education in a Global South Context Using Bourdieu's 'Thinking Tools', Md. Maksud Ali (University of Dundee, UK), Ian Hardy, M. Obaidul Hamid and Bob Lingard (University of Queensland, Australia) 23. Researching Language Ideologies and Researcher's Participant Objectivation: The Case of French in Canada, Sylvie Roy (University of Calgary, Canada) 24. Using Bourdieu in International Student Mobility Research: Past, Present, and Future Directions, Benjamin Mulvey (University of Glasgow, UK) and Jihyun Lee (Ulster University, UK) 25. Learning, Teaching, and Researching With Bourdieu: A Collaborative Reflection on Bourdieusian Encounters, Matthew A.M. Thomas (University of Glasgow, UK) and Elisabeth E. Lefebvre (Bethel University, USA) 26. Bourdieu and the Sociology of Educational Qualifications, Quentin Maire (University of Melbourne, Australia)
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781350349162
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781350349179
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781350349186
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781350349209
    Language: English
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