%0 Book %T Science and Politics: An A to Z Guide to Issues and Controversies %A Brent S. Steel %I CQ Press %G eng %U http://www.sagepub.in/books/Book239100?subject=G00&publisher=%2522CQ%2520Press%2522&sortBy=defaultPubDate%2520desc&pageTitle=productsSearch %0 Book Section %B Grassroots Activisms: Public Rhetorics in Localized Contexts. %D 2024 %T Resisting Extraction of the Scared: Indigenous-Based Grassroots Resistance to Frontier Capitalism %A Whitebear, Luhui %A Pebbles, Kenlea %A Gasteyer, Stephen %B Grassroots Activisms: Public Rhetorics in Localized Contexts. %I Ohio State University Press %G eng %& 7 %0 Journal Article %J Social Text %D 2023 %T Already Presumed Dead %A Natchee Barnd %K ethnic studies %K Indigenous studies %K red natural history %B Social Text %G eng %U https://socialtextjournal.org/periscope_article/already-presumed-dead/ %0 Journal Article %J Field Methods %D 2023 %T Duo-ethnographic Methods: A Feminist Take on Collaborative Research %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Field Methods %V 35 %8 03/2023 %G eng %0 Book %D 2023 %T The Ethnographic Case: Telling Stories, Shaping Knowledge %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Annual Review of Anthropology %D 2023 %T Global Health Interventions: The Military, The Magic Bullet, The Deterministic Model—and Intervention Otherwise %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Annual Review of Anthropology %V 52 %8 07/2023 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Marine Policy %D 2023 %T The importance of the seafood processing sector to coastal community resilience %A Lori A Cramer %A Jennifer Beaullieu %A Jamie Doyle %A Marta Maria Maldonado %A Hillary Egna %A Maria Johnson %A Flaxen DL Conway %X

Coastal communities face a myriad of social, economic, and ecological facets that affect their well-being and resilience capacity. For those places dependent on commercial fishing, resilience includes the processing sector of the seafood industry. Yet, there is a dearth of knowledge and understanding of the contribution of the seafood processing workforce to coastal community resilience. This study incorporates secondary data and collects new data through semi-structured interviews. The first set of interviews were collected with sector workers and leaders, and with coastal community leaders, in two Oregon counties. To supplement this data, interviews were conducted with knowledgeable sector contacts in New England and Norway. All interviews were conducted to contextualize perceptions of the seafood processing sector and resiliency within coastal communities. Analyses revealed three overarching themes related to the importance of the product, the work and workforce, and the seafood processing sector to the community. Results and discussion elaborate on the symbiotic connections between policy, management, and socio-cultural dependence of seafood processing to coastal community resilience.

%B Marine Policy %V 156 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2023 %T Introduction: Citation Practices in Medical Anthropology %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Ethnic Studies Review %D 2023 %T Mobilities and Ethnic Studies: A Roundtable Discussion %A Michelle Vasquez Ruiz %A Nisha Toomey %A Irit Katz %A Sean Fraga %A Genevieve Carpio %A Laura Barraclough %A Natchee Barnd %B Ethnic Studies Review %V 46 %P 128-154 %G eng %U https://online.ucpress.edu/esr/article/46/3/128/197699/Mobilities-and-Ethnic-StudiesA-Roundtable %N 3 %R https://doi.org/10.1525/esr.2023.46.3.128 %0 Journal Article %J American Indian Culture & Research Journal %D 2023 %T Pen of Molten Fire: Dr. Haunani-Kay Trask’s Writing as Indigenous Resistance %A Whitebear, Luhui %X

For Indigenous Pacific peoples, including those from islands and from coastal regions, it is the ocean that carries our stories through the currents. This article centers Haunani-Kay Trask’s work and the Pacific not as a place of separation but as a place of connection among Indigenous people using Kānaka Maoli and Coastal Chumash people as examples. Trask’s poetry and other literary work is discussed as a form of Indigenous resistance alongside personal narrative to thread the stories together, highlighting the ways in which militarization and other settler colonial practices have been used to limit the sovereign rights of Indigenous people.

%B American Indian Culture & Research Journal %V 46 %P 115-128 %G eng %U https://escholarship.org/uc/item/00s0645z %N 1 %& 115 %R https://doi.org/10.17953/aicrj.46.1.whitebear %0 Book Section %B Eating Beside Ourselves: Thresholds of Food and Bodies. %D 2023 %T The Placenta: An Ethnographic Analysis of Nourishing Relations.” %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Eating Beside Ourselves: Thresholds of Food and Bodies. %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Feminist Formations %D 2023 %T Resisting the Settler Gaze: California Indigenous Feminisms %A Whitebear, Luhui %X

The settler gaze has created the conditions in which Indigenous women and Two-Spirit people experience high levels of violence both historically and in current times. This essay analyzes California Indigenous feminist resistance to the violences in the mission impacted region of the Californias. Toypurina, Bárbara Gandiaga, and Yaquenonsat are discussed as examples of California Indigenous feminist resistance to settler colonial systems that contributed to the murdered and missing Indigenous women, girl, and Two-Spirit (MMIWG2S+) crisis during their time period. These historic California Indigenous women are then compared with current efforts to address the MMIWG2S+ crisis in California and beyond. Counter-colonial Indigenous intergenerational storytelling is used as a methodology to read these stories and the settler records in order to resist the settler gaze.

%B Feminist Formations %V 35 %P 97-116 %G eng %U https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/1/article/902068 %N 1 %& 97 %R 10.1353/ff.2023.a902068 %0 Book Section %B Oceans and Society: An Introduction to Marine Studies. %D 2023 %T Social Justice in Coastal Spaces. %A Marta Maria Maldonado %A Bradley Boovy %K ability %K coasts %K gender %K oppression %K power %K race/ethnicity %K social class %K space %X

The impacts of ecological change in coastal spaces, and the costs and benefits of different forms of human intervention on the coast, are not equally distributed among the human population. Instead, who benefits and suffers from what takes place on the coast is, to a great extent, a reflection of routine social relations that are hierarchical and complex. For this reason, questions of social inequality and social justice are integral and pertinent to the study of the human dimensions of marine environments and coastal areas. In this chapter, we introduce a conceptual and analytical toolkit to identify research concerns and formulate research questions related to “social relations of power in coastal spaces”, and to allow students to envision the value of research collaborations between marine scientists, social scientists, and scholars in the humanities. Anchored in anti-racist feminist perspectives, we outline an approach to marine studies that pays attention to the interdependencies between humans and oceans/coasts, while pushing for consideration of social justice concerns within the context of social impacts.

%B Oceans and Society: An Introduction to Marine Studies. %I Routledge %C New York %P 193-208 %G eng %& 12 %0 Generic %D 2023 %T Solicited Commentary %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Anthropology of Work Review %D 2022 %T Bloodwork: Circulatory Disorders, Immunity, and the Scarring of Systems %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Anthropology of Work Review %8 11/2022 %G eng %N 43 %0 Generic %D 2022 %T On Data Sovereignty, Counter Colonial Storytelling, and Indigenous Resistance: An Interview with Luhui Whitebear %A Whitebear, Luhui %G eng %U https://ccdigitalpress.org/book/ddvs/chapters/whitebear.html %0 Book Section %B The Routledge Companion to Gender and the American West %D 2022 %T Drifting across Lines in the Sand: Unsettled Records and the Restoration of Cultural Memories in Indigenous California %A Whitebear, Luhui %X

This chapter discusses the impacts of shifting settler colonial nations on Indigenous California in the making of the West. The roles of the Spanish mission system, the construction of the Californio identity, and the violent transformation of California into the “American West,” of the United States are described as colonial waves that disrupted existing Indigenous ways of being. This 80-year period set the stage for numerous impacts on gender identity in Indigenous California, especially in the areas impacted by the Spanish missions. The chapter further examines the role of women and Two-Spirit people in the restoration of cultural memories and reclamation of Indigenous identity in California in current times. By using rhetorical analysis, this chapter contributes to the unsettling of colonial records in California by Indigenous scholars.

%B The Routledge Companion to Gender and the American West %I Routledge %@ 9781351174282 %G eng %U https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/edit/10.4324/9781351174282-5/drifting-across-lines-sand-luhui-whitebear?context=ubx&refId=9df42fc6-487e-4300-8d0c-2f12808144f5 %& 3 %0 Journal Article %J Feminist Anthropology %D 2022 %T Duoethnography as Transformative Praxis: Conversations about Nourishment and Coercion in the COVID-era Academy %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Feminist Anthropology %V 3 %8 04/2022 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Urban Geography %D 2022 %T Installing Indigenous Geographies %A Natchee Barnd %B Urban Geography %V 44 %G eng %N 2 %R https://doi.org/10.1080/02723638.2022.2129717 %0 Journal Article %J Mobilities %D 2022 %T Mobilizing Indigeneity and Race Within and Against Settler Colonialism %A Genevieve Carpio %A Natchee Barnd %A Laura Barraclough %B Mobilities %V 17 %P 1-17 %8 01/2022 %G eng %U https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/rmob20 %N 2 %R https://doi.org/10.1080/17450101.2021.2004078 %0 Book Section %B How to Make the Body: Difference, Identity, and Embodiment %D 2022 %T “Penis-bodied Specimen in the Exhibit Körperwelten ('Body Worlds')” %A Sebastian Heiduschke %B How to Make the Body: Difference, Identity, and Embodiment %I Bloomsbury %P 103-18. %G eng %0 Generic %D 2022 %T The Politics and Practices of Representing Bodies in Capitalism: A Discussion about Public Health in Mexico and Beyond %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Generic %D 2022 %T On the Power and Nourishment of Multidisciplinary Inquiry: Remembering Adele H. Hite %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Generic %D 2022 %T War on Hunger, War on Women: Anti-Abortion Politics in Nutrition Science and Policy %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Book Section %B Women Worldwide:Transnational Feminist Perspectives %D 2022 %T Women and Environmental Politics %A Whitebear, Luhui %B Women Worldwide:Transnational Feminist Perspectives %7 2 %I Oregon State University %G eng %U https://open.oregonstate.education/womenworldwide/chapter/environmental-politics/ %& 10 %0 Journal Article %J People and Nature %D 2022 %T Words are monuments: Patterns in US national park place names perpetuate settler colonial mythologies including white supremacy %A Bonnie McGill %A Natchee Barnd %A Grace Wu %A Steph Borrelle %A Jonathan Koch %A Kurt Ingeman %B People and Nature %P 1-18 %G eng %R 10.1002/pan3.10302 %0 Journal Article %J Spark: A 4C4Equality Journal %D 2021 %T 2020 & the Elections Can’t Stop Us: Hashtagging Change through Indigenous Activism %A Whitebear, Luhui %X

The year is 2020. It is 528 years since the invasion of the Americas began in 1492. We are in a 500+ year crisis in which Indigenous women have been targeted systematically by colonizers. There are countless women who have been added to the 500+ year long list of what is now referred to as Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women (MMIW). The master narrative tells us that Indigenous women and Two-Spirit people are deserving of violence and are a threat to the colonial nations. Indigenous teachings tell us that our worlds cannot exist without them. Here, in 2020, it is Indigenous women and queer activists that are on the frontlines of this crisis. We lead searches, reunite families, help care for the dead, teach students and community what the root cause is, and advocate politically at the federal and state for systematic change. Armed with prayer, hashtags, political bills, and the strength of our ancestors, MMIW is much more than a political movement. MMIW is a movement towards healing.

%B Spark: A 4C4Equality Journal %G eng %U https://sparkactivism.com/volume-3-call/hashtagging-change-through-indigenous-activism/ %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Social and Personal Relationships %D 2021 %T Affection deprivation during the COVID-19 pandemic: A panel study %A Colin Hesse %A Alan Mikkelson %A Xi Tian %B Journal of Social and Personal Relationships %V 38 %P 2965-2984 %G eng %N 10 %0 Journal Article %J Communication Monographs %D 2021 %T Affectionate communication and health: A meta-analysis %A Colin Hesse %A Kory Floyd %A Steve Rains %A Alan Mikkelson %A Perry Pauley %A Nate Woo %A Benjamin Custer %A Kaylin Duncan %B Communication Monographs %V 88 %P 194-218 %G eng %N 2 %0 Generic %D 2021 %T Combating QAnon Conspiracies with Social Welfare Programs %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Book Section %B Managing Chronicity in Unequal States: Ethnographic Perspectives on Caring %D 2021 %T Foreword %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Managing Chronicity in Unequal States: Ethnographic Perspectives on Caring %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Rhetoric Review: Symposium: Diversity is not Enough: Mentorship and Community-Building as Antiracist Praxis %D 2021 %T Interlocking Communities of Care: A BIPOC Map Through Academia %A Whitebear, Luhui %B Rhetoric Review: Symposium: Diversity is not Enough: Mentorship and Community-Building as Antiracist Praxis %V 40 %G eng %N 3 %R 10.1080/07350198.2021.1935157 %0 Web Page %D 2021 %T Lives Depend on Ethnic Studies %A Natchee Barnd %B Visible Magazine %G eng %U https://visiblemagazine.com/lives-depend-on-ethnic-studies/ %0 Generic %D 2021 %T OPB Interview: As land acknowledgments become more common, Indigenous people grapple with next steps %A Whitebear, Luhui %A Black Elk, Rachel %G eng %U https://www.opb.org/article/2021/12/08/as-land-acknowledgments-become-more-common-indigenous-people-grapple-with-next-steps/ %0 Web Page %D 2021 %T Permissions are Not Forthcoming %A Natchee Barnd %K architecture %K e-flux %K environment* %K Guggenheim %K Indigenous art %K survivance %B e-flux Architecture and Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum %7 Survivance %G eng %U https://www.e-flux.com/architecture/survivance/397847/editorial-permissions-are-not-forthcoming/ %0 Book Section %B Transformative Approaches to Social Justice Education %D 2021 %T Reflections on Race/Ethnicity, Gender, and Labor in the Latinx Studies Classroom. %A Marta Maria Maldonado %X

Critical pedagogy is about interrupting in the classroom the work accomplished by dominant ideologies, helping students learn and unlearn. By the time students arrive at the typical neoliberal university classroom, most have been socialized into racialized and classed tales disguised as fundamental social truths. They’ve come to imagine capitalism as the norm, and a sensible economic system, with the freedom to buy as a fundamental mark of democracy. Many have bought into notions of meritocracy – each person will land a place in the socioeconomic order based on their talents and ability, according to how hard they work. People at the bottom rungs of the economy are there due to their lack of capacity or effort investment. Many have learned to distrust labor unions and have a vague sense of the politics of labor. This chapter draws from my classroom experiences teaching about Latinx work in the United States, to first, explore how students think about race/ethnicity, class, and labor, and the connections and disconnections between them, and second, to discuss some strategies to get students to think critically about their own lives as racialized, gendered, and classed, connections between different types of work, and the importance of labor activism.

%B Transformative Approaches to Social Justice Education %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Communication Quarterly %D 2021 %T Relational and health correlates of excessive affection %A Colin Hesse %A Alan Mikkelson %B Communication Quarterly %V 69 %P 320-340 %G eng %N 3 %0 Book Section %B Transformative Approaches to Social Justice Education: Equity and Access in the College Classrooms %D 2021 %T Scripting Change: The Social Justice Tour of Corvallis %A Natchee Barnd %E Nana Osei-Kofi %E Bradley Boovy %E Kali Furman %K cultural geography %K ethnic studies %K pedagogy %K research %B Transformative Approaches to Social Justice Education: Equity and Access in the College Classrooms %I Routledge %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Revista Lengua y Cultura %D 2021 %T Teststrategien im virtuellen Deutschunterricht %A Sebastian Heiduschke %B Revista Lengua y Cultura %V 2 %P 80-89 %G eng %N 4 %R https://doi.org/10.29057/lc.v2i4.6933 %0 Generic %D 2021 %T The US Needs the Help of Climate Migrants %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Book Section %B Women and Religion: Global Lives in Focus %D 2021 %T Women and Religion in North America %A Furman, Kali %A Venable, Jennifer %A Mae, Leida (LK) %A Whitebear, Luhui %A Lambert, Rebecca J %B Women and Religion: Global Lives in Focus %I ABC-CLIO %P 1-36 %@ 9781440871962 %G eng %& 1 %0 Magazine Article %D 2020 %T 5 Myths about the Protests in Portland %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Ms Magazine %8 July 28 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Cogn Res Princ Implic %D 2020 %T Adapting implementation science for higher education research: the systematic study of implementing evidence-based practices in college classrooms. %A Soicher, Raechel N %A Kathryn A. Becker-Blease %A Bostwick, Keiko C P %K Cognitive Science %K Education, Professional %K Evidence-Based Practice %K Humans %K Implementation Science %K Translational Medical Research %K Universities %X

Finding better ways to implement effective teaching and learning strategies in higher education is urgently needed to help address student outcomes such as retention rates, graduation rates, and learning. Psychologists contribute to the science and art of teaching and learning in higher education under many flags, including cognitive psychology, science of learning, educational psychology, scholarship of teaching and learning in psychology, discipline-based educational research in psychology, design-based implementation research, and learning sciences. Productive, rigorous collaboration among researchers and instructors helps. However, translational research and practice-based research alone have not closed the translation gap between the research laboratory and the college classroom. Fortunately, scientists and university faculty can draw on the insights of decades of research on the analogous science-to-practice gap in medicine and public health. Health researchers now add to their toolbox of translational and practice-based research the systematic study of the process of implementation in real work settings directly. In this article, we define implementation science for cognitive psychologists as well as educational psychologists, learning scientists, and others with an interest in use-inspired basic cognitive research, propose a novel model incorporating implementation science for translating cognitive science to classroom practice in higher education, and provide concrete recommendations for how use-inspired basic cognitive science researchers can better understand those factors that affect the uptake of their work with implementation science.

%B Cogn Res Princ Implic %V 5 %P 54 %8 2020 11 05 %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1186/s41235-020-00255-0 %0 Generic %D 2020 %T Advocacy Letters %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Generic %D 2020 %T Air-Pollution Hacks Cannot Address Political Failure %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Generic %D 2020 %T Anthropologists Respond to The Lancet EAT Commission %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Anthropology and Humanism %D 2020 %T Antihero Care: On Fieldwork and Anthropology %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Anthropology and Humanism %V 45 %8 10/2020 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Applied Cognitive PsychologyApplied Cognitive PsychologyAppl Cognit Psychol %D 2020 %T Assessing structure building in college classrooms at scale %A Soicher, Raechel N. %A Kathryn A. Becker-Blease %K higher education %K measurement %K reader ability %K structure building %K translational science %X Summary Structure building refers to the way in which people construct meaning from incoming information by creating a foundation of mental nodes, mapping incoming information to the foundational structure, and shifting to a new structure when necessary. Structure building ability has been shown to moderate learning both in laboratory-based and classroom-based research (e.g., use of outlines for effective note-taking and course final grades, respectively). However, measurement of structure building can be resource intensive. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate a shortened, scalable measure of structure building (developed by a textbook publisher) in a real-world context. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that this tool, embedded in the online ancillary materials accompanying a textbook, can be used to measure a variable that is relevant to students' learning in introductory psychology courses. %B Applied Cognitive PsychologyApplied Cognitive PsychologyAppl Cognit Psychol %V 34 %P 747 - 753 %8 2020/05/01 %@ 0888-4080 %G eng %U https://doi.org/10.1002/acp.3643 %N 3 %! Applied Cognitive Psychology %0 Journal Article %J The ADVANCE Journal %D 2020 %T Attending to Silence %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B The ADVANCE Journal %V 2 %8 12/2020 %G eng %0 Book Section %B Transnational German Studies %D 2020 %T Co-Producing World Cinema: Germany and Transnational Film Production %A Sebastian Heiduschke %K Germany -- Civilization %K Transnationalism %X

"This volume consists of a series of essays, written by leading scholars within the field, demonstrating the types of inquiry that can be pursued into the transnational realities underpinning German-language culture and history as these travel right around the globe. Contributions discuss the inherent cross-pollination of different languages, times, places and notions of identity within German-language cultures and the ways in which their construction and circulation cannot be contained by national or linguistic borders. In doing so, it is not the aim of the volume to provide a compendium of existing transnational approaches to German Studies or to offer its readers a series of survey chapters on different fields of study to date. Instead, it offers novel research-led chapters that pose a question, a problem or an issue through which contemporary and historical transcultural and transnational processes can be seen at work. Accordingly, each essay isolates a specific area of study and opens it up for exploration, providing readers, especially student readers, not just with examples of transnational phenomena in German language cultures but also with models of how research in these areas can be configured and pursued. Contributors: Angus Nicholls, Anne Fuchs, Benedict Schofield, Birgit Lang, Charlotte Ryland, Claire Baldwin, Dirk Weissmann, Elizabeth Anderson, James Hodkinson, Nicholas Baer, Paulo Soethe, Rebecca Braun, Sara Jones, Sebastian Heiduschke, Stuart Taberner and Ulrike Draesner"--

%B Transnational German Studies %I Liverpool University Press %C Liverpool %P 133-150 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2020 %T The Cruelty of War: Repairing COVID-19 Through Healing and Care %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Medical Anthropology %D 2020 %T Cultures of Nutrition: Classification, Food Policy, and Health %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Medical Anthropology %8 12/2020 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Cartographica %D 2020 %T Decolonizing the Map: Recentering Indigenous Mappings %A Natchee Barnd %A Reuben Rose-Redwood %A Annita Hetoevėhotohke’e Lucchesi %A Sharon Dias %A Wil Patrick %K decolonization %K geography %K indigenous %K mapping %B Cartographica %V 55 %P 151-162 %G eng %N 3 %& 151 %R https://doi.org/10.3138/cart.53.3.intro %0 Book Section %B Persistence is Resistance: Celebrating 50 Years of Gender, Women & Sexuality Studies %D 2020 %T Disrupting Systems of Oppression by Re-centering Indigenous Feminisms %A Whitebear, Luhui %B Persistence is Resistance: Celebrating 50 Years of Gender, Women & Sexuality Studies %I University of Washington %G eng %U https://uw.pressbooks.pub/happy50thws/chapter/disrupting-systems-of-oppression-by-re-centering-indigenous-feminisms/ %& 17 %0 Generic %D 2020 %T Don’t Reopen the Economy Until it is Safe to Reopen Schools %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Transl Issues Psychol Sci %D 2020 %T Four Empirically Based Reasons Not to Administer Time-Limited Tests. %A Gernsbacher, Morton Ann %A Soicher, Raechel N %A Kathryn A. Becker-Blease %X

For more than a century, measurement experts have distinguished between time-limited tests and untimed power tests, which are administered without time limits or with time limits so generous that all students are assured of completing all items. On untimed power tests, students can differ in their propensity to correctly respond to every item, and items should differ in how many correct responses they elicit. However, differences among students' speed of responding do not confound untimed power tests; therefore, untimed power tests ensure more accurate assessment. In this article, we present four empirically based reasons to administer untimed power tests rather than time-limited tests in educational settings. (1) Time-limited tests are less valid; students' test-taking pace is not a valid reflection of their knowledge and mastery. (2) Time-limited tests are less reliable; estimates of time-limited tests' reliability are artificially inflated due to artifactual consistency in students' rate of work rather than authentic consistency in students' level of knowledge. (3) Time-limited tests are less inclusive; time-limited tests exclude students with documented disabilities who, because they are legally allowed additional test-taking time, are often literally excluded from test-taking classrooms. (4) Time-limited tests are less equitable; in addition to excluding students with documented disabilities, time-limited tests can also impede students who are learning English, students from underrepresented backgrounds, students who are older than average, and students with disabilities who encounter barriers (e.g., stigma and financial expense) in obtaining disability documentation and legally mandated accommodations. We conclude by offering recommendations for avoiding time-limited testing in higher educational assessment.

%B Transl Issues Psychol Sci %V 6 %P 175-190 %8 2020 Jun %G eng %N 2 %R 10.1037/tps0000232 %0 Generic %D 2020 %T Head Circumference %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J American Anthropologist %D 2020 %T Imperialist Irony %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B American Anthropologist %V 122 %8 08/2020 %G eng %N 3 %& 674 %0 Generic %D 2020 %T Indigenary. %A Blake Hausman %G eng %U https://chjournal.com/blake-hausman %0 Newspaper Article %B Eugene Weekly %D 2020 %T Racialized Inequality: Social Justice is the Vaccine We Need for Oregon’s Food System %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Eugene Weekly %8 July 16 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2020 %T Reworking the Cognitive Bias—A Brainstorm %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Medical Anthropology Quarterly %D 2020 %T Reworking the Social Determinants of Health: Responding to Material-Semiotic Indeterminacy in Public Health Interventions %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Medical Anthropology Quarterly %V 34 %8 06/2020 %G eng %N 3 %& 378 %0 Generic %D 2020 %T The Social Life of Metrics %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Audiovisual Material %D 2020 %T Song of the Salmon %A Whitebear, Luhui %A Cespedes, Daniel %I Oregon State University %G eng %U https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C-_QmbK95Mk %0 Journal Article %J Ethnic Studies Review %D 2020 %T Statements of Solidarity: An Archive and Call to Action %A Natchee Barnd %K anti-blackness %K ethnic studies %K social justice %K solidarity %B Ethnic Studies Review %V 43 %P 5-23 %G eng %U https://online.ucpress.edu/esr/article/43/3/5/112179/Statements-of-SolidarityAn-Archive-and-Call-to %N 3 %9 Curation %& 5 %R https://doi.org/10.1525/esr.2020.43.3.5 %0 Magazine Article %D 2020 %T Stay Home, Stay Healthy is Dangerous Language %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Ms. Magazine %8 April 3 %G eng %0 Book Section %B Lexicon for an Anthropocene Yet Unseen %D 2020 %T Sustainability %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Lexicon for an Anthropocene Yet Unseen %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Computer Assisted LearningJournal of Computer Assisted LearningJ Comput Assist Learn %D 2020 %T Testing the segmentation effect of multimedia learning in a biological system %A Soicher, Raechel N. %A Kathryn A. Becker-Blease %K cognitive load %K learning %K multimedia %K segmentation %K self-paced %X

Abstract Multimedia instruction, the combination of pictures and words to produce meaningful learning, involves attention, selection, organization, and integration of new information with previously learned information. Because there is a large, theory-based literature supporting the effectiveness of multimedia instruction, we proposed that multimedia instruction could be leveraged to address issues in health communication. The cognitive theory of multimedia learning outlines techniques to improve meaningful learning when the processing load of essential information exceeds the cognitive capacity of the learner (Mayer, 2014). Specifically, segmentation, or presentation of the material in a learner paced fashion, results in deeper learning of the material than continuous presentation (Mayer & Chandler, 2001). We proposed a conceptual replication of the segmentation effect with multimedia materials relevant in a health communication context. We hypothesized that transfer of information from a multimedia presentation about kidney function would be improved in a segmented, versus continuous, condition. Additionally, we hypothesized that participants' perceived cognitive load during the learning task would be lower in the segmented, versus continuous, presentation condition. We were unable to replicate either of these advantages for the use of segmentation with health-related materials.

%B Journal of Computer Assisted LearningJournal of Computer Assisted LearningJ Comput Assist Learn %V 36 %P 825 - 837 %8 2020/12/01 %@ 0266-4909 %G eng %U https://doi.org/10.1111/jcal.12485 %N 6 %! Journal of Computer Assisted Learning %0 Journal Article %J Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in Psychology %D 2020 %T Utility value interventions: Why and how instructors should use them in college psychology courses. %A Soicher, Raechel N. %A Kathryn A. Becker-Blease %K *College Students %K *Intervention %K *Psychology Education %K *Reading %K *Teachers %K Experimenter Expectations %K Motivation %X

According to expectancy-value models of achievement motivation, a core component of increasing student motivation is utility value. Utility value refers to the importance that a task has in one’s future goals. Utility value interventions provide an opportunity for students to make explicit connections between course content and their own lives. A large body of literature suggests that utility value interventions are effective for a wide range of students (e.g., both adolescent and adult learners) in a variety of courses (e.g., introductory psychology, introductory biology, and physics). This review provides (1) an overview of an expectancy value model of achievement motivation, (2) a comprehensive review of the experimental studies of utility value interventions in psychology, (3) concrete pedagogical recommendations based on the evidence from over 30 studies of the utility value intervention, and (4) suggestions for future research directions. After reading this review, college-level psychology instructors should be able to decide whether the utility value intervention is appropriate for their own course and, if so, implement the intervention effectively. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved)

%B Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in Psychology %P No Pagination Specified - No Pagination Specified %8 2020 %@ 2332-211X(Electronic),2332-2101(Print) %G eng %0 Generic %D 2020 %T Vital Topics Forum, Chronic Disaster: Reimagining Noncommunicable Chronic Disease %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Seminar: A Journal of Germanic Studies %D 2019 %T Activating Affinities %A Natchee Barnd %A Bradley Boovy %K decolonization %K ethnic studies %K indigenous %K language %K race %B Seminar: A Journal of Germanic Studies %V 55 %G eng %U https://www.utpjournals.press/doi/full/10.3138/seminar.55.4.1 %N 4 %R https://doi.org/10.3138/seminar.55.4.1 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Social and Personal Relationships %D 2019 %T Affection deprivation in marital relationships: An actor-partner interdependence mediation analysis %A Colin Hesse %A Xi Tian %B Journal of Social and Personal Relationships %V 37 %P 965-985 %G eng %N 3 %0 Journal Article %J AAG Review of Books %D 2019 %T American Association of Geographers Book Review Forum: Native Space %A Natchee Barnd %A Nicholas Brown %A David Hugill %A Julie Tomiak %A Kyle Mays %A Laura Barraclough %B AAG Review of Books %V 7 %P 126-134 %G eng %U https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/2325548X.2019.1579593 %N 2 %R https://doi.org/10.1080/2325548X.2019.1579593 %0 Journal Article %J Tecnologia e Sociedad %D 2019 %T Cortes de carne: desenredando natureza-culturas ocidentais [tradução de “Cuts of meat: disentangling western nature-cultures”] %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Tecnologia e Sociedad %V 15 %G eng %N 35 %0 Generic %D 2019 %T Disaggregating Diabetes %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Book Section %B NaturenKulturen: Denkräume und Werkzeuge für neue politische %D 2019 %T Does Meat Come from Animals %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B NaturenKulturen: Denkräume und Werkzeuge für neue politische %G eng %0 Generic %D 2019 %T The Ethnographic Fact: A Discussion of Ethics in Anthropological Fieldwork.” %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Generic %D 2019 %T For People Fleeing Central America, Hunger May Not Look Like Hunger %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Cambridge Encyclopedia of Anthropology %D 2019 %T Global health %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Cambridge Encyclopedia of Anthropology %8 06/2019 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2019 %T Gun Violence Harms, Even If You’ve Never Been Shot %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Feminist Formations %D 2019 %T Introduction: Critical Mobilities in the Neoliberal University %A Marta Maria Maldonado %A Katja M. Guenther %X

This special issue of Feminist Formations centers on the politics of the movement of feminist scholars within, across, and out of academic institutions, or what Patti Duncan (2014, 56) has called “academic migrations.” Too often, feminist scholars relocate or are relocated as a response to discrimination, bullying, harassment, and/or hostile work environments. Such relocations may involve changing departments/units or institutions, or leaving academia altogether. Contributors to this special issue ask how and why feminist scholars circulate within, across, and sometimes out of academic institutions, what factors drive these movements, and what the meanings and consequences of their movements are at various scales. We seek to address the continued need for critical reflection on the experiences of scholars “from the margins” in academia, and of critical mobilities, specifically exits and reroutings.

%B Feminist Formations %V 31 %P vii-xxiii %G eng %N 1 %0 Book %D 2019 %T Latin American Soldiers: Armed Forces in the Region's History %A John R. Bawden %X

In this accessible volume, John R. Bawden introduces readers to the study of armed forces in Latin American history through vivid narratives about four very different countries: Mexico, Cuba, Brazil, and Chile.

Latin America has faced many of the challenges common to postcolonial states such as civil war, poorly defined borders, and politically fractured societies. Studying its militaries offers a powerful lens through which to understand major events, eras, and problems. Bawden draws on stories about the men and women who served in conventional armed forces and guerrilla armies to examine the politics and social structure of each country, the state’s evolution, and relationships between soldiers and the global community.

Designed as an introductory text for undergraduates, Latin American Soldiers identifies major concepts, factors, and trends that have shaped modern Latin America. It is an essential text for students of Latin American Studies or History and is particularly useful for students focusing on the military, revolutions, and political history.

%I Routledge %G eng %0 Generic %D 2019 %T No Relation %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Generic %D 2019 %T Passing %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Health Communication %D 2019 %T The relationships between doctor-patient affectionate communication and patient perceptions and outcomes %A Colin Hesse %A Emily Rauscher %B Health Communication %V 34 %P 881-891 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2019 %T SICK: The Deadly Logic of the Limited Good %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Generic %D 2019 %T Storytelling %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Anthropology Now %D 2019 %T An Unfinished War %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Anthropology Now %V 11 %8 10/2019 %G eng %N 2 %& 57 %0 Journal Article %J University of Miami Race & Social Justice Law Review %D 2019 %T VAWA Reauthorization of 2013 and the Continued Legacy of Violence Against Indigenous Women: A Critical Outsider Jurisprudence Perspective %A Whitebear, Luhui %B University of Miami Race & Social Justice Law Review %V 9 %P 75-89 %G eng %U https://repository.law.miami.edu/umrsjlr/vol9/iss1/5 %N 1 %& 75 %0 Journal Article %J American Anthropologist %D 2019 %T Whose Global, Which Health? Unsettling Collaboration with Careful Equivocation %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B American Anthropologist %V 121 %8 04/2019 %G eng %N 2 %& 297 %0 Book %D 2019 %T ドイツ映画 デーファと映画史 %A Heiduschke, Sebastian %E 山本 佳樹 %I 鳥影社 %P 270 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2018 %T Applying Anthropology %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J IDV-Magazin %D 2018 %T Der virtuelle Bachelor: Deutsch studieren online %A Sebastian Heiduschke %B IDV-Magazin %V 95 %P 41-45 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2018 %T The Ethnographic Case %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Book Section %B Gender and Sexuality in East German Film %D 2018 %T Gendered Spectacle: The Liberated Gaze in the DEFA Film Der Strass %A Jennifer Creech %A Sebastian Heiduschke %B Gender and Sexuality in East German Film %I Boydell & Brewer %P 249-268 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2018 %T George, the Dog %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Book Section %B Women's Lives around the World: A Global Encyclopedia %D 2018 %T Germany %A Sebastian Heiduschke %K Airports %K Boundaries (Geography) %K Catholicism %K Contraceptives %K Domestic violence %K Education %K Emigration and immigration %K Employment %K Ethnic groups %K Family life %K Fortifications %K Gender equality %K German history %K Labor market %K Language and languages %K Monarchy %K Population %K Rape %K Refugees %K Religions %K Sex education %K Wages and salaries %K Women politicians %K Women's rights %K Working women %B Women's Lives around the World: A Global Encyclopedia %I ABC-CLIO %V 4 %P 126-133 %@ 161069712X %G eng %6 4 %0 Magazine Article %D 2018 %T A Lot to Ask of a Name %A Natchee Barnd %K ethnic studies %K geography %K indigenous %K natchee barnd %K space %K street signs %K whiteness %B Oregon Humanities %7 Turn %V Summer %8 08/2018 %G eng %U https://oregonhumanities.org/rll/magazine/turn/a-lot-to-ask-of-a-name/ %0 Generic %D 2018 %T New Review Technologies: An Announcement & Invitation %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Western Journal of Communication %D 2018 %T Parent-child affection and helicopter parenting: Exploring the concept of excessive affection. %A Colin Hesse %A Mikkelson, A.C. %A Saracco, S. %B Western Journal of Communication %V 82 %P 457-474 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Communication teacher %D 2018 %T Staging scenes of co-cultural communication: Acting out aspects of marginalized and dominant identities %A Root, E. %B Communication teacher %V 32 %P 13-18 %8 10/2017 %G eng %N 1 %& 13 %0 Generic %D 2018 %T Thinking with Dementia %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Medicine Anthropology Theory %D 2018 %T Translational Competency: On the Role of Culture in Obesity Interventions %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Medicine Anthropology Theory %V 5 %G eng %N 4 %& 106 %0 Book Section %B Coastal Heritage and Cultural Resilience %D 2018 %T Understanding the Working in Working Waterfronts: The Hidden Faces of the Industries That Make up the Working Waterfront %A Jamie Doyle %A Bradley Boovy %A Marta Maria Maldonado %A Flaxen D.L. Conway %X

Working waterfront industries are reliant upon water access and encompass everything from wild harvest and cultured seafood to towboats, shipping, and marine research. Many of the industries along Oregon’s working waterfronts are inaccessible to the public or hard to see, even though they play critical social and economic roles in the local community. Working waterfront industries thrive when there is local understanding of, and support for, the work and the people doing this work. This chapter explores the connection between working waterfront industries and coastal community resilience and vitality using examples of infrastructure, family and gender, education, and changing demographics.

%B Coastal Heritage and Cultural Resilience %G eng %0 Magazine Article %D 2018 %T What Work Does a Street Sign Do? %A Natchee Barnd %E Michelle Patiño-Flores %B Oregon Humanities %8 07/2018 %G eng %U https://oregonhumanities.org/rll/beyond-the-margins/natchee-blu-barnd-on-native-street-names/ %9 Interview %0 Generic %D 2018 %T Why Are So Many Guatemalans Migrating to the U.S.? %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Camera Obscura: Feminism, Culture, and Media Studies %D 2018 %T Women’s Interventions in the Contemporary German Film Industry %A Sebastian Heiduschke %B Camera Obscura: Feminism, Culture, and Media Studies %V 33 %P 147–155 %G eng %N 3 %0 Journal Article %J Communication Quarterly %D 2017 %T Affection deprivation in romantic relationships %A Hesse, C. %A Mikkelson, A.C. %B Communication Quarterly %V 65 %P 20-38 %G eng %0 Book Section %B Online Language Teaching Research %D 2017 %T Building and Sustaining Language Degrees Online: The Case of German and Spanish %A Sebastian Heiduschke %A Prats David %X

This essay chronicles the planning and development of two online bachelor degree programs in German and Spanish at Oregon State University (OSU). It covers the history of online language teaching at OSU and provides detailed insight into curriculum planning, course setup, course development, and teaching experience. The article shows obstacles faced in the process of developing and teaching the online degrees and presents strategies used to overcome them. The authors conclude with a set of best practices for the development of language curricula in an asynchronous environment. They suggest that the successful implementation was possible due to the synergy of four factors: first, an institutional pledge to provide financial support for course development and program marketing; second, motivated faculty dedicated to teaching languages online and interested in a long-term commitment to development and revision of the curriculum; third, the separation of technical expertise from content development; and fourth, the training and further professional development of faculty.

%B Online Language Teaching Research %I Trysting Tree Books %C Corvallis %P 151-171 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Anthropology & Medicine %D 2017 %T Counting bodies? On future engagements with science studies in medical anthropology %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Anthropology & Medicine %V 24 %8 07/2017 %G eng %N 2 %& 142 %0 Book %B First Peoples: New Directions in Indigenous Studies %D 2017 %T Native Space: Geographic Strategies to Unsettle Settler Colonialism %A Natchee Barnd %K cultural geography %K ethnic studies %K indigenous %K indigenous geography %K place names %K race %K space %B First Peoples: New Directions in Indigenous Studies %I Oregon State University Press %C Corvallis %G eng %U http://osupress.oregonstate.edu/book/native-space %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Family Communication %D 2017 %T Reconceptualizing the role of conformity behaviors in family communication patterns theory %A Hesse, C. %A Rauscher, E. A. %A Budesky Goodman, R. %A Couvrette, M. A. %B Journal of Family Communication %V 17 %G eng %& 319-337 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Ethnographic Theory %D 2017 %T Where is the local? %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Journal of Ethnographic Theory %V 7 %G eng %N 2 %& 377 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Geography %D 2016 %T Constructing a Social Justice Tour: Pedagogy, Race, and Student Learning through Geography %A Natchee Barnd %K ethnic studies %K geography %K pedagogy %K race %K social justice %K tour %B Journal of Geography %V 115 %G eng %N 5 %! Constructing a Social Justice Tour %R 10.1080/00221341.2016.1153132 %0 Journal Article %J China Media Studies %D 2016 %T Cultural Adjustment from the Other Side: Korean Students' Experiences with their Sojourner-Teachers %A Root, E. %X

Traditional research on cultural adjustment focuses on the sojourner's experience within a foreign country. Sojourners never travel or move into a vacuum, however, and the missing component of such a focus is the experience of those who come into contact with these sojourners. In order to demonstrate the need to expand research on cultural adaptation, results from a case study are presented. The context for the case study is English language education in South Korea. Narratives of experience were collected from 26 South Korean university students based on their interaction with native-English-speaking teachers. Results demonstrate that students experience aspects of cultural adjustment when involved in interactions within the classroom setting.

%B China Media Studies %V 12 %P 35-45 %8 01/2016 %G eng %U http://www.chinamediaresearch.net/readmore/vol12no1/CMR160105.jpg %N 1 %& 35 %0 Journal Article %J Medical Anthropology %D 2016 %T Demedicalizing Health: The Kitchen as a Site of Care %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Medical Anthropology %V 35 %G eng %N 4 %& 305 %0 Journal Article %J Psychology Learning & TeachingPsychology Learning & Teaching %D 2016 %T Do Exam Wrappers Increase Metacognition and Performance? A Single Course Intervention %A Soicher, Raechel N. %A Gurung, Regan A. R. %X

Previous research has indicated that an intervention called ?exam wrappers? can improve students? metacognition when they are using wrappers in more than one course per academic term. In this study, we tested if exam wrappers would improve students? metacognition and academic performance when used in only one course per academic term. A total of 86 students used either exam wrappers (an exercise with metacognitive instruction), sham wrappers (an exercise with no metacognitive instruction), or neither (control). We found no improvements on any of three exams, final grades, or metacognitive ability (measured with the Metacognitive Awareness Inventory, MAI) across conditions. All students showed an increase in MAI over the course of the semester, regardless of condition. We discuss the challenges of improving metacognitive skills and suggest ideas for additional metacognitive interventions.

%B Psychology Learning & TeachingPsychology Learning & Teaching %V 16 %P 64 - 73 %8 2017/03/01 %@ 1475-7257 %G eng %U https://doi.org/10.1177/1475725716661872 %N 1 %! Psychology Learning & Teaching %0 Generic %D 2016 %T Fat used to be celebrated in Guatemala, now unhelpful obesity advice is causing weight anxiety %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Annals of the American Association of Geographers %D 2016 %T Latin@ Immobilities and Altermobilities Within the U.S. Deportability Regime %A Marta Maria Maldonado %A Adela C. Licona %A Sarah Hendricks %X

In this article, we explore how racialized constructions of a “Latin@ threat” serve as ideological underpinning for the practices of the U.S. deportability regime and also fuel broader practices of policeability, with consequences for Latin@ mobilities and immobilities. Drawing from ethnographic observation and in-depth interviews with Latin@s in Perry, Iowa, we discuss “the border within” as an extension of border politics and borderlands rhetorics to the U.S. heartland, explore imposed mobilities and immobilities, and also recognize tactical immobilities and altermobilities undertaken by Latin@s.

%B Annals of the American Association of Geographers %G eng %) Geographies of Mobility (2018) %0 Book %D 2016 %T The Pinochet Generation: The Chilean Military in the Twentieth Century %A John R. Bawden %X

Chilean soldiers in the twentieth century appear in most historical accounts, if they appear at all, as decontextualized figures or simply as a single man: Augusto Pinochet. In his incisive study The Pinochet Generation: The Chilean Military in the Twentieth Century, John R. Bawden provides compelling new insights into the era and posits that Pinochet and his men were responsible for two major transformations in Chile’s constitution as well as the political and economic effects that followed.
 
Determined to refocus what he sees as a “decontextualized paucity” of historical information on Chile’s armed forces, Bawden offers a new perspective to explain why the military overthrew the government in 1973 as well as why and how Chile slowly transitioned back to a democracy at the end of the 1980s. Standing apart from other views, Bawden insists that the Chilean military’s indigenous traditions and customs did more than foreign influences to mold their beliefs and behavior leading up to the 1973 coup of Salvador Allende.
 
Drawing from defense publications, testimonial literature, and archival materials in both the United States and Chile, The Pinochet Generation characterizes the lens through which Chilean officers saw the world, their own actions, and their place in national history. This thorough analysis of the Chilean services’ history, education, values, and worldview shows how this military culture shaped Chilean thinking and behavior, shedding light on the distinctive qualities of Chile’s armed forces, the military’s decision to depose Allende, and the Pinochet dictatorship’s resilience, repressiveness, and durability.

%G eng %0 Book %D 2016 %T Re-imagining DEFA: East German Cinema in Its National and Transnational Contexts %A Heiduschke, Sebastian %A Allan, Seán %I Berghahn Books %G eng %0 Book %D 2016 %T Re-imagining DEFA: East German Cinema in Its National and Transnational Contexts %A Sean Allan %A Sebastian Heiduschke %I Berghahn Books %G eng %0 Generic %D 2016 %T A reply %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Generic %D 2016 %T Sustainability %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T Alimentary Uncertainties: From Contested Evidence to Policy %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Web Page %D 2015 %T Christian Fragility %A Susan Shaw %I Huffington Post %G eng %U http://www.huffingtonpost.com/susan-m-shaw/christian-fragility_b_7700418.html %9 Web article %0 Book Section %B Bloom and Bust: Urban Landscapes in the East since German reunificaiton %D 2015 %T Cinematic Reflections of Germany's Postunification Woes: Architecture and Urban Space of Frankfurt (Oder) in Halbe Treppe, Lichter and Kombat Sechzehn %A Sebastian Heiduschke %B Bloom and Bust: Urban Landscapes in the East since German reunificaiton %I Berghahn Books %P 67-87 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Comparative Political Studies %D 2015 %T Comparative Institutional Advantage in Europe’s Sovereign Debt Crisis %A AL Johnston %A Hancké, R %A Pant, S %B Comparative Political Studies %V 48 %G eng %N 6 %0 Journal Article %J American Ethnologist %D 2015 %T Does Meat Come From Animals? A Multispecies Approach to Classification and Belonging in Highland Guatemala %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B American Ethnologist %V 25 %G eng %N 2 %& 309 %0 Journal Article %J BioSocieties %D 2015 %T Intervals of Confidence: Uncertain Accounts of Hunger, Weight, and Global Health %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B BioSocieties %V 10 %G eng %N 2 %& 229 %0 Book Section %B Nexus: Complicating Community and Centering the Self %D 2015 %T Of the Cross: Dancing Like an Octopus and Other Acts of Serious Ridiculousness %A Natchee Barnd %A Charlene Martinez %E Edwina Welch %E Joseph Ruanto-Ramirez %E Nancy Magpusao %E Sandra Amon %K cultural centers %K ethnic studies %K social justice %B Nexus: Complicating Community and Centering the Self %I Cognella, Inc. %P 259-267 %@ 978-63189-444-2 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T The Open Question: Open Access in Medical Anthropology %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Web Page %D 2015 %T Sandra Bland and the Texts of Terror %A Susan Shaw %I Huffington Post %G eng %U http://www.huffingtonpost.com/susan-m-shaw/sandra-bland-and-texts-of-terror_b_7844260.html %9 Web article %0 Book %D 2015 %T The Weight Of Obesity: Hunger and Global Health in Postwar Guatemala %A Emily Yates-Doerr %I University of California Press %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Social Science & Medicine %D 2015 %T The World in a Box?: Food Security, Edible Insects and ‘One World, One Health’ Collaboration %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Social Science & Medicine %V 129 %G eng %N 1 %& 106 %0 Generic %D 2014 %T Care: Provocation %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Generic %D 2014 %T CeSSIAM Bulletin, Editorial %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Book Section %B In the Peanut Gallery with Mystery Science Theater 3000: Essays on Film, Fandom, Technology and the Culture of Riffing %D 2014 %T Communists and Cosmonauts in Mystery Science Theater 3000: De-Camping East Germany’s First Spaceship on Venus/Silent Star %A Sebastian Heiduschke %B In the Peanut Gallery with Mystery Science Theater 3000: Essays on Film, Fandom, Technology and the Culture of Riffing %I McFarland %P 40-45 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Northwest Journal of Communication %D 2014 %T Definitions of an Intercultural Encounter: Insights Into Internationalization at Home Efforts %A E. Root %X
"Internationalization" has become a popular term in U.S. higher education. Some internationalization efforts shift the focus from enrolling students in study abroad programs to using what happens domestically, a concept called Internationalization at Home (IaH). In order to implement effective IaH efforts, considering how a specific study body conceptualizes an intercultural encounter is helpful. Through the collection of 32 narratives of U.S. students' experiences, this study investigates how participants at a largely culturally homogeneous university define themselves as culturally distinct from others during what they categorize as an intercultural encounter. The results indicate two main ways participants designate cultural difference, that of national identity and that of racial or ethnic identity. These ways of designating cultural difference indicate a master narrative of what an intercultural encounter is, typically exotic, short-term, impersonal, and often linked to travel. Identifying this master narrative of intercultural interactions provides insights for the development of IaH curriculum and training.
%B Northwest Journal of Communication %V Vol. 42 %P 35-60 %8 03/2014 %G eng %U http://connection.ebscohost.com/c/articles/95028265/definitions-intercultural-encounter-insights-internationalization-home-efforts %N Issue 1 %9 Academic %M 95028265 %& 35 %0 Journal Article %J Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies %D 2014 %T Disaggregating The Indo- and African-Caribbean Migration and Settlement Experience in Canada %A Dwaine Plaza %B Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies %V 29 %P 241 - 266 %8 2014 %@ 0826-3663 %G eng %N 57-58 %0 Journal Article %J Psychology of Music Psychology of Music %D 2014 %T The effect of subtitles on listeners' perceptions of expressivity %A J. M. Silveira %A Diaz, F. M. %B Psychology of Music Psychology of Music %V 42 %P 233 - 250 %8 2014/// %@ 0305-7356 %G eng %N 2 %0 Generic %D 2014 %T Endogenous Pathways to Food Sovereignty: Working with Positive Deviance in the Andes %A Joan Gross %X

Roundtable organizer and participant.  Society for Applied Anthropology Annual Meeting, Albuquerque, NM.  March 22, 2014.

%G eng %0 Generic %D 2014 %T Engaged Anthropology %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Anthropology Now %D 2014 %T Engagement in Practice: Obesity Science and Health Translation in Guatemala %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Anthropology Now %V 6 %G eng %N 1 %& 3 %0 Book Section %B Issues and Controversies in Science and Politics %D 2014 %T Ethanol %A David Bernell %B Issues and Controversies in Science and Politics %I CQ Press %G eng %0 Book Section %B Food Activism: Agency, Democracy and Economy %D 2014 %T Food Activism in Western Oregon %A Joan Gross %B Food Activism: Agency, Democracy and Economy %I Bloomsbury %C NY %P 15-30 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2014 %T The Form of the Otherwise %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J JEPO Energy Policy %D 2014 %T "Fracking" controversy and communication: Using national survey data to understand public perceptions of hydraulic fracturing %A Hilary Boudet %A Clarke, Christopher %A Bugden, Dylan %A Maibach, Edward %A Roser-Renouf, Connie %A Leiserowitz, Anthony %X

The recent push to develop unconventional sources of oil and gas both in the U.S. and abroad via hydraulic fracturing (“fracking”) has generated a great deal of controversy. Effectively engaging stakeholders and setting appropriate policies requires insights into current public perceptions of this issue. Using a nationally representative U.S. sample (N=1061), we examine public perceptions of hydraulic fracturing including: “top of mind” associations; familiarity with the issue; levels of support/opposition; and predictors of such judgments. Similar to findings on other emerging technologies, our results suggest limited familiarity with the process and its potential impacts and considerable uncertainty about whether to support it. Multiple regression analysis (r

%B JEPO Energy Policy %V 65 %P 57 - 67 %8 2014/// %@ 0301-4215 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Criminal Justice Policy %D 2014 %T From ‘Just Say No!’ to ‘Well, Maybe’ - The War on Drugs & Sensible Alternatives %A Scott Akins %A Mosher, Clayton James %B Criminal Justice Policy %P 121-144 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2014 %T Heterogeneity in family-level nutrition in Northern Ecuador %A Joan Gross %A Carla Guerron Montero %A Michaela Hammer %A Peter Berti %X

Interpretive Policy Analysis Annual Meeting, Wageningen, Holland.  July 3, 2014.

%G eng %0 Journal Article %J Women in German Yearbook: Feminist Studies in German Literature and Culture %D 2014 %T Inspiring and Educating GDR Women: Iris Gusner, Feminism, and the Film Kaskade Rückwärts %A Sebastian Heiduschke %B Women in German Yearbook: Feminist Studies in German Literature and Culture %V 30 %P 23–43 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Family Communication %D 2014 %T Investigating the role of hurtful family environment in affectionate communication and relationship satisfaction. %A Colin Hesse %E Rauscher, E. A. %Y Roberts, J. B. %? Ortega, S. R. %B Journal of Family Communication %V 14 %P 128 %G eng %9 Journal %& 112 %0 Hearing %D 2014 %T New Ventures: Intersections in Design Education %A Christine Gallagher %A Andrea Marks %K Design of Human Environment %K Graphic Design %B AIGA Design Education Conference: New Ventures: Intersections in Design Education %C Portland, Oregon %8 2014 %G eng %2 c %4 108888633344 %0 Generic %D 2014 %T Paradigm Shifts - Everything is Connected. %A Joan Gross %X

Invited talk.  2014 Food Security Summit, Corvallis, Oregon.  October 21, 2014.

%G eng %0 Generic %D 2014 %T Paradigmas Cambiando - Todo Está Conectado %A Joan Gross %X

Invited Talk, Bienal Internacional del Cartel, Morelia, Mexico.  Oct. 30, 2014.

%G eng %0 Generic %D 2014 %T Participant Observation: Embodied Intersubjectivity in Qualitative Research %A Joan Gross %X

Invited talk, Latin American Institue of Social Science (FLASCO),Quito, Ecuador, May 21, 2014.

%G eng %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Research in Music Education %D 2014 %T The Perception of Pacing in a Music Appreciation Class and Its Relationship to Teacher Effectiveness and Teacher Intensity %A J. M. Silveira %X The purpose of this study was to determine relationships among pacing, teacher effectiveness, and teacher intensity in the context of a realistic teaching situation. A scripted stimulus video was created in which the teacher demonstrated predefined pacing lapses to measure their effects on observers ratings of teacher effectiveness, teacher intensity, teacher pacing, and general perceptions. Participants ( N = 164 college students) were randomly assigned to one of four groups ( n = 41) to evaluate ongoing teacher effectiveness, teacher intensity, teacher pacing, or general perceptions (control group). Participants evaluated the teacher on their assigned construct using both continuous (Continuous Response Digital Interface) and summative measures (Likert-type scale). Results showed that the constructs had strong positive linear correlations with each other. The pacing group evidenced a greater response magnitude than the other three groups (effectiveness, intensity, control), suggesting that participants in the pacing group may have been reacting differently to some aspect of the teaching demonstration compared to the other groups. %B Journal of Research in Music Education %V 62 %P 302 - 318 %8 2014/// %@ 0022-4294 %G eng %N 3 %0 Generic %D 2014 %T The Scale %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J West European Politics West European Politics %D 2014 %T Sharing the Rewards, Dividing the Costs? The Electoral Consequences of Social Pacts and Legislative Reform in Western Europe %A AL Johnston %A Hamann, Kerstin %A Katsanidou, Alexia %A Kelly, John %A Pollock, Philip H. %B West European Politics West European Politics %P 1 - 22 %8 2014 %@ 0140-2382 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Yearbook of the Association of Pacific Coast Geographers %D 2014 %T A Tribal Litany for Survival: Dresslerville, Nevada and South Lake Tahoe, California %A Natchee Barnd %K california %K cultural geography %K ethnic studies %K geography %K indigenous %K nevada %K place names %K street names %K washiw %K washo %B Yearbook of the Association of Pacific Coast Geographers %V 76 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J CAPP Criminology & Public Policy %D 2013 %T 287(g) : State and Local Enforcement of Immigration Law %A Scott Akins %B CAPP Criminology & Public Policy %V 12 %P 227 - 236 %8 2013 %@ 1538-6473 %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Communication %D 2013 %T Alexithymia and impairment of decoding positive affect: An FMRI study. %A Colin Hesse %E Rauscher, E. A. %Y Frye-Cox, N. E. %? Hegarty II, J. P. %? Peng, H. %B Journal of Communication %V 63 %P 806 %G eng %& 786 %0 Journal Article %J Sociological Perspectives Sociological Perspectives %D 2013 %T Assessing the Effects of Recent Immigration on Serious Property Crime in Austin, Texas %A Scott Akins %A Stansfield, Richard %A Rumbaut, Rubén G. %A Roger B. Hammer %B Sociological Perspectives Sociological Perspectives %V 56 %P 647 - 672 %8 2013/// %@ 0731-1214 %G eng %N 4 %0 Journal Article %J Seminar: A Journal of Germanic Studies %D 2013 %T Authority, Mobility, and Teenage Rebellion in The Wild One (USA, 1953), Die Halbstarken (West Germany, 1956), and Berlin–Ecke Schönhauser (East Germany, 1957) %A Sebastian Heiduschke %B Seminar: A Journal of Germanic Studies %V 49 %P 281-299 %G eng %N 3 %0 Book Section %B Contours of Eating: New Relations between Food and Bodies %D 2013 %T Complex Carbohydrates: On the Relevance of Ethnography in Nutrition Education %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Contours of Eating: New Relations between Food and Bodies %G eng %0 Book %D 2013 %T Deutsch im Blick (Edition 2) %A Abrahms, Zsuzsanna %A Schuchard, Sarah %A Weilbacher, Jasmin %A Ghanem, Carla %A VanderHeijden, Vince %K Foreign Language Study %K German %K Humanities %K Language and languages %X

This textbook of classroom activities and homework accompanies Deutsch im Blick, http://coerll.utexas.edu/dib/, the web-based German program developed and in use at the University of Texas since 2004, and its companion site, Grimm Grammar (2000) http://coerll.utexas.edu/gg/. These are open access sites, free and open multimedia resources, which require neither password nor fees. Deutsch im Blick, used increasingly by students, teachers and institutions throughout the world, includes 307 videos (American students in Germany, native German interviews, vocabulary and culture presentation videos) recorded vocabulary lists, phonetic lessons, online grammar lessons (600 pages) with self-correcting exercises and audio dialogues, online grammar tools and diagnostic grammar tests.

%I University of Texas Austin %G eng %0 Book %D 2013 %T East German Cinema: DEFA and Film History %A Sebastian Heiduschke %I Palgrave Macmillan %G eng %0 Book Section %B Crossroads in American Studies: Transnational and Biocultural Encounters %D 2013 %T Elders in Exile: Three American Indian Stories of Survivance %A Philipp Kneis %A Offizier, Frederike %A Marc Priewe %A Ariane Schröder %B Crossroads in American Studies: Transnational and Biocultural Encounters %I Heidelberg %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Monatshefte %D 2013 %T Emerging from the Niche: DEFA’s Afterlife in Unified Germany %A Sebastian Heiduschke %B Monatshefte %V 105 %P 625–640 %G eng %N 4 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Environment and Development %D 2013 %T Environmental Disclosure in China: The Case of the Green Securities Policy %A David Bernell %A Wang %B Journal of Environment and Development %8 12/2013 %G eng %0 Book Section %B Issues and Controversies in Science and Politics %D 2013 %T Evolution %A Philipp Kneis %A Brent S. Steel %B Issues and Controversies in Science and Politics %I CQ Press %C Washington, DC %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Deviant Behavior %D 2013 %T Examining the Relationship of Substance Use and Sexual Orientation %A Scott Akins %A Lanfear, Charles %A Mosher, Clayton %X

In this article we examine the effects of self-reported sexual orientation on substance abuse. Using data on a random sample of 6,713 individuals in Washington State, this study examines causes and correlates of substance use by sexual minorities, an at-risk and treatment underserved population. Logistic regression results indicate homosexual orientation is a significant positive predictor of past year marijuana use, past year hard drug use, past year binge drinking, and lifetime alcohol addiction. Bisexual orientation is a significant predictor of past year marijuana use, past year hard drug use, and past year binge drinking. Potential causal mechanisms for these elevated patterns of substance use are discussed.

%B Deviant Behavior %V 34 %P 586 - 597 %8 2013/// %@ 0163-9625 %G eng %N 7 %0 Journal Article %J American Behavioral Scientist American Behavioral Scientist %D 2013 %T Facing Off: A Comparative Analysis of Obama and Romney Facebook Timeline Photographs %A Goodnow, Trischa %B American Behavioral Scientist American Behavioral Scientist %V 57 %P 1584 - 1595 %8 2013/// %@ 0002-7642 %G eng %N 11 %0 Journal Article %J German Studies Review %D 2013 %T GDR Cinema as Commodity: Marketing DEFA Films since Unification %A Sebastian Heiduschke %B German Studies Review %V 36 %P 61-78 %G eng %N 1 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Studies in International Education Journal of Studies in International Education %D 2013 %T I Came Back as a New Human Being: Student Descriptions of Intercultural Competence Acquired Through Education Abroad Experiences %A E. Root %A Ngampornchai, A. %B Journal of Studies in International Education Journal of Studies in International Education %V 17 %P 513 - 532 %8 2013/// %@ 1028-3153 %G eng %N 5 %0 Journal Article %J INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION STUDIES %D 2013 %T Identity Dialectics of the Intercultural Communication Instructor: Insights from Collaborative Autoethnography %A E. Root %A Hargrove, T.D. %A Ngampornchai, A. %A Petrunia, M.D. %B INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION STUDIES %V 22 %P 1 - 18 %8 2013/// %@ 1057-7769 %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION STUDIES %D 2013 %T Insights into the Differences-Similarities Dialectic in Intercultural Communication from University Students' Narratives %A E. Root %B INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION STUDIES %V 22 %P 61 - 79 %8 2013/// %@ 1057-7769 %G eng %N 3 %0 Book Section %B Reconstructing Obesity: The Meaning of Measures and the Measures of Meaning %D 2013 %T The Mismeasure of Obesity %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Reconstructing Obesity: The Meaning of Measures and the Measures of Meaning %G eng %0 Generic %D 2013 %T Oregon State University Cultural Centers Oral History Collection, 2013 %A Natchee Barnd %A Fernandez, Natalia Maria %X

The collection consists of seven born digital audio recordings of interviews with undergraduate and graduate student employees of the OSU Native American Longhouse. These recordings were originally captured in *.wav format, files which have been saved as preservation copies for each interview. Access *.mp3 files have been created for each interview as well. All interviews held in the collection have been transcribed by the staff of the Special Collections & Archives Research Center. Researcher access to both the collection's audio and transcripts is available on site and online. All interviews were conducted by either Natalia Fern·ndez, the Oregon Multicultural Librarian and a staff member of the Special Collections & Archives Research Center, or Dr. Natchee Barnd, professor of Ethnic Studies at Oregon State University. Topics touched upon in the collection's interviews include: Native American culture; working at the OSU Native American Longhouse; events hosted by or affiliated with the Native American Longhouse; the Quonset hut and Eena Haws Native American Longhouse facilities; diversity initiatives at OSU; the evolution of interviewees' personal identities as people of color; negotiating life at OSU as a student of color; and the future role of the Native American Longhouse both on campus and in the community.

%8 2013/// %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Drug Issues Journal of Drug Issues %D 2013 %T Patterns and Correlates of Adult American Indian Substance Use %A Scott Akins %A Lanfear, C. %A Cline, S. %A Mosher, C. %B Journal of Drug Issues Journal of Drug Issues %V 43 %P 497 - 516 %8 2013/// %@ 0022-0426 %G eng %N 4 %0 Book Section %B Metaphor , Narrative, and the Visual %D 2013 %T On the Role of Cognitive Possibility in Propaganda Appeals %E Goodnow, Trischa %E J. Kimble %B Metaphor , Narrative, and the Visual %7 A %P 75-86 %G eng %& How To Do Things With Pictures: Skill, Practice, Performance %0 Book %D 2013 %T (S)aged by culture : representations of old age in American Indian literature and culture %A Philipp Kneis %8 2013/// %@ 9783631638538 3631638531 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Comp Politics Comparative Politics %D 2013 %T Striking Concessions from Governments: The Success of General Strikes in Western Europe, 1980-2009 %A AL Johnston %A Hamann, Kerstin %A Kelly, John %B Comp Politics Comparative Politics %V 46 %P 23 - 41 %8 2013 %@ 0010-4159 %G eng %N 1 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management %D 2013 %T Student Loan Reform, Interest Subsidies and Costly Technicalities: Lessons from the UK Experience %A AL Johnston %A Barr, Nicholas %X

In this paper, we consider lessons for other countries about the design of student loans with income-contingent repayments (i.e. repayments calculated as "x" per cent of each borrower's subsequent income). Using a dataset of 20,000 simulated lifetime graduate earnings paths, we estimate the cost and distributional effects of reforms in England in 2012. Introducing a real interest rate produces significant savings, mostly from graduates in the middle and upper earnings deciles. But those gains are offset by an increase in the income threshold at which loan repayments start. We conclude with discussion of policy changes to offset the increased cost of student loans (roughly 4,400 British pounds per graduate) within the current austerity climate, namely significant reductions in the higher education block teaching grant and a cap on the number of students. (Contains 1 table and 5 figures.)

%B Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management %I Routledge. Available from: Taylor & Francis, Ltd. 325 Chestnut Street Suite 800, Philadelphia, PA 19106. Tel: 800-354-1420; Fax: 215-625-2940; Web site: http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals %V 35 %P 167 - 178 %8 2013 %@ 1360-080X %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Comparative Political Studies %D 2013 %T Unions Against Governments: Explaining General Strikes in Western Europe, 1980-2006 %A AL Johnston %A Kelly, J. %A Hamann, K. %B Comparative Political Studies %V 46 %G eng %N 9 %0 Book Section %B Diversity in Disney Films: Critical Essays on Race, Ethnicity, Gender, Sexuality and Disability %D 2013 %T White Man's Best Friend: Race and Privilege in Oliver and Company %A Natchee Barnd %E Cheu, Johnson %K disney %K diversity %K film %K race %X

"This essay collection gathers recent scholarship on representations of diversity in Disney and Disney/Pixar films, exploring not only race and gender, but also newer areas of study. Covering a wide array of films this compendium highlights the social impact of the entertainment giant and reveals its cultural significance in shaping our global citizenry"--Provided by publisher.

%B Diversity in Disney Films: Critical Essays on Race, Ethnicity, Gender, Sexuality and Disability %8 2013/// %@ 9780786446018 0786446013 %G eng %0 Book Section %B A New History of German Cinema %D 2012 %T 21 October 2001: Television Provides Paltform for Record Box-Office Success of Der Schuh des Manitu %A Sebastian Heiduschke %B A New History of German Cinema %I Camden House %P 572-577 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2012 %T Construyendo Soberanía Alimentaria: Una Vista Desde Oregon, EEUU %A Joan Gross %X

Second International Forum on Organic Agriculture and Agroecology, Guayaquil, Ecuador. October 18, 2012.

%G eng %0 Journal Article %J International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education %D 2012 %T Counterstories of college persistence by undocumented Mexicana students: Navigating race, class, gender, and legal status %A Susana María Muñoz %A Marta Maria Maldonado %X

This paper draws from four sets of four in‐depth interviews and one subsequent focus group to examine how undocumented Mexicana students navigate identities and the meanings of race, gender, class, and legal status. We mobilize a critical race theory framework to center and explore the content of students’ counterstories. While majoritarian stories perpetuate stereotypical narratives that portray communities of color as culturally deficient, counterstorytelling creates a space for exposing and resisting hegemonic narratives in the home, community, and college settings. We argue that, through counterstories, Mexicana students are able to develop a positive self‐image that allows them to hang on to their academic aspirations, to persist in college, and to envision and pursue the possibility of success. We look at how undocumented Mexicana students’ narratives also reproduce and/or reinscribe elements of oppressive discourses of race, class, and gender in the contemporary USA. We consider some implications of our discussion of counterstories for educational theory and policy.

%B International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education %V 25 %G eng %N 3 %0 Journal Article %J Cambridge Anthropology %D 2012 %T Cuts of Meat: Disentangling Western Nature-Cultures %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Cambridge Anthropology %V 30 %G eng %N 2 %& 48 %0 Generic %D 2012 %T Dumpster Diving. Entry in Encyclopedia of Consumption and Waste: The Social Science of Garbage. Carl Zimring, ed. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE %A Joan Gross %K diving %K dumpster %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Lingüística y literatura %D 2012 %T Estudio lingüístico comparativo entre el siciliano y el español %A Nunez, Eva %A Raven Chakerian %B Lingüística y literatura %V 25 %G eng %& 249 %0 Journal Article %J Eur. Union Polit. European Union Politics %D 2012 %T European Economic and Monetary Union's perverse effects on sectoral wage inflation: Negative feedback effects from institutional change? %A AL Johnston %B Eur. Union Polit. European Union Politics %V 13 %P 345 - 366 %8 2012 %@ 1465-1165 %G eng %N 3 %0 Conference Proceedings %B 27th Lowell Wakefield Fisheries Symposium %D 2012 %T A Framework for the Preliminary Assessment of Vulnerability of Fishing-Dependent Communities %A Flaxen D. L. Conway %A R. Hunter Berns %B 27th Lowell Wakefield Fisheries Symposium %C Anchorage, AK. %G eng %0 Book %D 2012 %T Making do in Damascus : navigating a generation of change in family and work %A Sally K. Gallagher %I Syracuse University Press %C Syracuse, N.Y. %8 2012 %@ 9780815632993 0815632991 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Anthropology Today %D 2012 %T Meeting the Demand for Meat %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Anthropology Today %V 28 %G eng %N 1 %& 11 %0 Journal Article %J Food, Culture and Society %D 2012 %T The Opacity of Reduction: Nutritional Black-Boxing and the Meanings of Nourishmen %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Food, Culture and Society %V 15 %G eng %N 2 %& 293 %0 Journal Article %J Asian EFL J. Asian EFL Journal %D 2012 %T Participation in and opposition to the ideology of English in South Korea: Insights from personal narratives %A E. Root %B Asian EFL J. Asian EFL Journal %V 14 %P 178 - 213 %8 2012/// %@ 1738-1460 %G eng %N 3 %0 Book %D 2012 %T Putting social movements in their place : explaining opposition to energy projects in the United States, 2000-2005 %A McAdam, Doug %A Hilary Boudet %X

"This book reports the results of a comparative study of 20 communities earmarked for environmentally risky energy projects. The authors find the overall level of emergent opposition to the projects very low, and they seek to explain that variation and impact it had on the proposed projects"-- "The field of social movement studies has expanded dramatically over the past three decades. But as it has done so, its focus has become increasingly narrow and ,zmovement-centric.,Z When combined with the tendency to select successful struggles for study, the conceptual and methodological conventions of the field conduce to a decidedly Ptolemaic view of social movements: one that exaggerates the frequency and causal significance of movements as a form of politics. This book reports the results of a comparative study, not of movements, but of 20 communities earmarked for environmentally risky energy projects. In stark contrast to the central thrust of the social movement literature, the authors find that the overall level of emergent opposition to the projects to have been very low, and they seek to explain that variation and the impact, if any, it had on the ultimate fate of the proposed projects"--

%I Cambridge University Press %C Cambridge; New York %8 2012/// %@ 9781107020665 1107020662 9781107650312 1107650313 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Food, Culture, and Society %D 2012 %T The Rise of State Agency-Nonprofit Collaboration Against Food Insecurity in Western States %A Mark Edwards %B Food, Culture, and Society %V 15 %P 93-112 %G eng %N 1 %0 Journal Article %J amerjsoci American Journal of Sociology %D 2012 %T To Act or Not to Act: Context, Capability, and Community Response to Environmental Risk %A Hilary Boudet %A Wright, Rachel A. %X

Social movement theory has rarely been tested with counterfactual cases, that is, instances in which movements do not emerge. Moreover, contemporary theories about political opportunity and resources often inadequately address the issue of motivation. To address these shortcomings, this article examines 20 communities that are at risk for mobilization because they face controversial proposals for large energy infrastructure projects. Movements emerge in only 10 cases, allowing for the identification of factors that drive mobilization or nonmobilization. Utilizing insights from social psychology, the authors contend that community context shapes motivations to oppose or accept a proposal, not objective measures of threat. They conclude that the combination of community contextto understand motivationand measures of capability is the best way to model movement emergence.

%B amerjsoci American Journal of Sociology %V 118 %P 728 - 777 %8 2012/// %@ 0002-9602 %G eng %N 3 %0 Journal Article %J Marine Policy %D 2012 %T The way forward with ecosystem-based management in tropical contexts: Reconciling with existing management systems %A Lori A Cramer %A Aswani, S. %A Christie, P. %A Muthiga, N.A. %A Mahon, R. %A Primavera, J.H. %A Barbier, E.B. %A Granek, E.F. %A Kennedy, C.J. %A Wolanski, E. %A Hacker, S. %X

This paper discusses some of the challenges and opportunities that can arise when implementing ecosystem-based management (EBM) in tropical nations. EBM creates a new series of challenges, problems, and opportunities that must be considered in light of existing governance and management frameworks in a local context. The paper presents five case studies from different parts of the tropical world, including Oceania, insular and continental Southeast Asia, East Africa, and the Caribbean, which illustrate that the implementation of EBM in watershed and marine ecosystems offers a new series of challenges and opportunities for its inclusion with existing forms of environmental governance and management. The paper suggests that EBM is best thought of as an expansion of customary management (CM) and integrated coastal management (ICM), rather than a paradigm shift, and that it has certain benefits that are worth integrating into existing systems when possible. The paper concludes that the cultural and institutional context of CM as well as the experience, technical skills, and legal basis that serve ICM programs are logical platforms from which to build EBM programs. Some guidelines for creating hybrid management regimes are suggested. In sum, declining marine species and ecosystems require urgent action, necessitating utilization of existing paradigms such as ICM and CM as a foundation for building EBM.

%B Marine Policy %V 36 %P 1 - 10 %8 2012 %@ 0308-597X %G eng %N 1 %0 Journal Article %J Medical Anthropology Quarterly %D 2012 %T The Weight of the Self: Care and Compassion in Guatemalan Dietary Choices %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Medical Anthropology Quarterly %V 25 %G eng %N 1 %& 136 %0 Book %D 2011 %T All the Fish in the Sea: Maximum Sustainable Yield and the Failure of Fisheries Management %A Carmel Finley %K American %K fish population %K fisheries %K fisheries policy %K management %X
Between 1949 and 1955, the State Department pushed for an international fisheries policy grounded in maximum sustainable yield (MSY). The concept is based on a confidence that scientists can predict, theoretically, the largest catch that can be taken from a species’ stock over an indefinite period. And while it was modified in 1996 with passage of the Sustained Fisheries Act, MSY is still at the heart of modern American fisheries management. As fish populations continue to crash, however, it is clear that MSY is itself not sustainable. Indeed, the concept has been widely criticized by scientists for ignoring several key factors in fisheries management and has led to the devastating collapse of many fisheries. Carmel Finley reveals that the fallibility of MSY lies at its very inception—as a tool of government rather than science. The foundational doctrine of the MSY emerged at a time when the US government was using science to promote and transfer Western knowledge and technology, and to ensure that American ships and planes would have free passage through the world’s seas and skies. Finley charts the history of US fisheries science using MSY as her focus, and in particular its application to halibut, tuna, and salmon fisheries. Fish populations the world over are threatened, and All the Fish in the Sea will help sound warnings of the effect of any management policies divested from science itself.
%P 224 %@ 0226249662 %G eng %0 Book Section %B Envisioning American Utopias. Fictions of Science and Politics in Literature and Visual Culture %D 2011 %T Barbarians at the Gate: (Ig)noble Savages and Manifest Destiny at the Final Frontier %A Philipp Kneis %A Dallman, Antje %A Reinhard Isensee %B Envisioning American Utopias. Fictions of Science and Politics in Literature and Visual Culture %I Peter Lang %C Frankfurt %P 103-128 %G eng %U http://www2.rz.hu-berlin.de/amerika/asc/publications/eau_kneis.html %0 Journal Article %J The Proceedings of Institute of Electrical & Electronics Engineers %D 2011 %T Beyond ‘Stressor-Receptor’ Interactions: Environmental Effects of Ocean Energy Through a Societal Lens %A Flaxen D. L. Conway %A Henkel, S %A G. Boehlert %B The Proceedings of Institute of Electrical & Electronics Engineers %G eng %0 Book Section %B A Companion to the Anthropology of the Body and Embodiment %D 2011 %T Bodily Betrayal: Love and Anger in the Time of Epigenetics %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B A Companion to the Anthropology of the Body and Embodiment %G eng %0 Generic %D 2011 %T CeSSIAM Bulletin, Editorial %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Generic %D 2011 %T Challenges of healthy eating among low income youth in Western Oregon: Preliminary Findings of the Ten Rivers Food Web Community Food Assessment %A Joan Gross %X

Agriculture, Food and Human Values, Society for the Anthropology of Food and Nutrition and Association for the Study of Food and Society annual meeting, Missoula, MT.  June 10, 2011

%G eng %0 Book %D 2011 %T Civil society in Russia : state society relations in the post-Yeltsin era %A Sarah L. Henderson %A National Council for Eurasian and East European Research (U.S.), %I National Council for Eurasian and East European Research %C Seattle, WA %8 2011 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2011 %T Complex Carbohydrates %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Food and Foodways %D 2011 %T Constructing a Community Food Economy %A Joan Gross %B Food and Foodways %V 19 %G eng %N 3 %0 Book %D 2011 %T The Daily Show and Rhetoric : Arguments, Issues, and Strategies %A Goodnow, Trischa %I Lexington Books %C Lanham, Md. %@ 9780739150023 0739150022 9780739150030 0739150030 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J J. Constr. Eng. Manage. Journal of Construction Engineering and Management %D 2011 %T Drivers of Conflict in Developing Country Infrastructure Projects: Experience from the Water and Pipeline Sectors %A Hilary Boudet %A Jayasundera, Dilanka Chinthana %A Davis, Jennifer %B J. Constr. Eng. Manage. Journal of Construction Engineering and Management %V 137 %P 498 - 511 %8 2011/// %@ 0733-9364 %G eng %N 7 %0 Book %D 2011 %T Envisioning American utopias : fictions of science and politics in literature and visual culture %A Philipp Kneis %A Dallmann, Antje %A Isensee, Reinhard %X

"The volume discusses utopian representations of American society, and reflections of American political thought and vision in literature, film, and television. The articles address topics of ecology, urbanism, politics, society, and heroism. Specifically, the volume addresses texts by Paul Auster, Ernest Callenbach, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Bernard-Henri Lévy, Herman Melville, Edgar Allen Poe, Sam Shepard, Alexis de Toqueville, James Welch, and Nathanael West, and television series like 24, and the Star Trek and Stargate franchises, as well as video games. Contributors include Sandra Beyer, Rasmus Damkjær Christensen, Antje Dallmann, Allison Davis-White Eyes, Martin Dalgaard Grøn, Reinhard Isensee, Berenike Jung, Philipp Kneis, Daniela Simon, Katarzyna Sobieraj, Renate Ulbrich, and Thomas Wagenknecht"--Publisher.

%I Peter Lang %C Frankfurt am Main; New York %8 2011 %@ 9783631575130 3631575130 %G eng %0 Book Section %B Envisioning American Utopias. Fictions of Science and Politics in Literature and Visual Culture %D 2011 %T Finding Atlantis Instead of Utopia: From Plato to Starfleet and Stargate Command %A Philipp Kneis %A Dallmann, Antje %A Reinhard Isensee %B Envisioning American Utopias. Fictions of Science and Politics in Literature and Visual Culture %I Peter Lang %C Frankfurt %P 79-102 %G eng %U http://www2.rz.hu-berlin.de/amerika/asc/publications/eau_kneis.html %0 Generic %D 2011 %T Food Activism in Rural Oregon: Challenges and Collaborations %A Joan Gross %X

Society for Applied Anthropology Annual Meeting, Seattle, WA.  March 31, 2011.

%G eng %0 Generic %D 2011 %T Food Activists: Issues of Structure and Agency %A Joan Gross %X

Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association, Montreal, Canada.  December, 2011.

%G eng %0 Journal Article %J Environmental Politics %D 2011 %T From NIMBY to NIABY: regional mobilization against liquefied natural gas in the United States %A Hilary Boudet %X

Only sometimes do environmental protests that begin as not-in-my-backyard (NIMBY) objections to proposed facilities become translated into more universal not-in-anyone's-backyard (NIABY) mobilizations. An examination of opposition to liquefied natural gas (LNG) receiving terminals in the United States shows evidence of regional mobilization in the Gulf and West Coasts, but not in the Northeast. Opposition to LNG facilities in the United States thus provides an opportunity to study often overlooked regional mobilization. A narrative of events in each region is provided, with special attention to the key mechanisms of frame bridging, relational diffusion, brokerage and certification. In the case of the Northeast, two contextual factors also appear to have impeded the development of more coordinated opposition to LNG.

%B Environmental Politics %V 20 %P 786 - 806 %8 2011/// %@ 0964-4016 %G eng %N 6 %0 Journal Article %J SOCSCI The Social Science Journal %D 2011 %T Ideology over strategy: Extending voting rights to felons and ex-felons, 1966-1992 %A Brett C. Burkhardt %X

The disenfranchisement of felons and ex-felons has long served to restrict the practice of democracy in the United States. In the late 20th century, a number of states allowed increasing numbers of felons and ex-felons to vote. Previous work has noted that Democrats are often associated with extensions of voting rights to felons and ex-felons. If this is the case, what accounts for their support for re-enfranchisement? In this paper I conduct a series of event history analyses of voting rights policy changes at the state level. I argue that Democratic support was not based on expected electoral benefits that might derive from changes in the composition of the electorate. Instead, analyses suggest that would-be reformersoften Democratic, but also Republicanwere importantly constrained by the ideological climate among a state's population. Thus, policy liberalism appears to have trumped crass partisan strategizing in encouraging restoration of voting rights to felons and ex-felons. Results also confirm claims that local patterns of racial domination were relevant in decisions to re-enfranchise or not.

%B SOCSCI The Social Science Journal %V 48 %P 356 - 363 %8 2011/// %@ 0362-3319 %G eng %N 2 %0 Generic %D 2011 %T The Influence of alexithymia on initial interactions. %A Colin Hesse %E Floyd, K. %G eng %0 Book Section %B Envisioning American Utopias. Fictions of Science and Politics in Literature and Visual Culture %D 2011 %T Introduction: Utopia and America %A Philipp Kneis %A Dallmann, Antje %A Reinhard Isensee %B Envisioning American Utopias. Fictions of Science and Politics in Literature and Visual Culture %I Peter Lang %C Frankfurt %P 7-17 %G eng %U http://www2.rz.hu-berlin.de/amerika/asc/publications/eau_kneis.html %0 Journal Article %J Gastronomica: The Journal of Food and Culture %D 2011 %T The Last Supper %A Julie Green %X

Texas, home to cattle ranches and more death-row executions than any other state, doesn't allow steak for a final meal. If you order steak in Texas, you get hamburger. I have always been focused on food. As a kid, I won eating contests; these days I grow organic produce. The years I spent in Oklahoma, which has the highest per capita rate of executions, turned my interest in food toward final meals. The Last Supper is a series of ceramic plates illustrating final meal requests in the United States. Starting in Norma, Oklahoma in 1999, I have painted 420 plates to date. I plan to continue adding fifty more each year until capital punishment is abolished. When looking at the inmates' humble choices, it is important to note that while rituals and traditions vary, most states limit final-meal allowances to twenty dollars. Maryland is the only state that does not allow any meal selection. A last cigarette is permitted in some prisons. Alcohol is prohibited in all. Texas denies bubble gum. Sometimes requests provide clues about personality, race, and region. An Oregon inmate's final meal request closed with "I would appreciate the eggs hot." And who wouldn't? The Last Supper plates have travelled to nine states and the UK. The project has been included in the book Confrontational Ceramics by Judith Schwartz, on the radio program The Splendid Table and on Southern California Public Radio.

%B Gastronomica: The Journal of Food and Culture %V 11 %P 81 - 83 %8 2011/// %@ 1529-3262 %G eng %N 1 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Ethnographic Theory %D 2011 %T Mixing Method, Tasting Fingers: Notes on an Ethnographic Experiment %A Emily Yates-Doerr %B Journal of Ethnographic Theory %V 1 %G eng %N 1 %& 221 %0 Generic %D 2011 %T Promise and peril America at the dawn of a global age %A Christopher McKnight Nichols %I Harvard University Press %C Cambridge, Mass. %8 2011/// %@ 9780674061187 0674061187 %G eng %U http://site.ebrary.com/id/10492930 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Policy Analysis and Management %D 2011 %T Reducing Child Support Debt and Its Consequences: Can Forgiveness Benefit All? %A Brett C. Burkhardt %A Heinrich, Carolyn J. %A Shager, Hilary M. %X

As child support debt owed nationally persists at enormous levels, both noncustodial parents and the custodial families who are not receiving support suffer significant hardships, and states are forced to expend greater resources on collection and enforcement efforts. This paper presents findings from an evaluation of a demonstration program developed to help noncustodial parents with large child support debts reduce their debt while simultaneously increasing child support paid to families, through gradual forgiveness of arrears conditional on payment of current child support obligations. The evaluation employs a randomized experimental design, nonexperimental analyses using propensity score matching and multilevel modeling techniques, and focus groups and follow-up interviews. Results show a pattern of effects that suggests individuals responded to the program as intended. State- and family-owed child support debt balances decreased for program participants, and participants paid more toward their child support obligations and arrears and made more frequent child support payments. The study findings suggest promise for the effectiveness of this program model in reducing child support debt burdens and in increasing families' receipt of child support, and they also point to ways in which the implementation of the program might be improved. (Contains 3 tables and 27 footnotes.)

%B Journal of Policy Analysis and Management %I John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Subscription Department, 111 River Street, Hoboken, NJ 07030-5774. Tel: 800-825-7550; Tel: 201-748-6645; Fax: 201-748-6021; e-mail: subinfo@wiley.com; Web site: http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/browse/?type=JOURNAL %V 30 %P 755 - 774 %8 2011/// %@ 0276-8739 %G eng %N 4 %0 Book Section %B Western Aid in Post-Communism: Effects and Side Effects %D 2011 %T USAID Support for Civil Society %A Sarah L. Henderson %A David Lehrer %A Anna Korhonen %B Western Aid in Post-Communism: Effects and Side Effects %7 2nd %I Palgrave %C New York %G eng %0 Book Section %B At the Heart of Work and Family: Engaging the Ideas of Arlie Hochschild %D 2011 %T Wives Who Play by the Rules: Working on Emotions in the Sport Marriage %A Steven M. Ortiz %A Anita Ilta Garey %A Karen V. Hansen %B At the Heart of Work and Family: Engaging the Ideas of Arlie Hochschild %P 124-135 %G eng %& 9 %0 Generic %D 2010 %T Building Communities and Making Connections %A Susana Rivera-Mills %A Trujillo, Juan Antonio. %X

Building Communities and Making Connections explores areas of academic and community engagement, through various studies that include community service learning, and the development and implementation of university programs that contain a community dimension. Academic endeavors have long been seen as separate from the realities of local and regional communities. This book closes the gap by looking at ways in which both academia and the communities its serves can collaborate to create authenti ...

%I Cambridge Scholars Pub. %C Newcastle upon Tyne %8 2010/// %@ 9781443820226 1443820229 %G eng %U http://public.eblib.com/choice/publicfullrecord.aspx?p=1107126 %0 Conference Paper %D 2010 %T China learns from the Soviet Union, 1949-present %A Hua-Yu Li %A Bernstein, Thomas P. %I Lexington Books %C Lanham, Md. %8 2010 %@ 9780739142226 0739142224 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Studies in symbolic interaction. %D 2010 %T Competing with her Mother-In-Law: The Intersection of Control Management and Emotion Management in Sport Families %A Steven M. Ortiz %B Studies in symbolic interaction. %I Jai Press. %C Greenwich, Conn %V 35 %P 319 - 344 %8 2010 %@ 0163-2396 %G eng %0 Book %D 2010 %T Developing Intercultural Competence through the Learning Community Model %A Susana Rivera-Mills %A Center for Educational Resources in Culture, Language and Literacy (CERCLL) %X

Learning Communities (LC) represent an alternative model of teaching and learning in higher education that can foster intercultural competence and knowledge. "Some of the distinctive features of LCs are that they are usually smaller than most units on campus, they help overcome the isolation of faculty members from one another and their students, they encourage continuity and integration in the curriculum and they help build a sense of group identity, cohesion and "specialness"" (O'Connor 2003). Having integrated a Spanish language LC at our institution we found this model to produce positive academic and affective outcomes. This model engages disaffected second language (L2) learners, helps keep first- and second-year students in school, and helps Latino students feel supported (Trujillo 2009). This paper focuses on how this model additionally helps to develop intercultural competence by describing the implementation of assignments and the interethnic and intraethnic interactions in the course. (Contains 1 footnote.) [This paper was published in: Proceedings of Intercultural Competence Conference August, 2010, Vol. 1, pp. 335-357.]

%I Center for Educational Resources in Culture, Language and Literacy (CERCCL). P.O. Box 210073, CCIT Room 337, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85722. Tel: 520-626-8071; Fax: 520-626-3313; e-mail: cerccl@email.arizona.edu; Web site: http://cercll.arizona.e %8 2010/// %G eng %0 Generic %D 2010 %T Discursive Tensions in the Development of a Local Food Movement %A Joan Gross %X

ASFS/AFHVS/SAFN National meeting.  Bloomington, IN.  June 5, 2010

%G eng %0 Journal Article %J Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology %D 2010 %T Ecosystem services as a common language for coastal ecosystem-based management. %A Lori A Cramer %A Granek EF %A Polasky S %A Kappel CV %A Reed DJ %A Stoms DM %A Koch EW %A Kennedy CJ %A Hacker SD %A Barbier EB %A Aswani S %A Ruckelshaus M %A Perillo GM %A Silliman BR %A Muthiga N %A Bael D %A Wolanski E %X

Ecosystem-based management is logistically and politically challenging because ecosystems are inherently complex and management decisions affect a multitude of groups. Coastal ecosystems, which lie at the interface between marine and terrestrial ecosystems and provide an array of ecosystem services to different groups, aptly illustrate these challenges. Successful ecosystem-based management of coastal ecosystems requires incorporating scientific information and the knowledge and views of interested parties into the decision-making process. Estimating the provision of ecosystem services under alternative management schemes offers a systematic way to incorporate biogeophysical and socioeconomic information and the views of individuals and groups in the policy and management process. Employing ecosystem services as a common language to improve the process of ecosystem-based management presents both benefits and difficulties. Benefits include a transparent method for assessing trade-offs associated with management alternatives, a common set of facts and common currency on which to base negotiations, and improved communication among groups with competing interests or differing worldviews. Yet challenges to this approach remain, including predicting how human interventions will affect ecosystems, how such changes will affect the provision of ecosystem services, and how changes in service provision will affect the welfare of different groups in society. In a case study from Puget Sound, Washington, we illustrate the potential of applying ecosystem services as a common language for ecosystem-based management.

%B Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology %V 24 %P 207 - 16 %8 2010 %@ 0888-8892 %G eng %N 1 %0 Book %D 2010 %T The Emancipation of the Soul. Memes of Destiny in American Mythological Television %A Philipp Kneis %I Peter Lang %C Frankfurt %P 153 %G eng %U http://www.pjkx.com/es/index.html %0 Journal Article %J American Indian Culture and Research Journal %D 2010 %T Inhabiting Indianness: Colonial Culs-de-Sac %A Natchee Barnd %K colonialism %K geography %K indian %K native american %K street names %X

This article offers original research on the national use of Indian-themed street names in residential areas, with an analysis of the content and commentary on the spatial implications. In addition to the research on the quality and quantity of such spatial markers, the author situates this data in relation to the racial composition of the neighborhoods and communities in which they appear, showing such locations to be exceedingly white spaces. His research and analysis demonstrate that the use of Indianness in street naming is uniquely prolific, extending across state and regional differences, and following a few culturally normative templates. Further, the use of Indianness in street naming is distinctive in referencing racialized peoples while marking white space. (Contains 5 figures, 3 tables and 30 notes.)

%B American Indian Culture and Research Journal %I American Indian Studies Center at UCLA. 3220 Campbell Hall, Box 951548, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1548. Tel: 310-825-7315; Fax: 310-206-7060; e-mail: sales@aisc.ucla.edu; Web site: http://www.books.aisc.ucla.edu/aicrj.html %V 34 %P 27 - 45 %8 2010 %@ 0161-6463 %G eng %N 3 %0 Book Section %B China Learns from the Soviet Union, 1949–Present %D 2010 %T Instilling Stalinism in Chinese Party Members: Absorbing Stalin’s Short Course %A Hua-Yu Li %A Thomas P. Bernstein %B China Learns from the Soviet Union, 1949–Present %G eng %0 Book %D 2010 %T Long form fishing community profile. %A Flaxen D. L. Conway %A Package, Christina %I Oregon State University, Oregon Sea Grant %C Corvallis, Or. %8 2010 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Oceanog. Oceanography %D 2010 %T Ocean Space, Ocean Place: The Human Dimensions of Wave Energy in Oregon %A Flaxen D. L. Conway %A Stevenson, John %A Hunter, Daniel %A Stefanovich, Maria %A Campbell, Holly %A Covell, Zack %A Yin, Yao %B Oceanog. Oceanography %V 23 %P 82 - 91 %8 2010 %@ 1042-8275 %G eng %N 2 %0 Generic %D 2010 %T Official and Personal Discourses in the Development of a Local Food Movement %A Joan Gross %X

109th Annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association, New Orleans, LA.  November 18, 2010.

%G eng %0 Journal Article %J Journal of drug issues. %D 2010 %T Pathways to Adult Alcohol Abuse Across Racial/Ethnic Groups: An Application of General Strain and Social Learning Theories %A Scott Akins %A Smith, Chad L %A Mosher, Clayton %B Journal of drug issues. %I Journal of Drug Issues %C Tallahassee, Fla. %V 40 %P 321 %8 2010/// %@ 0022-0426 %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Criminology & Public Policy %D 2010 %T Public Criminologies %A Michelle Inderbitzin %A Uggen, Christopher %X

Research Summary Public scholarship aspires to bring social science home to the individuals, communities, and institutions that are its focus of study. In particular, it seeks to narrow the yawning gap between public perceptions and the best available scientific evidence on issues of public concern. Yet nowhere is the gap between perceptions and evidence greater than in the study of crime. Here, we outline the prospects for a public criminology, conducting and disseminating research on crime, law, and deviance in dialogue with affected communities. We present historical data on the media discussion of criminology and sociology, and we outline the distinctive features of criminology-interdisciplinary, a subject matter that incites moral panics, and a practitioner base actively engaged in knowledge production-that push the boundaries of public scholarship. Policy Implications Discussions of public sociology have drawn a bright line separating policy work from professional, critical, and public scholarship. As the research and policy essays published in Criminology & Public Policy make clear, however, the best criminology often is conducted at the intersection of these domains. A vibrant public criminology will help to bring new voices to policy discussions while addressing common myths and misconceptions about crime.

%B Criminology & Public Policy %I Blackwell Publishing %V 9 %P 725 - 749 %8 2010 %@ 1538-6473 %G eng %N 4 %0 Book Section %B Advocacy Organizations and Collective Action %D 2010 %T Shaping Civic Advocacy: International and Dometic policies toward Russia's NGO Sector %A Sarah L. Henderson %A Mary Kay Gugerty %A Aseem Prakash %B Advocacy Organizations and Collective Action %I Cambridge University Press %C New York %G eng %0 Journal Article %J SOCF Sociological Forum %D 2010 %T Site Fights: Explaining Opposition to Pipeline Projects in the Developing World %A Hilary Boudet %A McAdam, Doug %A Davis, Jennifer %A Orr, Ryan J. %A Richard Scott, W. %A Levitt, Raymond E. %X

Fifty years ago, the main challenges to large infrastructure projects were technical or scientific. Today, the greatest hurdles faced by such projects are almost always social and/or political. Whether constructing large dams in the developing world or siting liquefied natural gas terminals in the United States, the onset of these projects often triggers intense popular opposition. But not always, and therein lays the animating aim of this project. We undertake a systematic comparative case analysis of mobilization efforts against 11 oil and gas pipeline projects spanning 16 countries in the developing world. Using theories from the social movement and facility siting literatures and the technique of fuzzy set/qualitative comparative analysis (fs/QCA), we examine the causal conditions linked to political and legal opposition to these projects. We find that both Western funding of projects and public consultation serve as necessary political opportunities encouraging mobilization. In addition, not compensating the host country for involvement in the project is linked to mobilization. Finally, some risk from the project, in the form of environmental or social impact, is associated with mobilization; however, this impact does not have to be very significant for mobilization to occur.

%B SOCF Sociological Forum %V 25 %P 401 - 427 %8 2010/// %@ 0884-8971 %G eng %N 3 %0 Book %D 2010 %T Spanish of the U.S. Southwest : a language in transition %A Susana Rivera-Mills %A Villa, Daniel J. %I Iberoamericana Vervuert Pub. Corp. %C Norwalk, CT %8 2010/// %@ 9781936353002 1936353008 9781936353019 1936353016 9788484894773 8484894770 9783865275097 3865275095 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Planning Education and Research %D 2010 %T A Tale of Two Sitings: Contentious Politics in Liquefied Natural Gas Facility Siting in California %A Hilary Boudet %A Ortolano, Leonard %X

The siting of large industrial facilities represents a difficult planning problem. Despite decades of experience and research on siting, many of the same patterns of conflict persist. We focus on four factors drawn largely from the study of social movements--threat, political opportunity, resources and appropriation, and loss of trust--to explain the mobilization efforts of project opponents in two cases of attempts to site liquefied natural gas terminals in California. Findings from these cases indicate that either a significant endowment of resources or a combination of threat and political opportunity is important for mobilization.

%B Journal of Planning Education and Research %I Sage Publications %V 30 %P 5 - 21 %8 2010/// %@ 0739-456X %G eng %N 1 %0 Generic %D 2010 %T Transnacionalismo del voseante: salvadoreÒos y hondureÒos en los Estados Unidos %A Susana Rivera-Mills %X

This sociolinguistic study explores Central American Spanish, specifically second-person pronoun usage and the sociolinguistic use of voseo as an affirmation of Central American identity among Salvadorans and Hondurans in the United States. The Salvadoran and Honduran linguistic experience is examined through sociolinguistic interviews and ethnographic observations with twenty individuals of Salvadoran and Honduran origin and/or descent . Initial results indicate that the native voseo is being transplanted into U.S. Central American communities and is used as an affirmation of Central American identity, and within and berween Central Americans and other Latinos (Mexican, Ecuadorian, Colombian) if their relationship reaches the level of confianza/trust required for the usage of vos. El propÛsito de este estudio es examinar las formas pronominales de segunda persona singular, especÌficamente el voseo, para determinar los patrones y contextos de su uso socioling¸Ìstico y cÛmo sirve de marcador de identidad entre salvadoreÒos y hondureÒos en los Estados Unidos. A travÈs de entrevistas socioling¸Ìsticas y por medio de observaciones etnogr·ficas con veinte individuos de origen o descendencia salvadoreÒa u hondureÒa, se adentra en la experiencia centroamericana en Oregon y Washington. Los datos preliminares muestran que el voseo es un fenÛmeno transnacional y sirve de rasgo socioling¸Ìstico, afirmando origen o descendencia centroamericana, y es usado en los Estados Unidos entre centroamericanos y otros latinos (mexicanos, ecuatorianos, colombianos) si su relaciÛn alcanza el nivel de confianza requerido por el vos.

%I Universidad de Alcal· %8 2010/// %G eng %U http://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/oaiart?codigo=3306395 %0 Book Section %B Fifty Key Criminological Thinkers %D 2010 %T William Chaimbliss %A Michelle Inderbitzin %A Heather Boyd %A Keith Hayward %A Shadd Maruna %A Jayne Mooney %B Fifty Key Criminological Thinkers %I Routledge %P 203-208 %G eng %0 Book %D 2010 %T Women and politics in a global world %A Sarah L. Henderson %A Jeydel, Alana S. %I Oxford University Press %C New York %8 2010 %@ 9780195388077 0195388070 %G eng %0 Book %D 2009 %T Adding value to ocean- and fisheries-related research through integrating the knowledge and expertise of the West Coast fishing community : the final evaluation of the Port Liason Project %A Flaxen D. L. Conway %A Hildenbrand, Kaety %I Oregon Sea Grant %C Corvallis, Or. %8 2009 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J International Journal of Geographical Information Science %D 2009 %T Assessing housing growth when census boundaries change %A Roger B. Hammer %A Syphard, Alexandra D. %A Stewart, Susan I. %A Mckeefry, Jason %A Fried, Jeremy S. %A Holcomb, Sherry %A Radeloff, Volker C. %X

The US Census provides the primary source of spatially explicit social data, but changing block boundaries complicate analyses of housing growth over time. We compared procedures for reconciling housing density data between 1990 and 2000 census block boundaries in order to assess the sensitivity of analytical methods to estimates of housing growth in Oregon. Estimates of housing growth varied substantially and were sensitive to the method of interpolation. With no processing and arealweighted interpolation, more than 35% of the landscape changed; 75-80% of this change was due to decline in housing density. This decline was implausible, however, because housing structures generally persist over time. Based on aggregated boundaries, 11% of the landscape changed, but only 4% experienced a decline in housing density. Nevertheless, the housing density change map was almost twice as coarse spatially as the 2000 housing density data. We also applied a dasymetric approach to redistribute 1990 housing data into 2000 census boundaries under the assumption that the distribution of housing in 2000 reflected the same distribution as in 1990. The dasymetric approach resulted in conservative change estimates at a fine resolution. All methods involved some type of tradeoff (e.g. analytical difficulty, data resolution, magnitude or bias in direction of change). However, our dasymetric procedure is a novel approach for assessing housing growth over changing census boundaries that may be particularly useful because it accounts for the uniquely persistent nature of housing over time.

%B International Journal of Geographical Information Science %V 23 %P 859 - 876 %8 2009 %@ 1365-8816 %G eng %N 7 %0 Magazine Article %D 2009 %T Captalism and its Discontents: Back-to-the-Lander and Freegan Foodways in Rural Oregon %A Joan Gross %B Food and Foodways %V 17 %P 57-79 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Law & Social Inquiry %D 2009 %T Criminal Punishment, Labor Market Outcomes, and Economic Inequality: Devah Pager's Marked: Race, Crime, and Finding Work in an Era of Mass Incarceration %A Brett C. Burkhardt %X

A growing empirical literature examines the role of incarceration in labor market outcomes and economic inequality more broadly. Devah Pager's book, Marked: Race, Crime, and Finding Work in an Era of Mass Incarceration (2007), offers compelling evidence that employment opportunities for former prisoners-especially black former prisoners-are bleak. I review Pager's methods and findings, place them in the context of previous work, and discuss the relation of race to a criminal record. I then explore several lines of related research that investigate the increasing reach of criminal punishment into various social realms. One goal of this essay is to draw research on economic inequality into the law and society literature.

%B Law & Social Inquiry %I Blackwell Publishing %V 34 %P 1039 - 1060 %8 2009/// %@ 0897-6546 %G eng %N 4 %0 Generic %D 2009 %T A Death in the Family %A Emily Yates-Doerr %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Sociology of Religion %D 2009 %T Defining spiritual growth: Congregations, Community & Connectedness %A Sally K. Gallagher %A Chelsea Newton %B Sociology of Religion %V 70 %P 232-261 %G eng %N 3 %0 Magazine Article %D 2009 %T The Double Binds of Getting Food among the Poor in Rural Oregon %A Joan Gross %A Nancy Rosenberger %B Food, Culture, and Society %V 12 %G eng %N 4 %0 Journal Article %J fidm Marine and Coastal Fisheries: Dynamics, Management, and Ecosystem Science %D 2009 %T Figuring Out the Human Dimensions of Fisheries: Illuminating Models %A Flaxen D. L. Conway %A Madeleine Hall-Arber %A Pomeroy, Caroline %X

Both natural scientists and economists commonly use quantitative data to create models of the systems that interest them and then use these models to inform fisheries management. Other social scientists rely on lengthier, descriptive texts based primarily on qualitative data to assess the human dimensions. To their dismay, fisheries social scientists find that much of their rich narrative with keen insights ends up filling pages that are neither read nor meaningfully integrated into decision-making in fisheries management. Nevertheless, what all scientists, practitioners, and managers want and need is information that will lead to a better understanding of the ecosystem (comprised of interdependent ecological and human systems) and therefore to fisheries management that benefits the whole system. Based on the belief that only a combination of high-quality quantitative and qualitative data will provide both the numbers and the context needed for success in ecosystem-based management, we discuss efforts to present social and cultural information in forms that are more familiar to those who rely on models for a representation of reality in the fisheries context. We point out how the designers of these models (or how we) think the models might be applied to fisheries management, noting how each model attempts to incorporate qualitative data to depict context essential for grounding the more commonly used biological and economic models. We also assess the benefits and limitations of these models, including the constraints on their development and use.

%B fidm Marine and Coastal Fisheries: Dynamics, Management, and Ecosystem Science %P 300 - 314 %8 2009 %@ 1942-5120 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Judicature %D 2009 %T George W. Bush's legacy on the federal bench: Policy in the face of diversity %A Rorie Solberg %A Diascro, J.S. %B Judicature %V 92 %P 289 - 301 %8 2009 %@ 0022-5800 %G eng %N 6 %0 Journal Article %J Homicide Studies %D 2009 %T Immigration, Economic Disadvantage, and Homicide %A Scott Akins %A Rumbaut, Rubén %A Stansfield, Richard %X

In this article, the effect of recent immigration on homicide rates across city of Austin, Texas census tracts is examined. Since 1980, Austin's recent immigrant population increased by more than 580% across the metropolitan area and it is now considered a "pre-emerging" immigrant gateway city to the United States. Therefore the changing population dynamics in Austin provide an excellent opportunity to study the effect of recent immigration on homicide. After controlling for structural predictors of homicide and correcting for spatial autocorrelation, our findings indicate that recent immigration is not associated with homicide.

%B Homicide Studies %I Sage Publications %V 13 %P 307 - 314 %8 2009/// %@ 1088-7679 %G eng %N 3 %0 Journal Article %J Southwest Journal of Linguistics %D 2009 %T Latinos or Hispanics? Changing Demographics, Implications, and Continued Diversity %A Susana Rivera-Mills %X

The study of Spanish in the southwestern region of the United States includes both traditional and newly formed speech communities, as demonstrated by the many contributions to the body of research that look at the Spanish of this region. However, as we observe current demographic patterns, it is evident that there is a significant change from the dominant Mexican, Mexican-American focus to one that is more inclusive of the diversity and growth of other Hispanic/Latino populations. This paper focuses on presenting the changing demographics of Latinos in the U.S. and exemplifies the case of Oregon to show the implications those changing demographics may have on our cultural and linguistic landscape as well as on future research endeavors.

%B Southwest Journal of Linguistics %V 28 %G eng %N 2 %M 52587753 %& 1 %0 Book Section %B Old Growth in a New World: A Pacific Northwest Icon Re-examined %D 2009 %T Moving Science and Immovable Values Regarding Old Growth Forests: Clumsy Solutions for Wicked Problems. %A Denise Lach %B Old Growth in a New World: A Pacific Northwest Icon Re-examined %I Island Press %C Washington, DC %P 233-243 %G eng %0 Book Section %B Teaching Race in the 21st Century: College Teachers Talk About Their Fears, Risks, and Rewards %D 2009 %T A New Era for Teaching American Indian Studies %A Natchee Barnd %E Lisa Guerrero %K american indian studies %K ethnic studies %K natchee barnd %K pedagogy %K teaching race %B Teaching Race in the 21st Century: College Teachers Talk About Their Fears, Risks, and Rewards %I Palgrave Macmillan %C New York %8 2009/// %@ 9780230608009 0230608000 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Rural Sociology %D 2009 %T Paradoxes of Providing Rural Social Services: The Case of Homeless Youth %A Mark Edwards %A Torgerson, Melissa %A Sattem, Jennifer %X

Economic and demographic changes in rural areas continue to introduce big-city problems in small towns. These communities' ability and willingness to respond are likely to be influenced by the geography, culture, and array of organizations in rural places. But how these characteristics of rural places shape local response is hard to predict and as yet unexplored. This article reports data from interviews with social-service providers and homeless youth in a rural county in the northwestern United States, drawing insights from both groups about the challenges of providing social services in rural places. Findings about drug use, sexual abuse and prostitution in rural communities illustrate how aspects of a rural context can influence the way small towns address social problems. (Contains 1 footnote.)

%B Rural Sociology %I Rural Sociological Society. 104 Gentry Hall, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211-7040. Tel: 573-882-9065; Fax: 573-882-1473; e-mail: ruralsoc@missouri.edu; Web site: http://www.ruralsociology.org %V 74 %P 330 - 355 %8 2009 %@ 0036-0112 %G eng %N 3 %0 Book Section %B Journal of Cold War Studies %D 2009 %T Reactions of Chinese People to the Death of Stalin %A Hua-Yu Li %B Journal of Cold War Studies %7 2 %V 11 %P 70-88 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Adolescent Research %D 2009 %T Reentry of Emerging Adults: Adolescent Inmates' Transition Back Into the Community %A Michelle Inderbitzin %X

This article is based on the sociological analysis of the experiences and perspectives of five young men making the transition out of one state's end-of-the-line maximum security juvenile correctional facility and attempting to reenter the community as emerging adults. As part of a larger ethnographic study of violent offenders in a cottage, these young men shared their observations as they faced their futures with both fear and hope. Upon their release from the institution, they found few people or services to rely on, and they struggled the best way they knew to cope with new and frightening responsibilities of independence and emerging adulthood.

%B Journal of Adolescent Research %V 24 %P 453 - 476 %8 2009/07/01 %G eng %U http://jar.sagepub.com/content/24/4/453.abstract %N 4 %! Journal of Adolescent Research %0 Hearing %D 2009 %T seem/seam %A Christine Gallagher %K Design of Human Environment %K Graphic Design %B Fairbanks Gallery %8 2009 %G eng %2 c %4 58492174336 %0 Book %D 2009 %T Spanish in Context 6 %? Susana Rivera-Mills %X

Spanish in Context publishes original theoretical, empirical and methodological studies into pragmatics and sociopragmatics, variationist and interactional sociolinguistics, sociology of language, discourse and conversation analysis, functional contextual analyses, bilingualism, and crosscultural and intercultural communication with the aim of extending our knowledge of Spanish and of these disciplines themselves.

%7 Spanish Maintenance and Loss in the US Southwest %V 1 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J The Social Science Journal %D 2009 %T When safety culture backfires: Unintended consequences of half-shared governance in a high tech workplace %A Mark Edwards %A Jabs, L.B. %X

This paper applies concepts from the sociology and anthropology of organizations to understand limits to the implementation of a more effective safety culture in the workplace. It highlights unintended consequences of combining bureaucratic control and shared governance and identifies sources of inertia within already existing safety cultures. The data come from focus group interviews with workers in a research and development facility of a multinational corporation in the Western U.S. It is found that safety protocols, rules, and rhetoric, combined with efforts to give workers more responsibility for safety in the workplace, create tendencies toward worker alienation, shame with regard to injuries, complacency, and fear of bureaucratic processes. Therefore it appears that some efforts to create safety culture in the workplace may unintentionally undermine the goal of manufacturing safety.

%B The Social Science Journal %V 46 %P 707 - 723 %8 2009 %@ 0362-3319 %G eng %N 4 %0 Book Section %B Understanding Contemporary Russia %D 2009 %T Women in a Changing Context %A Sarah L. Henderson %A Mike Bressler %B Understanding Contemporary Russia %I Boulder, CO %C Lynne Reinner Publishers %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Statesman Journal %D 2008 %T Candidates Need to Address Issue of Indebtedness %A David Bernell %B Statesman Journal %8 03/2008 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Science (New York, N.Y.) %D 2008 %T Coastal ecosystem-based management with nonlinear ecological functions and values. %A Lori A Cramer %A Barbier EB %A Koch EW %A Silliman BR %A Hacker SD %A Wolanski E %A Primavera J %A Granek EF %A Polasky S %A Aswani S %A Stoms DM %A Kennedy CJ %A Bael D, %A Kappel CV %A Perillo GM %A Reed DJ %X

A common assumption is that ecosystem services respond linearly to changes in habitat size. This assumption leads frequently to an "all or none" choice of either preserving coastal habitats or converting them to human use. However, our survey of wave attenuation data from field studies of mangroves, salt marshes, seagrass beds, nearshore coral reefs, and sand dunes reveals that these relationships are rarely linear. By incorporating nonlinear wave attenuation in estimating coastal protection values of mangroves in Thailand, we show that the optimal land use option may instead be the integration of development and conservation consistent with ecosystem-based management goals. This result suggests that reconciling competing demands on coastal habitats should not always result in stark preservation-versus-conversion choices.

%B Science (New York, N.Y.) %V 319 %P 321 - 3 %8 2008 %@ 0036-8075 %G eng %N 5861 %0 Magazine Article %D 2008 %T Defendiendo la (Agri)Cultura: Reterritorializing Culture in the Puerto Rican Décima %A Joan Gross %B Oral Tradition %V 23 %P 1-16 %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of drug issues. %D 2008 %T The Effect of Acculturation on Patterns of Hispanic Substance Use in Washington State %A Scott Akins %A Mosher, Clayton %A Smith, Chad L %A Gauthier, Jane Florence %B Journal of drug issues. %I Journal of Drug Issues %C Tallahassee, Fla. %V 38 %P 103 %8 2008/// %@ 0022-0426 %G eng %N 1 %0 Book Section %B Water and Equity: Fair Practice in Apportioning Water Among Places and Values %D 2008 %T Equity Issues in Stormwater Policy Implementation: Disparities in Financial Burdens and Lifestyle Sacrifice %A Amy Below %A Helen Ingram %A Richard Perry %A Sheldon Kamieniecki %B Water and Equity: Fair Practice in Apportioning Water Among Places and Values %I MIT Press %C Cambridge, MA %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology %D 2008 %T Human impacts on regional avian diversity and abundance. %A Roger B. Hammer %A Lepczyk CA %A Flather CH %A Radeloff VC %A Pidgeon AM, %A Liu J %X

Patterns of association between humans and biodiversity typically show positive, negative, or negative quadratic relationships and can be described by 3 hypotheses: biologically rich areas that support high human population densities co-occur with areas of high biodiversity (productivity); biodiversity decreases monotonically with increasing human activities (ecosystem stress); and biodiversity peaks at intermediate levels of human influence (intermediate disturbance). To test these hypotheses, we compared anthropogenic land cover and housing units, as indices of human influence, with bird species richness and abundance across the Midwestern United States. We modeled richness of native birds with 12 candidate models of land cover and housing to evaluate the empirical evidence. To assess which species were responsible for observed variation in richness, we repeated our model-selection analysis with relative abundance of each native species as the response and then asked whether natural-history traits were associated with positive, negative, or mixed responses. Native avian richness was highest where anthropogenic land cover was lowest and housing units were intermediate based on model-averaged predictions among a confidence set of candidate models. Eighty-three of 132 species showed some pattern of association with our measures of human influence. Of these species approximately 40% were negatively associated, approximately 6% were positively associated, and approximately 7% showed evidence of an intermediate relationship with human influence measures. Natural-history traits were not closely related to the direction of the relationship between abundance and human influence. Nevertheless, pooling species that exhibited any relationship with human influence and comparing them with unrelated species indicated they were significantly smaller, nested closer to the ground, had shorter incubation and fledging times, and tended to be altricial. Our results support the ecosystem-stress hypothesis for the majority of individual species and for overall species diversity when focusing on anthropogenic land cover. Nevertheless, the great variability in housing units across the land-cover gradient indicates that an intermediate-disturbance relationship is also supported. Our findings suggest preemptive conservation action should be taken, whereby areas with little anthropogenic land cover are given conservation priority. Nevertheless, conservation action should not be limited to pristine landscapes because our results showed that native avian richness and the relative abundance of many species peaked at intermediate housing densities and levels of anthropogenic land cover.

%B Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology %V 22 %P 405 - 16 %8 2008 %@ 0888-8892 %G eng %N 2 %0 Hearing %D 2008 %T In Other’s Words %A Christine Gallagher %K Design of Human Environment %K Graphic Design %8 2008 %G eng %2 c %4 58492237824 %0 Conference Proceedings %B Managing Data-Poor Fisheries: Case Studies, Models and Solutions %D 2008 %T Managing-Data Poor Fisheries by Paying Attention to Managing Relationships %A Flaxen D. L. Conway %A C. Pomeroy %A Madeleine Hall-Arber %B Managing Data-Poor Fisheries: Case Studies, Models and Solutions %C Berkeley, CA %8 2010 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J College Teaching %D 2008 %T Mediating the Conflict between Transformative Pedagogy and Bureaucratic Practice %A Michelle Inderbitzin %A Storrs, Debbie A. %X

This article reflects on the authors' experiences during a pilot year of an innovative core curriculum at a state research university and their attempts to create a "collaborative community" characterized by transformative pedagogy. It discusses their students' and colleagues' resistance to their inventive, albeit time-consuming and sometimes noisy, assignments. It analyzes the temptation to give in to bureaucratic inertia and return to an instruction paradigm that prioritizes the transmission of information over the more intensive goals of encouraging students to "claim their education." Finally, they suggest that the development of collaborative communities of like-minded teachers is an important resource in mediating the conflict between transformative pedagogy and bureaucratic practice.

%B College Teaching %I Heldref Publications. 1319 Eighteenth Street NW, Washington, DC 20036-1802. Tel: 800-365-9753; Tel: 202-296-6267; Fax: 202-293-6130; e-mail: subscribe@heldref.org; Web site: http://www.heldref.org %V 56 %P 47 - 52 %8 2008 %@ 8756-7555 %G eng %N 1 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Environmental Management Journal of Environmental Management %D 2008 %T Participants and non-participants of place-based groups: An assessment of attitudes and implications for public participation in water resource management %A Denise Lach %A Larson, Kelli L. %B Journal of Environmental Management Journal of Environmental Management %V 88 %P 817 - 830 %8 2008 %@ 0301-4797 %G eng %N 4 %0 Journal Article %J Scandinavian Journal of Hospitality and Tourism %D 2008 %T Recreation and Rural Development in Norway: Nature Versus Culture %A Roger B. Hammer %X

This paper explores the author's observations on the barriers, risks, and, to a greater extent, opportunities associated with natural amenityled or recreationled rural development in Norway, which others might term rural tourism. It seeks to establish an argument for a refocusing of rural amenityled development away from traditional highamenity areas and toward previously overlooked places, thus geographically and substantively broadening the potential for this type of development in Norway. This change in orientation seeks to avoid the tourismdependence that has emerged and is similar to older forms of naturalresource extraction dependence. Finally, the paper presents two cultural contradictions of cuisine that constitute barriers to the proposed broader geographical and cultural development of recreation and tourism in rural Norway.

%B Scandinavian Journal of Hospitality and Tourism %V 8 %P 176 - 186 %8 2008 %@ 1502-2250 %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Southern Illinois Law Journal %D 2008 %T Remaking the Federal Bench: An Exercise in Futility? %A Rorie Solberg %A Scott, Kevin %B Southern Illinois Law Journal %V 32 %P 493-508 %G eng %0 Hearing %D 2008 %T Something Undeniable %A Christine Gallagher %K Design of Human Environment %K Graphic Design %C Wellfleet, MA %8 2008 %G eng %2 c %4 58492196864 %0 Journal Article %J Revue Europeenne des Migrations Internationales %D 2008 %T Transnational Return Migration to the English Speaking Caribbean %A Dwaine Plaza %B Revue Europeenne des Migrations Internationales %V 24 %P 115-137 %G eng %N 1 %0 Hearing %D 2008 %T Untitled %A Christine Gallagher %K Design of Human Environment %K Graphic Design %B Design Principles and Practices Conference %C Miami, Florida %8 2008 %G eng %2 c %4 58492145664 %0 Journal Article %J FPA Foreign Policy Analysis %D 2008 %T U.S. Presidential Decisions on Ozone Depletion and Climate Change: A Foreign Policy Analysis %A Amy Below %X

The overarching question this paper addresses is whether and, if so, to what extent can existing IR theories commonly associated with high politics decision making be applied to low politics issue areas, specifically international environmental policy. The paper serves to test poliheuristic theory against two case studies, The Montreal Protocol and The Kyoto Protocol, to assess its ability to explain the decision-making processes of four United States presidents. The paper concludes that poliheuristic theory adequately explains the presidents behavior in virtually all cases. It is especially effective in explaining the first phase of the decision-making process. The paper also suggests in the conclusion that a presidents environmentalness may affect his decision-making behavior in the first phase.

%B FPA Foreign Policy Analysis %V 4 %P 1 - 20 %8 2008 %@ 1743-8586 %G eng %N 1 %0 Thesis %B Germanic Studies %D 2007 %T The Afterlife of DEFA in Post-Unification Germany: Characteristics, traditions and cultural legacy %A Sebastian Heiduschke %B Germanic Studies %I The University of Texas at Austin %V Ph.D. %G eng %9 Doctoral Dissertation %0 Journal Article %J Gender & Society %D 2007 %T Agency, Resources, and Identity %A Sally K. Gallagher %X

Drawing on theories of structure and agency, this article assesses how women in lower-income households in Damascus use existing gender schemas to avoid unattractive employment and improve their access to income and employment. It highlights the overlapping effects of economic policy and gender dependency schemas on both the need for additional income and women's employment opportunities. While providing greater access to resources, women's accommodation to gender dependency schemas also helps to maintain domesticity and dependence on men. Agency for these women draws on and reinforces a collectively gendered sense of self that is central to the process of both obtaining resources and doing gender.

%B Gender & Society %I Sage Publications %V 21 %P 227 - 249 %8 2007 %@ 0891-2432 %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Ecological Applications %D 2007 %T The association of forest bird species richness with housing density and landscape patterns across the United States %A Pidgeon, Anna M. %A Volker C. Radeloff %A Curt H. Flather %A Christopher A. Lepczyk %A Murray K. Clayton %A Todd Jerome Hawbaker %A Roger B. Hammer %B Ecological Applications %V 17 %P 1989-2010 %G eng %N 7 %0 Journal Article %J The American Sociologist %D 2007 %T Breaking Out of Academic Isolation: The Media Odyssey of a Sociologist %A Steven M. Ortiz %X

The professional development of sociologists involves specialized training through which we acquire and apply numerous skills. However, it is unlikely that our professional socialization includes training in how to inform the public about sociological knowledge and research through media involvement. As a sociologist who did not receive such training and was not prepared for the enormous unanticipated media and public interest given to my research topic, I provide a personal account of my unexpected metamorphosis into a media self and my experiences working with the media. I describe the nature of my professional and media obscurity, provide an overview of my initiation into media culture, and explore a self-transformation process that became necessary to manage the responsibilities associated with the media-assigned role of expert. I identify and examine the lessons I learned through extensive media involvement and the emergent realities of this involvement. Based on my experiences and resulting awareness of media culture, I offer to the discipline some suggestions and guidelines for media involvement and advocate for media training.

%B The American Sociologist %I Springer %V 38 %P 223 - 249 %8 2007 %@ 0003-1232 %G eng %N 3 %0 Journal Article %J Landscape Ecology %D 2007 %T Building patterns and landscape fragmentation in northern Wisconsin, USA %A Roger B. Hammer %A Charlotte Gonzalez-Abraham %A Radeloff, Volker %A Hawbaker, Todd %A Stewart, Susan %A Clayton, Murray %X

Housing growth is prevalent in rural areas in the United States and landscape fragmentation is one of its many effects. Since the 1930s, rural sprawl has been increasing in areas rich in recreational amenities. The question is how housing growth has affected landscape fragmentation. We thus tested three hypotheses relating land cover and land ownership to density and spatial pattern of buildings, and examined whether building density or spatial pattern of buildings was a better predictor for landscape fragmentation. Housing locations were mapped from 117 1:24,000-scale USGS topographic maps across northern Wisconsin. Patch-level landscape metrics were calculated on the terrestrial area remaining after applying 50, 100 and 250 m disturbance zones around each building. Our results showed that building density and the spatial pattern of buildings were affected mostly by lake area, public land ownership, and the abundance of coniferous forest, agricultural land, and grassland. A full 40% of the houses were within 100 m of lakeshores. The clustering of buildings within 100 m of lakeshores limited fragmentation farther away. In contrast, agricultural and grassland areas were correlated with higher building density, higher fragmentation, and more dispersed building pattern possible legacies of agricultural settlement patterns. Understanding which factors influence building density and fragmentation is useful for landscape level planning and ecosystem management in northern Wisconsin and areas that share similar social and environmental constraints.

%B Landscape Ecology %I Springer %V 22 %P 217 - 230 %8 2007 %@ 0921-2973 %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion %D 2007 %T Children as Religious Resources: The Role of Children in the Social Re-Formation of Class, Culture, and Religious Identity %A Sally K. Gallagher %X

Based on observations and interviews in two churches representing two different strands of American Protestantism, I assess the ways in which children contribute to the social construction of class, culture, and religious identity for adults. Evidence comes from observing how congregations incorporate children into adult worship services and talk about them in texts and programs, and from the ways in which newer and long-term congregation members describe valuing and understanding children's ministries. These styles and their meanings reflect the history, heritage, and theological distinctives of these two strands of American Protestantism. Religion, I suggest, is not just good for children; children themselves are a religious resource whose presence in worship, service, and discourse helps to create and maintain a sense of identity, place, and meaning in the lives of worshipping adults.

%B Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion %I Blackwell Publishing %V 46 %P 169 - 183 %8 2007 %@ 0021-8294 %G eng %N 2 %0 Book Section %B Picturing America. Trauma, Realism, Politics and Identity in American Visual Culture %D 2007 %T Communicating Democracy. Entering the American Republic Through The West Wing or the Commander in Chief %A Philipp Kneis %A Dallmann, Antje %A Reinhard Isensee %B Picturing America. Trauma, Realism, Politics and Identity in American Visual Culture %P 131-149 %G eng %U http://www2.rz.hu-berlin.de/amerika/asc/publications/pa_kneis.html %0 Journal Article %J Colloquia Germanica %D 2007 %T «Das ist die Mauer, die quer durchgeht. Dahinter liegt die Stadt und das Glück.» DEFA Directors and their Criticism of the Berlin Wall %A Sebastian Heiduschke %B Colloquia Germanica %V 40 %P 37-50 %G eng %N 1 %& 37 %0 Journal Article %J JOURNAL OF FORESTRY -WASHINGTON- %D 2007 %T Defining the Wildland-Urban Interface %A Roger B. Hammer %A Stewart, S. I. %A Radeloff, V. C. %A Hawbaker, T. J. %B JOURNAL OF FORESTRY -WASHINGTON- %V 105 %P 201 - 207 %8 2007 %@ 0022-1201 %G eng %N 4 %0 Generic %D 2007 %T Drugs and drug policy the control of consciousness alteration %A Mosher, Clayton James %A Scott Akins %X

Provides a cross-national perspective on the regulation of drug use by examining and critiquing drug policies in the United States and abroad in terms of their scope, goals, and effectiveness.\

%I Sage\ %C Thousand Oaks, Calif.\ %8 2007///\ %@ 9781452211657 1452211655\ %G eng %U http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=467201\ %0 Journal Article %J FLAN Foreign Language Annals %D 2007 %T Empowering Students With Language Learning Strategies: A Critical Review of Current Issues %A Susana Rivera-Mills %A Plonsky, Luke %X

This article analyzes the body of research literature that has brought us to the State of our current knowledge regarding learning strategies in general and learning strategies Instruction as they relate to second language acquisition (SLA). Three categories are discussed: (1) types of learning strategies, (2) learning autonomy and strategy training, and (3) other strategy-related factors such as metalinguistic development and internal/external variables related to the use of learning strategies (e.g., motivation). By conducting a critical review of the issues presented in the literature, the analysis arrives at the implications for language teaching and language learning, taking into consideration the perspective of both the instructor and the Student.

%B FLAN Foreign Language Annals %V 40 %P 535 - 548 %8 2007/// %@ 0015-718X %G eng %N 3 %0 Journal Article %J Global Development Studies %D 2007 %T An Examination of Transnational Remittance Practices of Jamaican Canadian Families %A Dwaine Plaza %B Global Development Studies %V 4 %8 217-250 %G eng %N 3-4 %0 Journal Article %J ECIN Economic Inquiry %D 2007 %T Fiscal Policy, Expectation Traps, and Child Labor %A Patrick M. Emerson %A Knabb, Shawn D., %X

This paper develops a dynamic model with overlapping generations where there are two possible equilibria: one without child labor, and one with it. It is shown that intergenerational transfers can eliminate the child labor equilibrium and that this intervention is Pareto improving. However, if society does not believe that the government will implement the transfer program, it wont, reinforcing societys expectations. This is true even if the transfer program would have been implemented in the absence of uncertainty. Thus a government may be powerless to prevent the child labor equilibrium if it does not command the confidence of their populace, leaving the country in an expectations trap. (JEL D91, E60, J20, O20)

%B ECIN Economic Inquiry %V 45 %P 453 - 469 %8 2007/// %@ 0095-2583 %G eng %N 3 %0 Book Section %B Teaching for Change: The Difference, Power, and Discrimination Model %D 2007 %T A History of Difference, Power and Discrimination at Oregon State University (with Dr. Janet Nishihara) %A Joan Gross %B Teaching for Change: The Difference, Power, and Discrimination Model %I Lexington Books %C Boulder %P 5-16 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of America %D 2007 %T Human influence on California fire regimes. %A Roger B. Hammer %A Syphard AD %A Radeloff VC %A Keeley JE %A Hawbaker TJ %A Clayton MK %A Stewart SI %X

Periodic wildfire maintains the integrity and species composition of many ecosystems, including the mediterranean-climate shrublands of California. However, human activities alter natural fire regimes, which can lead to cascading ecological effects. Increased human ignitions at the wildland-urban interface (WUI) have recently gained attention, but fire activity and risk are typically estimated using only biophysical variables. Our goal was to determine how humans influence fire in California and to examine whether this influence was linear, by relating contemporary (2000) and historic (1960-2000) fire data to both human and biophysical variables. Data for the human variables included fine-resolution maps of the WUI produced using housing density and land cover data. Interface WUI, where development abuts wildland vegetation, was differentiated from intermix WUI, where development intermingles with wildland vegetation. Additional explanatory variables included distance to WUI, population density, road density, vegetation type, and ecoregion. All data were summarized at the county level and analyzed using bivariate and multiple regression methods. We found highly significant relationships between humans and fire on the contemporary landscape, and our models explained fire frequency (R2 = 0.72) better than area burned (R2 = 0.50). Population density, intermix WUI, and distance to WUI explained the most variability in fire frequency, suggesting that the spatial pattern of development may be an important variable to consider when estimating fire risk. We found nonlinear effects such that fire frequency and area burned were highest at intermediate levels of human activity, but declined beyond certain thresholds. Human activities also explained change in fire frequency and area burned (1960-2000), but our models had greater explanatory power during the years 1960-1980, when there was more dramatic change in fire frequency. Understanding wildfire as a function of the spatial arrangement of ignitions and fuels on the landscape, in addition to nonlinear relationships, will be important to fire managers and conservation planners because fire risk may be related to specific levels of housing density that can be accounted for in land use planning. With more fires occurring in close proximity to human infrastructure, there may also be devastating ecological impacts if development continues to grow farther into wildland vegetation.

%B Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of America %V 17 %P 1388 - 402 %8 2007 %@ 1051-0761 %G eng %N 5 %0 Journal Article %J Social Indicators Research %D 2007 %T Identifying Factors that Influence State-specific Hunger Rates in the U.S.: A Simple Analytic Method for Understanding a Persistent Problem %A Mark Edwards %A Weber, Bruce %A Bernell, Stephanie %X

An existing measure of food insecurity with hunger in the United States may serve as an effective indicator of quality of life. State level differences in that measure can reveal important differences in quality of life across places. In this study, we advocate and demonstrate two simple methods by which analysts can explore state-specific contributions to state-specific hunger rates. Using existing survey data and the U.S. Department of Agriculture measure of household food insecurity with hunger, we illustrate how comparing group-specific hunger rates within states and how the demographic method of standardization can both be used to assess how a state's population and local characteristics influence hunger rates and other quality of life indicators associated with hunger.

%B Social Indicators Research %I Springer %V 81 %P 579 - 595 %8 2007 %@ 0303-8300 %G eng %N 3 %0 Book Section %B Its a Crime: Women and Justice %D 2007 %T The Impact of Gender on Juvenile Justice Decisions %A Michelle Inderbitzin %B Its a Crime: Women and Justice %7 Fourth %I Pearson Prentice Hall %C Upper Saddle River, NJ %P 782-791 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Punishment & Society %D 2007 %T Inside a Maximum Security Juvenile Training School: Institutional Attempts to Redefine the American Dream and Normalize Incarcerated Youth %A Michelle Inderbitzin %X

The ethnographic analysis revealed that cottage staff played an important part in modeling conforming behaviors, strategies, and attitudes for their institutionalized juveniles. The cottage staff reinforced the notion that these youth should aim low and adopt aspirations and goals more appropriate to the opportunities for success they would face in their communities. The author argues that the analysis lends strength to the argument that juvenile correctional facilities are one of the last examples of the old penology and that one of the underlying tasks of such institutions is to lower or level the aspirations of young inmates to be more in line with the level of success they are likely to achieve in the community. The research involved conducting an ethnographic analysis of a cottage for violent offenders in a maximum-security juvenile training school. The study focused on the interactions between juveniles and staff within one of the cottages housing violent juvenile offenders. The researcher observed the interactions approximately once a week for about 8 hours at a time. Informal interviews in the form of conversations were also conducted with the juvenile offenders and cottage staff members. In addition to the main findings relayed above, the analysis also focused on the incarcerated youths' perceptions of the future, which included predictions by the juveniles about who would die first and who would end up in the penitentiary as an adult offender. References

%B Punishment & Society %V 9 %P 235 - 251 %8 2007 %G eng %N 3 %0 Journal Article %J Political Research Quarterly %D 2007 %T Judicial Review by the Burger and Rehnquist Courts: Explaining Justices' Responses to Constitutional Challenges %A Rorie Solberg %A Lindquist, S. A. %B Political Research Quarterly %V 60 %P 71 - 90 %8 2007 %@ 1065-9129 %G eng %N 1 %0 Journal Article %J International journal of offender therapy and comparative criminology %D 2007 %T A Look from the Inside: Balancing Custody and Treatment in a Juvenile Maximum-Security Facility. %A Michelle Inderbitzin %X

This article is based on an ethnographic study of a cottage for violent offenders in one state's maximum-security training school. Staff members working in the cottage were the institution's front line in its attempts to hold the youth accountable for their crimes while also trying to resocialize and rehabilitate young men who were growing up with few conforming role models. As such, cottage staff members were put in the difficult position of juggling their roles as corrections officers, counselors, and surrogate parents. To effectively do their job, they had to find ways to balance the rhetoric of rehabilitation with the punitive reality of daily life in the institution. This article details the juvenile justice career paths of the staff members in the cottage and provides a sociological analysis of the roles, responsibilities, and interactions of the staff members with each other and with the young men in their care.

%B International journal of offender therapy and comparative criminology %V 51 %P 348 - 62 %8 2007 %@ 0306-624X %G eng %N 3 %0 Journal Article %J Terres D'Amerique %D 2007 %T Migration Caribbeene et Integration au Canada: a la poursuite du reve d'ascension Sociale (1900-1998) %A Dwaine Plaza %B Terres D'Amerique %V 6 %P 141-157 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Politics & Policy %D 2007 %T The Missing Link: Regionalism as a First Step Toward Globalizing U.S. Environmental Security Policy %A Amy Below %X

Especially since September 11, 2001, national security has been a high policy priority for the United States. Unfortunately, this has come at the detriment of other policies and relationships with foreign nations, including its fellow North American neighbors, Canada, and Mexico. What the current U.S. administration has overlooked in its reprioritization of policy goals is the close relationship between security and environmental protection. This article discusses the need to more closely incorporate environmental and/or ecological security into a traditional notion of national security and it highlights the specific link between traditional conceptions of security and global climate change. The study additionally debates the question of U.S. participation in a North American environmental security agenda, namely one that coordinates efforts to address global warming.

%B Politics & Policy %I Blackwell Publishing %V 35 %P 702 - 715 %8 2007 %@ 1555-5623 %G eng %N 4 %0 Book %D 2007 %T The New Nuns : Racial Justice and Religious Reform in the 1960s %A Amy Koehlinger %X

In the 1960s, a number of Catholic women religious in the United States abandoned traditional apostolic works to experiment with new and often unprecedented forms of service among non-Catholics. Amy Koehlinger explores the phenomenon of the "new nun" through close examination of one of its most visible forms - the experience of white sisters working in African-American communities. In a complex network of programs and activities that Koehlinger describes as the "racial aposto-late," sisters taught at African-American colleges in the South, held racial sensitivity sessions in integrating neighborhoods, and created programs for children of color in public housing projects." "Engaging with issues of race and justice allowed the sisters to see themselves, their vocation, and the Church in dramatically different terms. In this book, Koehlinger captures the confusion and frustration, as well as the exuberance and delight, they experienced in their new Christian mission. Their increasing autonomy and frequent critiques of institutional misogyny shaped reforms within their institute and sharpened a post-Vatican II crisis of authority.

%I Harvard University Press %C Cambridge, Mass. %@ 9780674024731 %G eng %U http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674024731 %0 Journal Article %J Innovation: The European Journal for Social Science Research %D 2007 %T NGOs and the Development of Civil Society in Bulgaria and the U.S.: A Comparative Analysis %A Sarah L. Henderson %A Brent S. Steel %A Rebecca L. Warner %B Innovation: The European Journal for Social Science Research %V 20 %P 35-52 %G eng %0 Book Section %B Picturing America. Trauma, Realism, Politics and Identity in American Visual Culture %D 2007 %T 'Normal Again': Buffy the Vampire Slayer as Psychotic Narration %A Philipp Kneis %A Chris Flor %A Reinhard Isensee %A Dallman, Antje %B Picturing America. Trauma, Realism, Politics and Identity in American Visual Culture %I Peter Lang %C Frankfurt %P 65-77 %G eng %U http://www2.rz.hu-berlin.de/amerika/asc/publications/pa_kneis.html %0 Book %D 2007 %T Participation and protest : women and politics in a global world %A Sarah L. Henderson %A Jeydel, Alana S. %X

"Despite increased international rhetoric in support of women's equality, women currently comprise a disproportionate share of the world's illiterate, poor, displaced, underpaid, underemployed, and underrepresented populations. And though women have gained visibility and influence in a wide array of political and economic arenas, their position and status in society are still far from equal to those of men. On the other hand, since the post-World War II era, there has been a global explosion of women's activism on behalf of equality, liberation, and better living conditions - women are standing up not only for themselves, but also for other disempowered groups. Participation and Protest provides an overview of the ways in which women participate in institutionalized politics, social movements, and revolutionary movements. It discusses key policy issues that affect women, such as equality in the workforce, maternity and family leave policies, and reproductive rights. Exploring the critical concerns that confront women in the world community - including economic development, war, and international law - the book analyzes the role of women in nationalist and fundamentalist movements, and also considers women's rights in the broader context of international human rights. Offering global coverage of this important subject, Participation and Protest examines the impact of women in politics - and politics' impact on women - from a cross-national, comparative perspective."--pub. desc.

%I Oxford University Press %C New York %8 2007 %@ 019515925X 9780195159257 0195159233 9780195159233 9780195159257 9780195159233 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of America %D 2007 %T Patterns of houses and habitat loss from 1937 to 1999 in northern Wisconsin, USA. %A Roger B. Hammer %A Gonzalez-Abraham CE %A Radeloff VC %A Hawbaker TJ %A Stewart SI %A Clayton MK %X

Rural America is witnessing widespread housing development, which is to the detriment of the environment. It has been suggested to cluster houses so that their disturbance zones overlap and thus cause less habitat loss than is the case for dispersed development. Clustering houses makes intuitive sense, but few empirical studies have quantified the spatial pattern of houses in real landscapes, assessed changes in their patterns over time, and quantified the resulting habitat loss. We addressed three basic questions: (1) What are the spatial patterns of houses and how do they change over time; (2) How much habitat is lost due to houses, and how is this affected by spatial pattern of houses; and (3) What type of habitat is most affected by housing development. We mapped 27 419 houses from aerial photos for five time periods in 17 townships in northern Wisconsin and calculated the terrestrial land area remaining after buffering each house using 100- and 500-m disturbance zones. The number of houses increased by 353% between 1937 and 1999. Ripley's K test showed that houses were significantly clustered at all time periods and at all scales. Due to the clustering, the rate at which habitat was lost (176% and 55% for 100- and 500-m buffers, respectively) was substantially lower than housing growth rates, and most land area was undisturbed (95% and 61% for 100-m and 500-m buffers, respectively). Houses were strongly clustered within 100 m of lakes. Habitat loss was lowest in wetlands but reached up to 60% in deciduous forests. Our results are encouraging in that clustered development is common in northern Wisconsin, and habitat loss is thus limited. However, the concentration of development along lakeshores causes concern, because these may be critical habitats for many species. Conservation goals can only be met if policies promote clustered development and simultaneously steer development away from sensitive ecosystems.

%B Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of America %V 17 %P 2011 - 23 %8 2007 %@ 1051-0761 %G eng %N 7 %0 Conference Paper %D 2007 %T Picturing America : trauma, realism, politics, and identity in American visual culture %A Philipp Kneis %A Dallmann, Antje %A Isensee, Reinhard %I Lang %C Frankfurt am Main; New York %8 2007 %@ 9780820498560 0820498564 9783631549407 3631549407 %G eng %0 Book Section %B Teaching Qualitative Methods Compendium %D 2007 %T Qualitative Research Methods SOC 418/518 Syllabus %A Dwaine Plaza %B Teaching Qualitative Methods Compendium %7 4 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J SOC4 Sociology Compass %D 2007 %T Racial Residential Segregation and Crime %A Scott Akins %X

Racial residential segregation is a pervasive and persistent feature of life in urban America. The consequences of segregation are numerous and are generally deleterious for minority populations. One consequence of segregation is inflated rates of crime in segregated areas. However, the study of segregation and crime is limited to a handful of studies and many questions remain unanswered. These include: (i) Does the criminogenic effect of segregation remain when research employs a unit of analysis other than cities (e.g., neighborhoods, regions)? (ii) What is the primary theoretical mechanism by which racial segregation produces crime? (iii) What types of mediating processes can attenuate the criminogenic effect of segregation? The current article will summarize the interdisciplinary literature on segregation and crime and discuss avenues for future research.

%B SOC4 Sociology Compass %V 1 %P 81 - 94 %8 2007/// %@ 1751-9020 %G eng %N 1 %0 Book Section %B Through the Eye of Katrina: Social Justice in the United States %D 2007 %T 'Revolutions May Go Backwards’: The Persistence of Voter Disenfranchisement in the United States. %A Michelle Inderbitzin %A Kelly Fawcett %A Christopher Uggen %A Kristin A. Bates %A Richelle S. Swan %B Through the Eye of Katrina: Social Justice in the United States %I Carolina Academic Press %C Durham, NC %P 37-53 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Latino(a) Research Review %D 2007 %T Segmented Assimilation of One-and-a Half Generation Mexican Youth in Oregon %A Dwaine Plaza %A Gonzales-Berry, Erlinda %A Mendoza, Marcella %B Latino(a) Research Review %V 6 %P 94-118 %G eng %N 1-2 %0 Journal Article %J Landscape Ecology %D 2007 %T Spatiotemporal dynamics of housing growth hotspots in the North Central U.S. from 1940 to 2000 %A Lepczyk, ChristopherA. %A Roger B. Hammer %A Stewart, SusanI. %A Radeloff, VolkerC. %K Getis-Ord (G*) statistic %K Housing growth %K Spatial statistic %K Spatiotemporal pattern %K Sprawl %K Time series %B Landscape Ecology %I Kluwer Academic Publishers %V 22 %P 939-952 %8 2007/07/01 %@ 0921-2973 %G eng %U http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10980-006-9066-2 %N 6 %! Landscape Ecol %0 Magazine Article %D 2007 %T Teaching about Globalization and Food in Ecuador %A Joan Gross %A David McMurray %B Food and Society %V 10 %G eng %N 3 %0 Book %D 2007 %T Teaching Oregon Native Languages %A Joan Gross %I Oregon State University Press %C Corvallis %G eng %0 Journal Article %J American Institute of Biological Sciences BioScience %D 2007 %T Understanding Regional Change: A Comparison of Two Lake Districts %A Roger B. Hammer %A Stephen R. Carpenter %A Barbara J. Benson %A Reinette Biggs %A Jonathan W. Chipman %A Jonathan A. Foley %A Shaun A. Golding %A Pieter T. J. Johnson %A Richard C. Lathrop %A Amy M. Kamarainen %A Timothy K. Kratz %A Katheri McMahon %X

We compared long-term change in two lake districts, one in a forested rural setting and the other in an urbanizing agricultural region, using lakes as sentinel ecosystems. Human population growth and land-use change are important drivers of ecosystem change in both regions. Biotic changes such as habitat loss, species invasions, and poorer fishing were prevalent in the rural region, and lake hydrology and biogeochemistry responded to climate trends and landscape position. Similar biotic changes occurred in the urbanizing agricultural region, where human-caused changes in hydrology and biogeochemistry had conspicuous effects. Feedbacks among ecosystem dynamics, human uses, economics, social dynamics, and policy and practice are fundamental to understanding change in these lake districts. Sustained support for interdisciplinary collaboration is essential to build understanding of regional change.

%B American Institute of Biological Sciences BioScience %V 57 %P 323 - 335 %8 2007 %@ 0006-3568 %G eng %N 4 %0 Book Section %B Seeing Color: Indigenous Peoples and Radicalized Ethnic Minorities in Oregon %D 2007 %T We Are Tired of Cookies and Old Clothes': From Poverty Programs to Community Empowerment Among Oregon's Mexicano Population, 1957-1975 %A Dwaine Plaza %A Gonzales-Berry, Erlinda %A Xing, Jun %B Seeing Color: Indigenous Peoples and Radicalized Ethnic Minorities in Oregon %I Oregon State University Press %P 93-116 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE %D 2007 %T Wildland-urban interface housing growth during the 1990s in California, Oregon, and Washington %A Roger B. Hammer %A Radeloff, V. C. %A Fried, J. S. %A Stewart, S. I. %B INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE %V 16 %P 255 - 265 %8 2007 %@ 1049-8001 %G eng %N 3 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Empirical Legal Studies %D 2006 %T Activism, Ideology, and Federalism: Judicial Behavior in Constitutional Challenges Before the Rehnquist Court, 1986-2000 %A Rorie Solberg %A Lindquist, Stefanie A. %X

In this study, we evaluate the individual voting behavior of the justices on the Rehnquist Court in cases raising constitutional challenges to federal, state, and local legislation. Using activism, federalism, and ideology as our guiding principles, we evaluate the extent to which the justices' voting behavior is consistent with the conventional wisdom that conservatives are more restraintist and more likely to protect states' rights in conformity with Chief Justice Rehnquist's focus on federalism. Although we find that there is some correlation between judicial ideology and activism, with liberals more activist than conservatives in general, we also find that the conservative wing of the Rehnquist Court is also largely guided by its own ideological reaction to the substantive policy embodied in the laws at issue. Thus, conservative justices as well as liberals are likely to strike down state laws when those laws fail to conform to the ideological preferences. This result underscores the importance of the attitudinal model of judicial behavior as an explanation of voting patterns on the Court, regardless of the justices' rhetoric in favor of judicial restraint or states' rights.

%B Journal of Empirical Legal Studies %I Blackwell Publishing %V 3 %P 237 - 261 %8 2006 %@ 1740-1453 %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Population Research and Policy Review %D 2006 %T The American Community Survey in counties with "seasonal" populations %A Roger B. Hammer %A Auken, Paul %A Voss, Paul %A Veroff, Daniel %X

The U.S. Census Bureau designed the American Community Survey (ACS) to provide annual estimates of social and economic characteristics for states, counties, municipalities, census tracts, and block groups. Because of its April 1 reference date, in northern nonmetropolitan counties with substantial seasonal population fluctuations the decennial census provides a statistical representation of the demographic and social characteristics of the population at a time when the population is close to its annual minimum. The year-round monthly ACS sample survey has the potential to provide local communities with an unprecedented understanding of the average population characteristics over the course of a year. In the future, the ACS even has the potential for providing social and economic characteristics of the population by season. This paper examines four ACS pilot data collection counties, Oneida and Vilas Counties in northern Wisconsin, and Lake and Flathead Counties in northwest Montana. We hypothesize that the ACS will reflect a resident population over the course of the year that is different from the traditional April 1 decennial census population. While the ACS holds much promise, our research uncovered some sampling problems that are not yet fully resolved. In addition, our analysis was not able to examine ACS estimates for minor civil divisions (MCDs), which are functioning governmental units in many states. The fact that these MCDs often have very small populations, together with the fact that estimated standard errors at the much larger census tract level in these counties are disconcertingly large, raises (currently unanswerable) questions concerning the eventual statistical quality of ACS estimates for small MCDs. Consequently, the adequacy of the ACS as a replacement for the census long form may depend on the ability of the Census Bureau to effectively address the concerns presented in this analysis.

%B Population Research and Policy Review %I Springer %V 25 %P 275 - 292 %8 2006 %@ 0167-5923 %G eng %N 3 %0 Hearing %D 2006 %T Building the Maverick Student %A Christine Gallagher %A Nielsen,Susie %K Design of Human Environment %K Graphic Design %B Aiga Design Education / The Design Frontier / %C Colorado %8 2006 %G eng %2 c %4 58492133376 %0 Book Section %B Negotiating Borders and Belonging: Transnational Identities and Practices in Canada %D 2006 %T The Caribbean Community in Canada: Transnational Connections and Transformation %A Dwaine Plaza %A Simmons, A. %A Wong, Lloyd %A Vic Satzewich %B Negotiating Borders and Belonging: Transnational Identities and Practices in Canada %I University of British Columbia Press %P 130-149 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Identity %D 2006 %T The Construction of a Segmented Hybrid Identity Among One-and-a-Half-Generation and Second-Generation Indo-Caribbean and African Caribbean Canadians %A Dwaine Plaza %X

Using data from life history interviews collected from a 2000 Centre of Excellence for Research on Immigration and Settlement-funded research project, this article examines the role that family, the community, and the environment have played in the identity formation of one-and-a-half-generation and second-generation Indo-Caribbean and African Caribbean Canadians. Findings from this research suggest that ethnic identity formation in Canada for young people involves a fluid and complex interplay of culture, environment, and community. Ethnic identity for this particular group is a dynamic, situational, and changing process. The experiences of ethnicity are also shaped largely by rules and practices in past and present relationships. For one-and-a-half-generation and second-generation Caribbean Canadians, this process may be understood as a stage in the immigration life cycle, a stage characterized by constant shifting and assembling of new hybridized identities, ones that are based primarily on physical appearance and closeness to the dominant group in terms of social and cultural capital.

%B Identity %I Taylor & Francis %V 6 %P 207 - 229 %8 2006 %@ 1528-3488 %G eng %N 3 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Development Economics %D 2006 %T Corruption, competition and democracy %A Patrick M. Emerson %X

This paper presents a model of the interaction between corrupt government officials and industrial firms to show that corruption is antithetical to competition. It is hypothesized that a government agent that controls access to a formal market has a self-interest in demanding a bribe payment that serves to limit the number of firms. This corrupt official will also be subject to a detection technology that is a function of the amount of the bribe payment and the number of firms that pay it. Under quite normal assumptions about the shape of the graph of the detection function, multiple equilibria can arise where one equilibrium is characterized by high corruption and low competition, and another is characterized by low corruption and high competition. Some suggestive empirical evidence is presented that supports the main hypothesis that competition and corruption are negatively related.

%B Journal of Development Economics %V 81 %P 193 - 212 %8 2006/// %@ 0304-3878 %G eng %N 1 %0 Journal Article %J Population Research and Policy Review %D 2006 %T County child poverty rates in the US: a spatial regression approach %A Roger B. Hammer %A Voss, Paul %A Long, David %A Friedman, Samantha %X

We apply methods of exploratory spatial data analysis (ESDA) and spatial regression analysis to examine intercounty variation in child poverty rates in the US. Such spatial analyses are important because regression models that exclude explicit specification of spatial effects, when they exist, can lead to inaccurate inferences about predictor variables. Using county-level data for 1990, we re-examine earlier published results [Friedman and Lichter (Popul Res Policy Rev 17:91-109, 1998)]. We find that formal tests for spatial autocorrelation among county child poverty rates confirm and quantify what is obvious from simple maps of such rates: the risk of a child living in poverty is not (spatially) a randomly distributed risk at the county level. Explicit acknowledgment of spatial effects in an explanatory regression model improves considerably the earlier published regression results, which did not take account of spatial autocorrelation. These improvements include: (1) the shifting of "wrong sign" parameters in the direction originally hypothesized by the authors, (2) a reduction of residual squared error, and (3) the elimination of any substantive residual spatial autocorrelation. While not without its own problems and some remaining ambiguities, this reanalysis is a convincing demonstration of the need for demographers and other social scientists to examine spatial autocorrelation in their data and to explicitly correct for spatial externalities, if indicated, when performing multiple regression analyses on variables that are spatially referenced. Substantively, the analysis improves the estimates of the joint effects of place-influences and family-influences on child poverty.

%B Population Research and Policy Review %I Springer %V 25 %P 369 - 391 %8 2006 %@ 0167-5923 %G eng %N 4 %0 Journal Article %J Arizona Law Review %D 2006 %T Court Size and Diversity on the Bench: The Ninth Circuit and its Sisters %A Rorie Solberg %B Arizona Law Review %V 48 %P 247 - 266 %8 2006 %@ 0004-153X %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Society & Natural Resources %D 2006 %T Environmental Perception in a Rapidly Growing, Amenity-Rich Region: The Effects of Lakeshore Development on Perceived Water Quality in Vilas County, Wisconsin %A Roger B. Hammer %A Stedman, Richard %X

We explore the relationship between perceived and actual water quality in a rapidly growing, high-amenity rural area (Vilas County, WI) and how this relationship is affected by shoreline development. Although the data on the relationship between shore development and aquatic environs are not conclusive, people express high levels of concern about the environmental impacts of this type of growth. We link databases that include water quality and lakeshore development variables with a mail survey of 1000 local property owners. Although the shoreline development levels are unrelated to water quality variables such as turbidity, chlorophyll levels, and color, we find that lakes with higher levels of development are perceived by respondents as having worse water quality than lightly developed lakes. These findings have important implications for high-amenity rural communities that undergoing rapid development.

%B Society & Natural Resources %I Taylor & Francis %V 19 %P 137 - 151 %8 2006 %@ 0894-1920 %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Social Science Quarterly %D 2006 %T Evaluating Models of Legal Advocacy %A Rorie Solberg %A Eric Waltenburg %B Social Science Quarterly %V 87 %P 558-572 %G eng %0 Hearing %D 2006 %T The Figure: Transcribing the Human Form %A Christine Gallagher %A Alsobrook,Law %A Hammett,Levi %A Nielsen,Susie %K Design of Human Environment %K Graphic Design %B Catalog Design Collaboration w/ Law Alsobrook %8 2006 %G eng %2 c %4 58492262400 %0 Journal Article %J The Prison Journal %D 2006 %T Guardians of the State's Problem Children: An Ethnographic Study of Staff Members in a Juvenile Correctional Facility %A Michelle Inderbitzin %X

Key findings revealed that cottage staff members suffered from occupational stress brought on by their observation that the juvenile offender population was becoming increasingly younger and needier. The lives of juvenile inmates at the correctional facility revolve around their cottages and, as a result, staff members and older inmates become role models for younger inmates. Staff members spoke of the benefits they received from their relationships with inmates but also discussed their perceived failures in working with the juvenile inmates. An attitude of cynicism took over many staff members whose perceived failures had weighed on them over the years. Despite the hardships of working with juvenile offender populations, the majority of staff members were determined to retain their good intentions and remain modestly optimistic for the benefit of the youth in their care. Data for the study were collected during a 15-month period through direct observation of daily life in a cottage of violent young male juvenile offenders in a State end-of-the-line juvenile correctional facility. Extensive participant-observer interactions with 12 cottage staff and approximately 20 juvenile offenders also informed the data. The analysis focused on the ways in which cottage staff members influenced the lives of juvenile inmates during their incarceration and the nature of the relationships that formed between staff and offenders. The analysis also focused on the official and unofficial roles of cottage staff members as well as their hopes and frustrations. All data analysis was qualitative in nature. References

%B The Prison Journal %V 86 %P 431 - 451 %8 2006 %G eng %N 4 %0 Journal Article %J Public Understanding of Science %D 2006 %T Ideology and scientific credibility: environmental policy in the American Pacific Northwest %A Denise Lach %A Brent S. Steel %A Satyal, Vijay %X

In the later years of the twentieth century and into the twenty-first century, there has been an increasing emphasis among many decision-makers, interest groups, and citizens about the importance of science-based environmental policy. The assumption is that scientists can facilitate the resolution of public environmental decisions by providing scientific information to policymakers and the public, and by becoming more directly involved in policy arenas than they have traditionally been. However, at the same time, there are those who question the value of science, especially for ideological reasons. This study empirically examines the impact of ideology on attitudes toward science, scientific research, and scientists among various environmental policy participants. The data utilized to investigate these orientations were collected from surveys of five different groups involved in environmental policy and management in the Pacific Northwest including ecological scientists at universities and federal agencies; natural resource and environmental managers of state and federal programs; members of interest groups (e.g., environmental groups, industry associations, etc.); the “attentive public” (i.e., citizens who have participated in the environmental policy process); and the general public. Preliminary results reveal significant differences between liberals and conservatives in their orientations toward science, with self-identified liberals generally more likely to see science and scientists as objective and conservatives having a contrary view.

%B Public Understanding of Science %I Sage Publications %V 15 %P 481 - 495 %8 2006 %@ 0963-6625 %G eng %N 4 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Transformative Education %D 2006 %T Imagining a Liberal Education: Critically Examining the Learning Process Through Stimulation %A Michelle Inderbitzin %A Storrs, Debbie %X

Transformative pedagogy and a learning-centered paradigm are at the heart of a liberal education. In this article, the authors present a case study detailing a simulation they created in an interdisciplinary course in one university’s core curriculum. Although the simulation and the larger course appeared to have engaged the students, after years of socialization to be passive receptacles of information, they seemed to find it difficult to break out of the traditional classroom experience; indeed, they had difficulty even imagining alternative forms of learning. Such resistance suggests the need for more innovative and transformative learning experiences as central components of today’s liberal education. The sharing of ideas and practices to strengthen oppositional teaching cultures is suggested to mitigate the cost of engaging in transformative pedagogy.

%B Journal of Transformative Education %I Sage Publications %V 4 %P 175 - 189 %8 2006 %@ 1541-3446 %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J The Policy Studies Journal %D 2006 %T Inter-Court Dynamics and the Development of Legal Policy: Citation Patterns in the Decisions of the U.S. Courts of Appeals %A Rorie Solberg %A Haire, Susan B. %A Emrey, Jolly A. %X

Lower federal appellate judges, like other government officials, identify problems, formulate and implement solutions, and subsequently evaluate them for their efficacy. Immediately following the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act, courts were confronted with cases that raised new policy issues in claims of employment discrimination. With no guidance from the Supreme Court for five years, circuit courts articulated solutions to these issues with written published opinions. By examining citations to precedents in those opinions, we evaluate the degree to which the court’s reasoning draws on policies from other circuits. Although stare decisis does not compel appeals court judges to consider decisions from other circuits, 76 percent of the opinions include a reference to an out-of-circuit precedent. Outside citations were not uniform across circuits and cases with increased references to outside courts in circuits were characterized by conflict. Our examination of citation patterns suggests that the development of precedent proceeds on two tracks. On one level, circuit judges’ opinions build on precedent from within their court. More broadly, citations reflect on an inter-court dialog to identify conflict and consensus in federal legal policy.

%B The Policy Studies Journal %I Blackwell Publishing %V 34 %P 277 - 293 %8 2006 %@ 0190-292X %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Adolescent Research %D 2006 %T Lessons from a Juvenile Training School: Survival and Growth %A Michelle Inderbitzin %X

This article examines the lessons learned by youths confined to a maximum-security juvenile correctional facility. Using data from an ethnographic study of a cottage of violent offenders in one state's end-of-the-line training school, the author describes the lessons the institution and its staff members hoped to teach the young people in their care and the informal but vital lessons the inmates indicated they had learned during their incarceration. The continued viability of training schools as a response to serious and violent juvenile offenders is analyzed and discussed.

%B Journal of Adolescent Research %I SAGE Publications, 2455 Teller Road, Thousand Oaks, CA 91320. Tel: 800-818-7243 (Toll Free); Fax: 800-583-2665 (Toll Free). %V 21 %P 7 - 26 %8 2006 %@ 0743-5584 %G eng %N 1 %0 Book %D 2006 %T Mao and the economic Stalinization of China, 1948-1953 %A Hua-Yu Li %X

"In the first systematic study of its kind, Hua-yu Li tackles one of the most important unresolved mysteries of the early history of the People's Republic of China - the economic policy shift of 1953. As a result of this policy shift, the moderate economic policies of "New Democracy" were abruptly terminated - much sooner than specified by the official party line - and replaced with a radical Stalinist economic program called the "general line for socialist transition." Utilizing the rich archival materials released in China since the mid-1980s and Russian archival information released in China since the early 1990s, Li presents an explanation for the policy shift."--BOOK JACKET.

%I Rowman & Littlefield %C Lanham %8 2006 %@ 0742540537 9780742540538 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Corrections Compendium %D 2006 %T Negotiating Cooperation and Control: Resident Leadership in a Juvenile Institution %A Michelle Inderbitzin %X

The influence of resident leaders in a juvenile institution may be particularly significant in a population of teenagers locked away from the rest of the world. Within a juvenile institution there is heightened anger and peer pressure and fitting in typically takes precedence over anything else. The opinions of juvenile inmate leaders carry more weight than any order or threat that the institutional staff could impose. In order for staff members to avoid conflict and create a safer environment for themselves and the inmates, a foundation built on cooperative relationships becomes imperative. Juvenile justice agencies should encourage leadership skills learned in the cottage, especially as these juvenile inmates prepare to reenter their communities. Utilizing 1 cottage in a maximum security locked facility, housing approximately 200 serious and chronic male offenders, age 15 to 20, research focused on the Blue cottage where violent juveniles were housed. The study examined the leadership role of juvenile inmates within the cottage and the relationship between the juvenile leader and staff. It examined how offender leaders influenced the day-to-day life of a cottage of violent offenders; how inmate cooperation, due to the leadership influence, could make juvenile correctional facilities calmer and safer places. References

%B Corrections Compendium %V 31 %P 6, 7, 33 - 34 %8 2006 %G eng %N 2 %0 Book Section %B Returning to the Source: The Final Stage of the Caribbean Migration Circuit %D 2006 %T An Overview of Return Migration to the English Speaking Caribbean %A Dwaine Plaza %A Frances Henry %B Returning to the Source: The Final Stage of the Caribbean Migration Circuit %I Jamaica: University of the West Indies Press %P 145-166 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Philosophy and Ethics: New Research %D 2006 %T Perceptions of domestic animals: A national survey of producers and the public %A Lori A Cramer %A Davis, S. %B Philosophy and Ethics: New Research %P 305-318 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Environmental Management %D 2006 %T Privileged Knowledge and Social Change: Effects on Different Participants of Using Geographic Information Systems Technology in Natural Resource Management %A Denise Lach %A Duncan, Ally %X

The use of geographic information systems (GIS) technology in natural resource management has expanded rapidly: It is the preferred tool of spatial data analysis addressing large landscapes and is typically the presentation medium for conveying landscape-scale scientific findings to all kinds of audiences. In a case study using the Coastal Landscape Analysis and Modeling Study in western Oregon, it was found that the use of GIS to analyze and display natural resource data in that project produced a variety of responses among different participants and participant groups. The findings offer insights into the workings of groups attempting public involvement in natural resource management.

%B Environmental Management %I Springer %V 38 %P 267 - 285 %8 2006 %@ 0364-152X %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND RESOURCE ECONOMICS %D 2006 %T Restricted Opportunities, Personal Choices, Ineffective Policies: What Explains Food Insecurity in Oregon? %A Mark Edwards %A Bernell, S. L. %A Weber, B. A. %B JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND RESOURCE ECONOMICS %V 31 %P 193 - 211 %8 2006 %@ 1068-5502 %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Ecological Applications Ecological Applications %D 2006 %T Road Development, Housing Growth, And Landscape Fragmentation In Northern Wisconsin: 1937-1999 %A Roger B. Hammer %A Hawbaker, Todd J. %A Radeloff, Volker C. %A Clayton, Murray K. %A Charlotte Gonzalez-Abraham %B Ecological Applications Ecological Applications %V 16 %P 1222 - 1237 %8 2006 %@ 1051-0761 %G eng %N 3 %0 Book %D 2006 %T Salmon 2100 : the future of wild Pacific salmon %A Denise Lach %A Lackey, Robert T. %A Duncan, Sally L. %I American Fisheries Society %C Bethesda, Md. %8 2006 %@ 1888569786 9781888569780 %G eng %0 Book Section %B Returning to the Source: The Final Stage of the Caribbean Migration Circuit %D 2006 %T Second Generation "Returnee" Migration to Jamaica and Barbados: Pursing Happiness and Mobility %A Dwaine Plaza %B Returning to the Source: The Final Stage of the Caribbean Migration Circuit %I Jamaica: University of the West Indies Press %P 145-166 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Sociological Perspectives %D 2006 %T Using Power: An Exploration of Control Work in the Sport Marriage %A Steven M. Ortiz %X

Drawing from long-term ethnographic research, this article provides valuable insight into the power and control processes that emerge from the work/family issues of professional athletes and their wives. It examines from the wives' perspective how these husbands engage in the interrelated processes of gender work and "control work" in their marital relationships and how wives respond. The "spoiled athlete syndrome" is introduced and discussed within the context of a typology of control work. As processes of learning, cultivating, and exerting control, this syndrome begins with early male, sport, and power-control socialization and continues through occupational socialization. This article seeks to explore the possible consequences and implications of such "control management" by husbands who have learned to define the male self and sport involvement as aspects of a hegemonic masculinity and how such definitions affect their wives and marriages.

%B Sociological Perspectives %I University of California Press %V 49 %P 527 - 557 %8 2006 %@ 0731-1214 %G eng %N 4 %0 Hearing %D 2006 %T XXX: The Power of Sex in Contemporary Design %A Christine Gallagher %A Nielsen,Susie %K Design of Human Environment %K Graphic Design %8 2006 %G eng %2 c %4 58492286976 %0 Book Section %B Clumsy Solutions for a Complex World %D 2006 %T You Never Miss the Water ‘Till the Well Runs Dry: Crisis and Creativity in California. %A Denise Lach %A Helen Ingram %A Steve Rayner %A Verweij, Marco %A Michael Thompson %B Clumsy Solutions for a Complex World %I Cambridge University Press %G eng %& 10 %0 Journal Article %J State Politics and Policy Quarterly %D 2005 %T All States are not Equal: Investigating the Differential Success of the States in the Courts of Appeals %A Rorie Solberg %A Leonard Ray %B State Politics and Policy Quarterly %V 5 %P 147-167 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J SAGE Public Administration Abstracts %D 2005 %T Communicating to the courts and beyond: Why members of Congress participate as amici curiae %A Rorie Solberg %A Heberlig, E. %X

Members of Congress engage in discretionary behaviors, such as making speeches and cosponsoring bills, which are generally motivated by either electoral needs or policy preferences. We examine a discretionary behavior that engages the judicial branch in the conversation: the participation of members of Congress as amici curiae before the Supreme Court. Amicus curiae briefs provide members of Congress with a direct avenue of communication with the judiciary, and this characteristic suggests that cosigning would be a method of creating good public policy. Using data from the 1980-1997 terms of the Supreme Court, however, we find that members of Congress cosign onto amicus curiae briefs as a means of "taking stances," akin to cosponsoring a bill. The action allows the member to speak indirectly to an audience beyond these governmental institutions. Evidence shows that ideological extremism and committee jurisdiction promote participation as amicus curiae.

%B SAGE Public Administration Abstracts %I Sage Publications %V 32 %8 2005 %@ 0094-6958 %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Justice System Journal %D 2005 %T Diversifying the Federal Bench: Presidential Patterns %A Rorie Solberg %A Bratton, K. A. %B Justice System Journal %V 26 %P 119 - 134 %8 2005 %@ 0098-261X %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Judicature %D 2005 %T Diversity and G.W. Bush’s Judicial Appointments: Serving Two Masters %A Rorie Solberg %B Judicature %V 88 %P 276-283 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Qualitative Inquiry Qualitative Inquiry %D 2005 %T The Ethnographic Process of Gender Management: Doing the "Right" Masculinity With Wives of Professional Athletes %A Steven M. Ortiz %B Qualitative Inquiry Qualitative Inquiry %V 11 %P 265 - 290 %8 2005 %@ 1077-8004 %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Sociology of Religion Sociology of Religion %D 2005 %T Godly Manhood Going Wild?: Transformations in Conservative Protestant Masculinity %A Sally K. Gallagher %A Wood, Sabrina L. %B Sociology of Religion Sociology of Religion %V 66 %8 2005 %@ 1069-4404 %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Offender Rehabilitation %D 2005 %T Growing Up Behind Bars An Ethnographic Study of Adolescent Inmates in a Cottage for Violent Offenders %A Michelle Inderbitzin %X

The purpose of this study is to direct attention inside the walls of a juvenile correctional facility to closely examine the experiences and daily lives of adolescent inmates. The ethnographic data for this study were collected through participant-observation and extended interactions in a cottage for violent male offenders in one state's maximum-security training school. This paper examines the adjustments and survival strategies of young offenders as they adapt to life inside the institution. The boys in this study face a particularly tough adolescence as they come of age in a “society of captives” (Sykes, 1958) where each individual's manhood and sense of self is continually tested. This paper offers a view from the inside, giving voice to young inmates, elucidating their struggles, their issues and concerns. Adolescent inmates in the juvenile justice system are virtually always released back into the community in a matter of months or years; understanding the way they experience incarceration is an important step in creating policy that will facilitate their reentry and offer hope for a conforming future.

%B Journal of Offender Rehabilitation %I Taylor & Francis %V 42 %P 1 - 22 %8 2005 %@ 1050-9674 %G eng %N 3 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Family and Economic Issues %D 2005 %T Occupational Structure and the Employment of American Mothers of Young Children %A Mark Edwards %X

Explanations for the increase of employment for American mothers with young children have focused on women's motivations and skills or on increased wages. Instead, this analysis considers how access to professional and managerial occupations may explain this employment trend. Relying on Current Population Survey data (1968-1995), the study reports that growing availability of these occupations explains less than 1/4 of employment growth. The percentage of full-time employed newer mothers in professional and managerial occupations, while having grown substantially over time, remains relatively small. Part-time employment does not explain the trend. Relatively high rates of full-time work, even for low-prestige occupations, affirm existing research emphasizing family economic need and validate questions about the structure of work for accommodating family obligations.

%B Journal of Family and Economic Issues %I Springer %V 26 %P 31 - 53 %8 2005 %@ 1058-0476 %G eng %N 1 %0 Book Section %B Fat: The Anthropology of Obsession %D 2005 %T Phat %A Joan Gross %B Fat: The Anthropology of Obsession %I Penguin/Tarcher %C New York %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Public Utilities Fortnightly %D 2005 %T Risking a Green Power Outage %A David Bernell %B Public Utilities Fortnightly %8 10/2005 %G eng %0 Book Section %B Beyond the Blood, The Beach and the Banana: New Perspectives in Caribbean Studies %D 2004 %T Caribbean Migration to Canada: Mobility and Opportunity 1900-2001 %A Dwaine Plaza %A Sandra Courtman %B Beyond the Blood, The Beach and the Banana: New Perspectives in Caribbean Studies %I Ian Randal Publisher %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies %D 2004 %T Disaggregating the Indo and African-Caribbean Migration and Settlement Experience in Canada %A Dwaine Plaza %B Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies %V 29 %P 241-266 %G eng %N 57-58 %0 Journal Article %J International Journal of Intercultural Relations International Journal of Intercultural Relations %D 2004 %T Learning through listening: applying an action learning model to a cross-cultural field study experience in Native America %A R Thompson %A Dwaine Plaza %B International Journal of Intercultural Relations International Journal of Intercultural Relations %V 28 %P 165 - 180 %8 2004 %@ 0147-1767 %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Contemporary Ethnography %D 2004 %T Leaving the Private World of Wives of Professional Athletes: A Male Sociologist's Reflections %A Steven M. Ortiz %X

The same skills, techniques, and strategies that make fieldwork go well can keep the fieldworker in the field far longer than necessary. Interest in this irony and the exit process was prompted by dilemmas encountered by a male ethnographer in terminating his long-term fieldwork with wives of professional athletes. This reflexive account examines collaborative relationships and compulsive data collection-which proved to be essential in gathering and analyzing data-for their consequences in the leaving process. It is proposed that having a greater awareness of such methodological issues may result in constructing more realistic and less stressful exit strategies, and coping more effectively with the disruptive, emotional, or problematic nature of the disengagement process.

%B Journal of Contemporary Ethnography %I Sage Publications %V 33 %P 466 - 487 %8 2004 %@ 0891-2416 %G eng %N 4 %0 Book %D 2004 %T Lemons are not red %A Seeger, Laura Vaccaro %X

A simple story highlights such things as a yellow lemon, a pink flamingo, and a silver moon in a visual game in which die-cut shapes fall on the correct color backgrounds.

%I Roaring Brook Press %C Brookfield, Conn. %@ 1596430087 9781596430082 9781596431959 1596431954 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Peace Research Abstracts %D 2004 %T Moving up the judicial ladder: the nomination of state Supreme Court justices to the federal courts %A Rorie Solberg %A Bratton, Kathleen %X

State institutions have assumed increasingly important roles in policymaking. Moreover, prior research indicates that judicial experience has emerged as a particularly important factor in nomination to the federal courts. Despite these developments, justices from state Supreme Courts are not often nominated to the federal judiciary. This article identifies the factors that influence the nomination of state Supreme Court justices to the federal courts. The results indicate that partisan alignment between the nominee, senators, and president is a critical factor in nomination. Age is also a significant factor in predicting nomination; a justice's likelihood of being nominated peaks in her early 50s. Moreover, state high court justices who serve on relatively prestigious courts or have considerable seniority are less likely to be nominated to the federal courts thereby suggesting that visibility may not be an asset to state justices wishing to move to the federal courts.

%B Peace Research Abstracts %I Sage Publications %V 41 %8 2004 %@ 0031-3599 %G eng %N 4 %0 Journal Article %J Eastern economic journal. %D 2004 %T Symposium: The Impact of Welfare Reform on Population Sub-Groups - Single Mother Work and Poverty under Welfare Reform: Are Policy Impacts Different in Rural Areas? %A Mark Edwards %A Weber, Bruce %A Duncan, Greg %B Eastern economic journal. %I Eastern Economic Association. %C Bloomsburg, Pa. %V 30 %P 31 %8 2004 %@ 0094-5056 %G eng %N 1 %0 Journal Article %J Gender & Society %D 2004 %T Where Are the Antifeminist Evangelicals?: Evangelical Identity, Subcultural Location, and Attitudes toward Feminism %A Sally K. Gallagher %X

Based on data from a national survey and personal interviews with more than 300 religiously committed Protestants, this analysis assesses the range and location of attitudes toward feminism among conservative Protestants. Findings suggest that evangelicals are not uniformly antifeminist. Rather, the majority are both supportive and appreciative of the gains of liberal feminism as well as concerned that feminism has gotten off track by promoting an excessive individualism that undermines stable, meaningful, and caring relationships. For most evangelicals, feminism is neither a significant subcultural religious boundary nor a focus of political mobilization or action. Political conservatism, embeddedness in conservative local religious subcultures, belief in husbands’ headship and authority, and affiliation with particular subgroups and denominations help to locate and specify the sources that create, reinforce, and sustain more negative attitudes toward feminism within this diverse religious subculture.

%B Gender & Society %I Sage Publications %V 18 %P 451 - 472 %8 2004 %@ 0891-2432 %G eng %N 4 %0 Book %D 2003 %T Building democracy in contemporary Russia : Western support for grassroots organizations %A Sarah L. Henderson %I Cornell University Press %C Ithaca %8 2003 %@ 0801441358 9780801441356 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2003 %T Evangelical identity and gendered family life %A Sally K. Gallagher %I Rutgers University Press %C New Brunswick, N.J. %8 2003 %@ 0813535468 9780813535463 9780813531786 0813531780 9780813531793 0813531799 %G eng %U http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=107158 %0 Magazine Article %D 2003 %T The Massacre of the Innocents: Politics and Art in Belgium, 1886-1910 %A Joan Gross %B Comparative Literature and Culture %V 5 %8 09/2003 %G eng %N 3 %0 Journal Article %J The Review of Economics and Statistics %D 2003 %T Multi-Dimensional Separating Equilibria and Moral Hazard: An Empirical Study of National Football League Contract Negotiations %A Conlin, Michaell %A Patrick M. Emerson %X

This paper empirically tests for a multidimensional separating equilibrium in contract negotiations and tests for evidence of the moral hazard inherent in many contracts. Using contract and performance data on players drafted into the National Football League from 1986 through 1991, we find evidence that players use delay to agreement and incentive clauses to reveal their private information during contract negotiations. In addition, our empirical tests of the moral hazard issue indicate that a player's effort level is influenced by the structure of his contract.

%B The Review of Economics and Statistics %I MIT Press %V 85 %P 760 - 765 %8 2003/// %@ 0034-6535 %G eng %N 3 %0 Journal Article %J Symbolic Interaction %D 2003 %T Muted Masculinity as an Outsider Strategy: Gender Sharing in Ethnographic Work with Wives of Professional Athletes %A Steven M. Ortiz %X

Using findings from a study of the world of the wives of professional athletes, this article explores the complex motivations for and displays of trust, rapport, and group acceptance during ethnographic research. Episodic exchanges between a male ethnographer and female collaborators revealed subtle issues of gender and perceived relative worth. This article proposes the outsider strategy of “muted masculinity” as a means of exploring ethnographic issues in which the boundaries between insiders and outsiders are uncertain.

%B Symbolic Interaction %I University of California Press %V 26 %P 601 - 611 %8 2003 %@ 0195-6086 %G eng %N 4 %0 Journal Article %J Contemporary Justice Review %D 2003 %T Outsiders and Justice Consciousness %A Michelle Inderbitzin %X

The foundations of my justice consciousness lie in two books that share the name "outsiders." I was introduced to S.E. Hinton's novel before I was a teenager and it was my first real contact with the "Greasers," the "Socs," and a world of juvenile delinquency divided by social class. Written by a 16-year-old girl around the time I was born, I think it was this book that initially sparked my fascination with juvenile delinquency and the study of crime. I pursued this interest in college and became concerned with inequality and the ways in which our social surroundings shape our choices and our life chances. Reading Howard S. Becker's classic statement of labeling theory in his version of Outsiders changed my perspective again and I have never looked at the world in quite the same way since.

%B Contemporary Justice Review %I Taylor & Francis %V 6 %P 357 - 362 %8 2003 %@ 1028-2580 %G eng %N 4 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Drug Issues %D 2003 %T Patterns and Correlates of Substance Use Among American Indians in Washington State %A Scott Akins %A Mosher, Clayton James %A Rotolo, Thomas %A Griffin, Robert %B Journal of Drug Issues %V 33 %P 45-74 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J New Zealand Police %D 2003 %T Public Alcohol Bans: An assessment of their potential effectiveness for reducing crime and disorder. %B New Zealand Police %G eng %0 Book Section %B Minoritiés ethniques anglophones et francophones: études culturelles comparatives %D 2003 %T Puerto Rican and Algerian Musical Discourses in the Diaspora %A Joan Gross %A David McMurray %B Minoritiés ethniques anglophones et francophones: études culturelles comparatives %I L'Harmattan %C Paris %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Justice Quarterly %D 2003 %T Racial Segregation and Property Crime: Examining the mediating effect of police strength %A Scott Akins %B Justice Quarterly %V 20 %P 675-695 %G eng %0 Book Section %D 2002 %T Arab Noise and Ramadan Nights: Rai, Rap, and Franco-Maghrebi Indentity %A Joan Gross %I McGraw-Hill %G eng %) Gender in a Transnational World: Introduction to Women's Studies %0 Journal Article %J Sociology of Sport On Line %D 2002 %T Camaraderie and Hierarchy in College Football: A Content Analysis of Team Photographs %A Dwaine Plaza %A Kathleen Stanley %B Sociology of Sport On Line %V 5 %G eng %N 2 %) Special Issue, November/December %& http://physed.otago.ac.nz/sosol/v5i2/v5i2.html %0 Journal Article %J Sociology of Sport Online %D 2002 %T Constructing Dependency in Coping with Stressful Occupational Events: At What Cost for Wives of Professional Athletes? %A Steven M. Ortiz %B Sociology of Sport Online %V 5 %8 Nov-Dec %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Sociological Forum %D 2002 %T Education and Occupations: Re-examining the Conventional Wisdom about Later First Births Among American Mothers %A Mark Edwards %B Sociological Forum %V 17 %P 423-443 %G eng %N 3 %0 Generic %D 2002 %T The effect of segregation on concentrated disadvantage, community instability and crime a comparison of neighborhoods in Portland, Oregon and Columbus, Ohio\ %A Scott Akins %I Washington State University\ %C Pullman, Wash.\ %8 2002///\ %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Teaching Sociology %D 2002 %T No Passport Required: An Action Learning Approach to Teaching about Globalization. %A Dwaine Plaza %A Kathleen Stanley %X

Describes a one-week course that focused on connections between global processes and local communities using an action-learning model. Discusses the action learning model, the content of the course, how student learning was evaluated, and what the teachers learned throughout the course. Addresses other uses of the model. (CMK)

%B Teaching Sociology %V 30 %P 89 - 99 %8 2002 %@ 0092-055X %G eng %N 1 %0 Journal Article %J Sage Public Administration Abstracts %D 2002 %T Selling civil society: Western aid and the nongovernmental organization sector in Russia. %A Sarah L. Henderson %X

To what degree can Western countries "purchase" civic engagement and participation in less developed countries that do not share the Western liberal tradition? Drawing on interview data as well as internal documents, this article looks at the effects of Western and international assistance on building civil society and, hence, democracy in Russia by focusing on the Russian nongovernmental organization (NGO) community. Although Western assistance has provided tangible equipment and training for NGOs, overall funding designed to facilitate the growth of civil society has had unintended consequences. Institutions, interests, and incentive structures impede successful collective action toward building a civic community by encouraging both funders and NGO activists to pursue short-term benefits over long-term development. The result is the creation of patron-client ties between the international donor and the Russian recipient rather than horizontal networks of civic engagement among Russian NGOs and their domestic audience.

%B Sage Public Administration Abstracts %I Sage Publications %V 29 %P 309 - 456 %8 2002 %@ 0094-6958 %G eng %N 3 %0 Journal Article %J Russian History %D 2002 %T Stalin's Short Course and Mad's Socialist Economic Transformation of China in the Early 1950s %A Hua-Yu Li %B Russian History %I Brill %V 29 %P 357 - 376 %8 2002 %@ 0094-288X %G eng %N 2/4 %0 Book Section %B Caribbean Families in Britain and the Transatlantic World %D 2001 %T Aging in Babylon: Elderly Caribbeans Living in Great Britain %A Dwaine Plaza %A Harry Goulbourne %B Caribbean Families in Britain and the Transatlantic World %I The University of Warwick Caribbean Studies Series %C London: Macmillian %P 219-231 %G eng %0 Book Section %D 2001 %T Arab Noise and Ramadan Nights: Rai, Rap, and Franco-Maghrebi Indentity %A Joan Gross %I Blackwell %G eng %) The Anthropology of Globalization: A Reader %0 Journal Article %J JOMF Journal of Marriage and Family %D 2001 %T Connections and Constraints: The Effects of Children on Caregiving %A Sally K. Gallagher %A Gerstel, Naomi %X

This article assesses the effects of children on parents' involvement in caregiving. On the basis of interviews with 273 respondents, we address the effects of having children on care given to kin and nonkin; assess the effects of children's characteristics, especially age and gender, on the help mothers and fathers provide; and examine how these vary with mothers' employment. Overall, we find that the presence of children connects parents into networks of care more than it constrains them. The effects vary depending on the characteristics of the child (including age and gender) as well as characteristics of the parent (like gender and employment).

%B JOMF Journal of Marriage and Family %V 63 %P 265 - 275 %8 2001 %@ 0022-2445 %G eng %N 1 %0 Journal Article %J SSQU Social Science Quarterly %D 2001 %T Do Attitudes and Personality Characteristics Affect Socioeconomic Outcomes? The Case of Welfare Use by Young Women %A Mark Edwards %A Plotnick, Robert %A Klawitter, Marieka %X

Objective. We estimate a model of social-psychological determinants of entry into Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC), the primary cash welfare program in the United States until 1996. Methods. Using information from the youngest cohorts of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, we estimate logit models of the probability of ever participating in AFDC and hazard models of the timing until first use of AFDC. Results. We find strong associations between welfare use and several attitudes and personality characteristics, but with two exceptions, most of the associations are not robust to the inclusion of exogenous background characteristics. There is consistent, strong evidence that positive attitudes toward school lower the likelihood of using welfare and increase duration until first receipt. Family background and social environment characteristics show strong robust effects. Conclusions. Our results point to relatively weak evidence for the hypothesis that individual attitudes in adolescence have a significant impact on initial welfare receipt.

%B SSQU Social Science Quarterly %V 82 %P 817 - 843 %8 2001 %@ 0038-4941 %G eng %N 4 %0 Book Section %B Halloween Passage %D 2001 %T Halloween aux Etats-Unis d'Amérique: une vue personnelle %A Joan Gross %B Halloween Passage %P 29-38 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J SSQU Social Science Quarterly %D 2001 %T Home Ownership, Affordability, and Mothers' Changing Work and Family Roles %A Mark Edwards %X

Objective. Elaborating on conventional explanations for rapid employment growth of married mothers of preschoolers, I propose that pursuit of home ownership contributed to this trend differently in different decades since 1950. Methods. Measuring husbands' income in terms of mortgage qualification and using logistic regression analysis of pooled Current Population Survey data to estimate trends standardized for compositional change, I compare hypothetical with observed trends since 1970. Results. Declining ability of husbands' income to qualify for mortgages and rising educational attainment of mothers explains the post-1970 accelerated employment growth for preschoolers' mothers. By the 1980s, other influences have greater relative effects on young mothers' employment. Conclusion. Home ownership contributed to slower growth in preschoolers' mothers' employment through the 1950s and 1960s, raising standard-of-living expectations. Declining affordability in the 1970s inspired even more rapid growth. Pursuit of prescribed standards of living has increasingly motivated families to embrace dual-earner work and family arrangements.

%B SSQU Social Science Quarterly %V 82 %P 369 - 383 %8 2001 %@ 0038-4941 %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Qualitative Inquiry %D 2001 %T How Interviewing Became Therapy for Wives of Professional Athletes: Learning From a Serendipitous Experience %A Steven M. Ortiz %X

During field research on wives of professional athletes, several of the wives seemed to find that the in-depth interviews had a therapeutic value. Indeed, they themselves often referred to the interview sessions as "therapy sessions," opportunities to unload suppressed feelings, innermost thoughts, and private experiences in ways that led to certain self-transformations. This article examines the nature of collaborative relationships in the interviewing process and factors that enabled some of the wives to experience a cathartic process of self-revelation and an introspective process of self-discovery, thereby gaining more from their participation than they had expected.

%B Qualitative Inquiry %I Sage Publications %V 7 %P 192 - 220 %8 2001 %@ 1077-8004 %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Gender & Society %D 2001 %T Men's Caregiving: Gender and the Contingent Character of Care %A Sally K. Gallagher %A Gerstel, Naomi %X

This article extends recent scholarship on masculinity by analyzing the effects of social structure, social relations, and gendered caregiving ideology on the care men give to kin and friends. To be sure, men spend significantly less time giving care than do women. However, much variation is contingent on the women in men's lives: It is primarily the characteristics of men's families (including wives' caregiving; the presence of young children, especially daughters; and the availability of siblings, especially sisters) more than employment or gendered caregiving ideology that shape the amount and kind of caregiving men provide. Our findings suggest that although men's caregiving is variable and socially patterned, it is contingent on women: Wives and daughters pull men into caregiving, while adult sisters substitute for them.

%B Gender & Society %I Sage Publications %V 15 %P 197 - 217 %8 2001 %@ 0891-2432 %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Cold War Studies %D 2001 %T The Political Stalinization of China: The Establishment of One-Party Constitutionalism, 1948-1954 %A Hua-Yu Li %X This article offers a fresh perspective on the establishment of a one-party constitutional structure in China from 1948 to 1954, using documents and first-hand accounts published in China over the past two decades. These documents suggest that the Stalinization of China cannot be understood outside the larger context of the political Stalinization of the rest of the Communist world. Stalin played a critical role in determining the pace of political reform in China, and he actively encouraged Mao to allow non-Communists to take part in the Chinese electoral process and in the writing of the Chinese constitution. Although Mao would have preferred to establish a Soviet-style one-party system right away, he readily yielded to Stalin's advice. Mao chose to obey Stalin's dictates for political reform so that he could gain greater independence in domestic economic policies. %B Journal of Cold War Studies %I Project Muse %V 3 %P 28 - 47 %8 2001 %@ 1520-3972 %G eng %N 2 %0 Magazine Article %D 2001 %T Regional accents of global music: The Occitan Rap of Les Fabulous Trobadors %A Joan Gross %A Vera Mark, Penn State %B French Cultural Studies %V 12 %P 77-94 %8 02/2001 %G eng %N 34 %0 Journal Article %J Wabaggi Journal of Diaspora Studies %D 2001 %T A Socio-Historic Examination of Caribbean Migration to Canada: Moving to the Beat of Changes in Immigration Policy %A Dwaine Plaza %B Wabaggi Journal of Diaspora Studies %V 4 %P 39-80 %G eng %N 1 %0 Book %D 2001 %T Speaking in Other Voices: An Ethnography of Walloon Puppet Theaters %A Joan Gross %I John Benjamins Press %C Amsterdam and Philadelphia %P 337 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Marriage and Family %D 2001 %T Uncertainty and the Rise of the Work-Family Dilemma. %A Mark Edwards %X

Suggests that consumptive certainty of the 1950s and 1960s gave way to economic uncertainty in the 1970s and beyond. Economic uncertainty provided impetus, legitimacy, and justification for young families to adopt new work-family arrangements. Hence, economic uncertainty is conceptualized as a real circumstance that substantiates families' reasonable perceptions of need. (Author/MKA)

%B Journal of Marriage and Family %V 63 %P 183 - 96 %8 2001 %@ 0022-2445 %G eng %N 1 %0 Book Section %B Change and Resilience in Fishing %D 2000 %T Community infrastructure and the development of human capital: A Pacific view %A Lori A Cramer %A Susan Hanna %A Madeleine Hall-Arber %B Change and Resilience in Fishing %I Oregon Sea Grant Publishers %C Corvallis, OR %P 57-68 %G eng %( Change and Resilience in Fishing %0 Journal Article %J ECOJ The Economic Journal %D 2000 %T The Economics of Tenancy Rent Control %A Basu, Kaushik %A Patrick M. Emerson %X

We consider a rent control regime where rent increases on, and eviction of, a sitting tenant are forbidden. When apartments become vacant landlords may negotiate new rents. If inflation exists, landlords prefer to rent to short-staying tenants. Since departure-date-contingent contracts are forbidden and landlords cannot tell whether tenants are short-stayers, an adverse selection problem arises, with a Pareto inefficient equilibrium. When tenant types are determined endogenously, multiple equilibria can arise where one equilibrium is Pareto dominated. Abolition of the rent control regime, cannot only shift the equilibrium out of this inferior outcome, but also result in across-the-board lowering of rents.

%B ECOJ The Economic Journal %V 110 %P 939 - 962 %8 2000/// %@ 0013-0133 %G eng %N 466 %0 Journal Article %J Demokratizatsiya: The Journal of Post-Soviet Democratization %D 2000 %T Importing Civil Society: Foreign Aid and the Women’s Movement in Russia %A Sarah L. Henderson %B Demokratizatsiya: The Journal of Post-Soviet Democratization %V 8 %P 65-82 %G eng %N 1 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Eastern Caribbean Studies %D 2000 %T In Pursuit of the Mobility Dream: Second Generation British/Caribbeans Returning to Jamaica and Barbados %A Dwaine Plaza %B Journal of Eastern Caribbean Studies %V 27 %P 135-160 %G eng %N 4 %0 Journal Article %J Deviant Behavior %D 2000 %T Multiple birth rates and racial type: a research note regarding r/K theory %A Scott Akins %A Griffin, Robert %X

Recent work in the sociobiological study of deviance has suggested a link between r-selection traits, such as probabilities of multiple births, racial type, and criminality. This theory, however, failed to present any supporting evidence regarding the multiple birth-crime relationship. This paper tests a hypothesis derived from r/K theorization, that twinning rates will correspond to differential crime rates by racial type. Further, a number of additional variables are discussed that may prove suitable for future study.

%B Deviant Behavior %I Taylor & Francis %V 21 %P 15 - 22 %8 2000/// %@ 0163-9625 %G eng %N 1 %0 Book %D 2000 %T New perspectives on current sociolinguistic knowledge with regard to language use, proficiency, and attitudes among Hispanics in the U.S. : the case of a rural Northern California community %A Susana Rivera-Mills %I E. Mellen Press %C Lewiston, NY %8 2000/// %@ 0773479066 9780773479067 077347997X 9780773479975 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Social Indicators Research %D 2000 %T Transnational Grannies: The Changing Family Responsibilities of Elderly African Caribbean-Born Women Resident in Britain %A Dwaine Plaza %B Social Indicators Research %I Kluwer Academic Publishers %V 51 %P 75-105 %8 2000/07/01 %@ 0303-8300 %G eng %U http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A%3A1007022110306 %N 1 %! Social Indicators Research %0 Journal Article %J Social Indicators Research Journal %D 2000 %T Transnational Grannies: The Changing Family Responsibility of Elderly African Caribbean-born Women Resident in Britain %A Dwaine Plaza %B Social Indicators Research Journal %V 11 %P 180-201 %G eng %N 7 %0 Conference Proceedings %B The Sixth Annual Symposium about Language and Society %D 1999 %T Belgian Language Politics in Performance %A Joan Gross %B The Sixth Annual Symposium about Language and Society %P 104-114 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Canadian Journal of Ethnic Studies %D 1999 %T Breaking Through the Glass Ceiling: The Pursuit of University Training Among Afro-Caribbean Migrants and Their Children in Toronto %A Dwaine Plaza %A Alan Simmons %B Canadian Journal of Ethnic Studies %V 30 %P 99-120 %G eng %N 3 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Applied Forestry %D 1999 %T Changing public values: Consequences for Pacific northwest forestry %A Shindler, B %A Lori A Cramer %B Journal of Applied Forestry %V 13 %P 28-34 %G eng %N 1 %0 Journal Article %J CANADIAN WOMAN STUDIES %D 1999 %T Issues of Race in Employment Experiences of Caribbean Women in Toronto %A James, C., Plaza, D., Jansen, C., %B CANADIAN WOMAN STUDIES %V 19 %P 129 - 133 %8 1999 %@ 0713-3235 %G eng %0 Book Section %B Globalized Identities: New Directions in the Study of Caribbean Migration %D 1998 %T Strategies and Strategizing: The Struggles for Upward Mobility Among University Educated Caribbean-Born Men in Canada %A Dwaine Plaza %A Mary Chamberlain %B Globalized Identities: New Directions in the Study of Caribbean Migration %C London: Routledge %P 249-266 %G eng %0 Book Section %B Culture of the Internet %D 1997 %T Pornography in cyberspace: An exploration of what's in Usenet %A Dwaine Plaza %A Mehta, M. %A Mahwah, NJ %B Culture of the Internet %I Wilfred Laurier University Press %C Waterloo, Ontario %P 53*67 %G eng %0 Book Section %D 1997 %T Rai, Rap and Ramadan Nights: Franco-Maghrebi Cultural Identities %A Joan Gross %I University of California Press %C Berkeley %G eng %) Political Islam %0 Journal Article %J Symbolic interaction. %D 1997 %T Traveling With the Ball Club: A Code of Conduct for Wives Only %A Steven M. Ortiz %B Symbolic interaction. %I For the Society by the University of California Press Journals Division, etc.] %C Berkeley, Calif., etc. %V 20 %P 225 %8 1997 %@ 0195-6086 %G eng %N 3 %0 Book Section %B Displacement, Diaspora and the Geographies of Identity %D 1996 %T Arab Noise and Ramadan Nights: Rai, Rap, and Franco-Maghrebi Indentity %A Joan Gross %A David McMurray %A Ted Swedenburg %B Displacement, Diaspora and the Geographies of Identity %I Duke University Press %C Durham, NC %G eng %0 Journal Article %J El Vigía de Tierra %D 1996 %T La política del uso del idioma non oficial: el valón en Béligica, el tamazight en Marruecos %A Joan Gross %B El Vigía de Tierra %V 2 %P 181-204 %G eng %N 3 %0 Journal Article %J Social Forces %D 1996 %T Pregnancy Discrimination Litigation: Legal Erosion of Capitalist Ideology under Equal Employment Opportunity Law. %A Mark Edwards %X

Analysis of 82 court cases involving pregnancy discrimination, 1972-91, shows that this litigation revealed the gender bias of equal employment opportunity law and capitalist economic relations, eroded assumptions about economic imperatives for not accommodating pregnant workers, and laid the groundwork for the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993. Includes many cases involving pregnant teachers. Contains 32 references. (SV)

%B Social Forces %V 75 %P 247 - 68 %8 1996 %@ 0037-7732 %G eng %N 1 %0 Journal Article %J Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies %D 1994 %T Arab Noise and Ramadan Nights: Rai, Rap, and Franco-Maghrebi Indentity %A Joan Gross %A David McMurray %A Ted Swedenburg %B Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies %V 3 %P 3-39 %G eng %N 1 %0 Journal Article %J Clinical sociology review. %D 1994 %T Clinical Typifications by Wives of Professional Athletes: The Field Researcher as Therapist %A Steven M. Ortiz %B Clinical sociology review. %I Clinical Sociology Association %C Providence, R.I. %P 48 %8 1994 %@ 0730-840X %G eng %N 12 %0 Book %D 1994 %T Older people giving care : helping family and community %A Sally K. Gallagher %I Auburn House %C Westport, Conn. %8 1994 %@ 0865692335 9780865692336 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Anthropological Quarterly %D 1994 %T Popular Culture as Contested Terrain: The Cace of Tchantché %B Anthropological Quarterly %V 67 %P 62-70 %8 04/1994 %G eng %N 2 %0 Book Section %B Research in Community Sociology: The Community of the Streets %D 1994 %T Shopping for Sociability in the Mall %A Steven M. Ortiz %A Spencer E. Cahill %A Jyn H. Lofland %B Research in Community Sociology: The Community of the Streets %I JAI Press %C Greenwich, CT %P 183-199 %G eng %) Supplement 1 %0 Journal Article %J PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review %D 1993 %T Berber Origins and the Politics of Ethnicity in Colonial North African Discourse %A Joan Gross %B PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review %V 16 %P 39-57 %8 06/1993 %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Rural Sociology %D 1993 %T Changing Forest Service Values and Their Implications for Land Management Decisions Affecting Resource-Dependent Communities. %A Lori A Cramer %X

A nationwide survey of U.S. Forest Service employees examined values and management priorities across employment levels. Compared to agency policies, respondents gave higher priorities to noncommodity uses of national forests, such as recreation and wildlife. This disparity of opinion was greatest among new district rangers, who were more educated and more varied in background than other respondents. (SV)

%B Rural Sociology %V 58 %P 475 - 91 %8 1993 %@ 0036-0112 %G eng %N 3 %0 Book Section %B Contemporary Cultural Anthropology %D 1993 %T Multilingualism in Morocco %A Joan Gross %B Contemporary Cultural Anthropology %I HarperCollins %C Glenview, IL %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Critique of Anthropology %D 1993 %T The Politics of Unofficial Language: Walloon in Belgium, Tamazight in Morocco %A Joan Gross %B Critique of Anthropology %V 13 %P 177-208 %G eng %N 2 %0 Book Section %B Public Reactions to Nuclear Waste: Citizens' Views of Repository Siting %D 1993 %T Rural community residents' views of nuclear waste siting in Nevada %A Lori A Cramer %A Krannich, R.S. %A Little, R.L. %B Public Reactions to Nuclear Waste: Citizens' Views of Repository Siting %I Duke University Press %P 263-287 %G eng %& 10 %0 Journal Article %J Middle East Report %D 1992 %T Rai, Rap and Ramadan Nights: Franco-Maghrebi Cultural Identities %A Joan Gross %A David McMurray %A Ted Swedenburg %B Middle East Report %P 11-17 %8 09/1992 %G eng %N Sept/Oct %0 Generic %D 1992 %T Walloons %A Joan Gross %G eng %0 Book Section %B Humor and Comedy in Puppetry %D 1987 %T The Form and Function of Humor in the Liége Puppet Theater %A Joan Gross %B Humor and Comedy in Puppetry %I Popular Press %C Bowling Green %P 106-126 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Anthropological Quarterly %D 1987 %T Transformations of a Popular Culture Form in Northern France and Belgium %A Joan Gross %B Anthropological Quarterly %V 60 %P 71-76 %8 04/1987 %G eng %N 2 %0 Journal Article %J Semiotica %D 1983 %T Creative Use of Language in a Liége Puppet Theater %A Joan Gross %B Semiotica %V 47 %P 281-315 %G eng %N 1-4