%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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 Generic %D 1992 %T Walloons %A Joan Gross %G eng