2 resultados para Didactics of French
Resumo:
Nous proposons d’interroger, dans cette contribution, les représentations sociolinguistiques des immigrés issus de la diaspora ex-yougoslave, installés au sud de la France, qui vivent au quotidien le contact entre la langue maternelle (langue de la maison ou de l’environnement familial) et le français (langue de l’environnement social). Les réflexions que nous proposons ici s’insèrent dans le projet « Représentations des langues et des identités en Méditerranée en contexte plurilingue » (EA739 Dipralang). Notre étude de cas permet d’explorer les frontières de ce projet (langues de migration plutôt que langues minoritaires d’implantation historique) et le rôle des représentations sociolinguistiques dans la structuration des identités de leurs locuteurs.
Resumo:
Background: Monitoring of emerging modes of drug consumption in France has identified new patterns of injection among youths with diverse social backgrounds, which may explain the persistence of high rates of hepatitis C virus infection. The circumstances surrounding the first injection have been poorly documented in the group of heavy drug users and in the context of the French opioid substitution treatment (OST) policy that provides expanded access to high-dosage buprenorphine (BHD). Methods: An Internet survey (Priminject) was conducted from October 2010 to March 2011 with French drug users. Four time periods were compared based on critical dates throughout the implementation of the Harm Reduction Policy in France. Results: Compared with drug users who injected for the first time prior to 1995, the aspects of drug use for users who recently injected for the first time were as follows: (1) experimentation with miscellaneous drugs before the first injection; (2) an older age at the time of first injection; (3) heroin as the drug of choice for an individual’s first injection, notwithstanding the increased usage of stimulant drugs; (4) BHD did not appear to be a pathway to injection; and (5) an increased number of users who injected their first time alone, without the help or presence of another individual. Conclusion: The PrimInject study showed that there is a group of injection drug users that is larger than the group of injection drug users observed in previous studies; therefore, it is necessary to diversify programs to reach the entire spectrum of high-risk users.