6 resultados para Middle class -- Catalonia -- 19th century

em Repositório Científico do Instituto Politécnico de Lisboa - Portugal


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In order to study the impact of premature birth and low income on mother–infant interaction, four Portuguese samples were gathered: full-term, middle-class (n=99); premature, middle-class (n=63); full-term, low income (n=22); and premature, low income (n=21). Infants were filmed in a free play situation with their mothers, and the results were scored using the CARE Index. By means of multinomial regression analysis, social economic status (SES) was found to be the best predictor of maternal sensitivity and infant cooperative behavior within a set of medical and social factors. Contrary to the expectations of the cumulative risk perspective, two factors of risk (premature birth together with low SES) were as negative for mother–infant interaction as low SES solely. In this study, as previous studies have shown, maternal sensitivity and infant cooperative behavior were highly correlated, as was maternal control with infant compliance. Our results further indicate that, when maternal lack of responsiveness is high, the infant displays passive behavior, whereas when the maternal lack of responsiveness is medium, the infant displays difficult behavior. Indeed, our findings suggest that, in these cases, the link between types of maternal and infant interactive behavior is more dependent on the degree of maternal lack of responsiveness than it is on birth status or SES. The results will be discussed under a developmental and evolutionary reasoning

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o objeto deste artigo é analisar as respostas da escola ao fenômeno da violência em meio escolar e qual a influência das características dos contextos urbanos nesse processo. A identificação de escolas situadas em contextos urbanos fortemente degradados e com elevada conflitualidade e desigualdade social, mas que apresentavam níveis reduzidos de violência no seu interior e, inversamente, escolas com uma frequência elevada de ocorrências que se situavam em contextos urbanos mais estruturados e maioritariamente de classe média, levou- nos a questionar as concepções largamente aceitas e difundidas sobre o aparente contágio de conflitualidade em escolas situadas em meios sociais desfavorecidos. As evidências encontradas na análise dessa relação entre as escolas e o contexto social local permitiram- nos refutar o determinismo das características do meio social sobre as escolas, bem como a consequente incapacidade dessas na regulação e prevenção da violência. o centramento da pesquisa na dimensão organizacional, em concreto nas estratégias definidas e desenvolvidas pelas escolas no combate ao problema da violência, permitiu-nos compreender e demonstrar que as orientações, as práticas e os processos organizacionais têm um papel decisivo na pacificação dos quotidianos escolares.

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Esta comunicação tem como objetivo analisar como as políticas respeitantes à segurança escolar são reinterpretadas e reorientadas em resultado das estratégias e filosofias de intervenção das direções das escolas e outros agentes educativos. Tendo como premissa que o contexto social não determina linearmente a violência escolar, o estudo centrou-­se na análise das relações entre o contexto social local e organizacional das escolas, procurando identificar os factores relevantes para o processo de regulação da violência. Foram selecionados três clusters de escolas na Área Metropolitana de Lisboa, tendo em conta contrastes intra e inter clusters assim como a sua posição relativa face aos níveis de violência registadas a nível nacional. Foi identificada uma diversidade significativa de respostas à violência, concretizadas na mobilização de diferentes recursos pelos responsáveis das escolas com o duplo objetivo de atingir as metas políticas definidas e os seus próprios interesses estratégicos. Esta apropriação e reorientação das políticas realiza-­se através da estruturação de redes locais de poder, hierarquizando competências e responsabilidades, e no processo, redefinindo os objetivos do processo de prevenção e intervenção. A ocultação das situações de violência, o recrutamento preferencial de estudantes de classe média ou com sucesso educativo elevado, ou ainda as sanções desproporcionais para alunos agressores ou indisciplinados, foram algumas das estratégias identificadas. Isto mostra que os atores têm diferentes possibilidades e capacidades de ação num sistema complexo de regras sociais que, dentro de certos limites, lhes permite reinterpretar e reconstruir regras e, em última instância, contribuir para a alteração do próprio sistema (Mouzelis, 2000;; Burns e Flam, 2000;; Lipsky, 1980).

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This paper suggests that the thought of the North-American critical theorist James W. Carey provides a relevant perspective on communication and technology. Having as background American social pragmatism and progressive thinkers of the beginning of the 20th century (as Dewey, Mead, Cooley, and Park), Carey built a perspective that brought together the political economy of Harold A. Innis, the social criticism of David Riesman and Charles W. Mills and incorporated Marxist topics such as commodification and sociocultural domination. The main goal of this paper is to explore the connection established by Carey between modern technological communication and what he called the “transmissive model”, a model which not only reduces the symbolic process of communication to instrumentalization and to information delivery, but also politically converges with capitalism as well as power, control and expansionist goals. Conceiving communication as a process that creates symbolic and cultural systems, in which and through which social life takes place, Carey gives equal emphasis to the incorporation processes of communication.If symbolic forms and culture are ways of conditioning action, they are also influenced by technological and economic materializations of symbolic systems, and by other conditioning structures. In Carey’s view, communication is never a disembodied force; rather, it is a set of practices in which co-exist conceptions, techniques and social relations. These practices configure reality or, alternatively, can refute, transform and celebrate it. Exhibiting sensitiveness favourable to the historical understanding of communication, media and information technologies, one of the issues Carey explored most was the history of the telegraph as an harbinger of the Internet, of its problems and contradictions. For Carey, Internet was seen as the contemporary heir of the communications revolution triggered by the prototype of transmission technologies, namely the telegraph in the 19th century. In the telegraph Carey saw the prototype of many subsequent commercial empires based on science and technology, a pioneer model for complex business management; an example of conflict of interest for the control over patents; an inducer of changes both in language and in structures of knowledge; and a promoter of a futurist and utopian thought of information technologies. After a brief approach to Carey’s communication theory, this paper focuses on his seminal essay "Technology and ideology. The case of the telegraph", bearing in mind the prospect of the communication revolution introduced by Internet. We maintain that this essay has seminal relevance for critically studying the information society. Our reading of it highlights the reach, as well as the problems, of an approach which conceives the innovation of the telegraph as a metaphor for all innovations, announcing the modern stage of history and determining to this day the major lines of development in modern communication systems.

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The legacy of nineteenth century social theory followed a “nationalist” model of society, assuming that analysis of social realities depends upon national boundaries, taking the nation-state as the primary unit of analysis, and developing the concept of methodological nationalism. This perspective regarded the nation-state as the natural - and even necessary - form of society in modernity. Thus, the constitution of large cities, at the end of the 19th century, through the intense flows of immigrants coming from diverse political and linguistic communities posed an enormous challenge to all social research. One of the most significant studies responding to this set of issues was The Immigrant Press and its Control, by Robert E. Park, one of the most prominent American sociologists of the first half of the 20th century. The Immigrant Press and its Control was part of a larger project entitled Americanization Studies: The Acculturation of Immigrant Group into American Society, funded by the Carnagie Corporation following World War I, taking as its goal to study the so-called “Americanization methods” during the 1920s. This paper revisits that particular work by Park to reveal how his detailed analysis of the role of the immigrant press overcame the limitations of methodological nationalism. By granting importance to language as a tool uniting each community and by showing how the strength of foreign languages expressed itself through the immigrant press, Park demonstrated that the latter produces a more ambivalent phenomenon than simply the assimilation of immigrants. On the one hand, the immigrant press served as a connecting force, driven by the desire to preserve the mother tongue and culture while at the same time awakening national sentiments that had, until then, remained diffuse. Yet, on the other hand, it facilitated the adjustment of immigrants to the American context. As a result, Park’s work contributes to our understanding of a particular liminal moment inherent within many intercultural contexts, the space between emigrant identity (emphasizing the country of origin) and immigrant identity (emphasizing the newly adopted country). His focus on the role played by media in the socialization of immigrant groups presaged later work on this subject by communication scholars. Focusing attention on Park’s research leads to other studies of the immigrant experience from the same period (e.g., Thomas & Znaniecki, The Polish Peasant in Europe and America), and also to insights on multi-presence and interculturality as significant but often overlooked phenomena in the study of immigrant socialization.

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In the present longitudinal study, we investigated attachment quality in Portuguese mother–infant and in father–infant dyads, and evaluated whether attachment quality was related to parental sensitivity during parent–infant social interaction or to the amount of time each parent spent with the infant during play and in routine caregiving activities (e.g., feeding, bathing, play). The sample consisted of 82 healthy full-term infants (30 girls, 53 boys, 48 first born), and their mothers and fathers from mostly middle-class households. To assess parental sensitivity, mothers and fathers were independently observed during free play interactions with their infants when infants were 9 and 15 months old. The videotaped interactions were scored by masked coders using the Crittenden’s CARE-Index. When infants were 12 and 18 months old, mother–infant and father–infant dyads were videotaped during an adaptation of Ainsworth’s Strange Situation. Parents also described their level of involvement in infant caregiving activities using a Portuguese version of the McBride and Mills Parent Responsibility Scale. Mothers were rated as being more sensitive than fathers during parent–infant free play at both 9 and 15 months. There also was a higher prevalence of secure attachment in mother–infant versus father–infant dyads at both 12 and 18 months. Attachment security was predicted by the amount of time mothers and fathers were involved in caregiving and play with the infant, and with parents’ behavior during parent–infant free play.