2 resultados para Data Migration Processes Modeling
em Portal do Conhecimento - Ministerio do Ensino Superior Ciencia e Inovacao, Cape Verde
Resumo:
The research presented here aimed to analyze the processes of integration of Cape Verdeans immigrants descendants of living in the neighborhood of Talude, Town of Unhos, Municipality of Loures. To analyze the central object of research - the process of integration of descendants of migrants in the neighborhood of Talude we tried to answer the following questions, which reflect the objectives of the research: What are the paths of socialization the descendants of immigrants: at the family, at school, in employment, in the neighborhood and in other activities? What is the influence of gender relations in the processes of integration of descendants? What are the perception the of immigrants descendants living in the neighborhood of Talude in relation to how they are viewed by residents of the Town residents in the neighborhood? And the people or society in general? And what influence these perceptions have in their process of integration? This study consists in two parts: the design of the survey, which is depicted on the reason for the choice of topic, the definition of the topic, research objectives, the method that was used in the course of investigation and the framing of the issue. In the second part, the analysis of data in different pathways: family, neighborhood, school, labor market, in other activities, the influence of gender and image(s). As a general conclusion we can say that there are several factors that contribute to the identification of immigrant descendants (there are no apparent factors that predominate) and the images they have of themselves and the Portuguese society in general are diverse.
Resumo:
Although the Santiago variety of Cape Verdean Creole (CVC) has been the subject of numerous linguistic works, the second major variety of the language, i.e. the São Vicente variety of CVC (CVSV), has hardly been described. Nevertheless this lack of studies and given its striking differences, on all linguistic levels, from the variety of Santiago (CVST), the implicit explanation for such divergences, echoed for decades in the literature on CVC, has been the presumably decreolized character of CVSV. First, this study provides a comprehensive fieldwork-based synchronic description of CVSV major morpho-syntactic categories in the intent to document the variety. Second, it aims to place the study of CVSV within a broader scope of contact linguistics in the quest to explain its structure. Based on analyses of historical documents and studies, it reconstructs the sociohistorical scenario of the emergence and development of CVSV in the period of 1797- 1975. From the comparison of the current structures of CVSV and CVST, the examination of linguistic data in historical texts and the analysis of sociohistorical facts it becomes clear that the contemporary structure of CVSV stems from the contact-induced changes that occurred during the intensive language and dialect contact on the island of São Vicente in the early days of its settlement in the late 18th and ensuing early 19th century development, rather than from modern day pressure of Portuguese. Although this dissertation argues for multiple explanations rather than a single theory, by showing that processes such as languages shift among the first Portuguese settlers, L2 acquisition, migration of the Barlavento speakers and subsequent dialect leveling as well as language borrowing at a later stage were at stake, it demonstrates the usefulness of partial-restructuring model proposed by Holm (2004).