803 resultados para Social Practices
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El artículo muestra cómo los postulados de libertad e igualdad, propuestos por el Estado nacional, fueron asimilados por las escuelas religiosas de la ciudad de Cuenca, en Ecuador. A través del análisis de dos fuentes: la literatura y los testimonios orales de quienes fueron alumnos de estas escuelas entre 1928 y 1946, el estudio muestra cómo en esta ciudad el liberalismo no fue percibido como obstáculo para que los niños pobres opten por la educación religiosa. En este contexto, la propuesta liberal chocó con los valores del antiguo régimen escolar. Si bien se mantenían las diversas prácticas de discrimen de una sociedad local estratificada, al mismo tiempo se observa que también se introdujeron cambios especialmente en la educación de las mujeres de origen popular.
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La religión es un tema que se ha ligado a los temas de migración debido al interés en las transacciones e interconexiones que se presentan entre los migrantes y sus familias residentes en los países de origen, así como a la importancia que tienen las prácticas religiosas para los migrantes en sus países de destino. Al examinar casos concretos de migración y al comparar diferentes grupos religiosos –tanto católicos como quienes no están vinculados a una institución religiosa– se observa la continuidad y los cambios de las formas de pertenencia, cuyas raíces provienen de la historia colonial. Analizando los procesos de construcción del espacio religioso se investiga si el traslado de concepciones e imágenes religiosas está provocando nuevos esencialismos o culturas híbridas, en las cuales se articulan bricolajes de ideologías y cosmovisiones. Los casos comparados evidencian que las religiones y sus aparatos tienen una importante influencia en las concepciones y percepciones del espacio, los cuales determinan las prácticas y pertenencias sociales.
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A number of recent articles emphasize the fundamental importance of taphonomy and formation processes to interpretation of plant remains assemblages, as well as the value of interdisciplinary approaches to studies of environmental change and ecological and social practices. This paper examines ways in which micromorphology can contribute to integrating geoarchaeology and archaeobotany in analysis of the taphonomy and context of plant remains and ecological and social practices. Micromorphology enables simultaneous in situ study of diverse plant materials and thereby traces of a range of depositional pathways and histories. In addition to charred plant remains, also often preserved in semi-arid environments are plant impressions, phytoliths and calcitic ashes. These diverse plant remains are often routinely separated and extracted from their depositional context or lost using other analytical techniques, thereby losing crucial evidence on taphonomy, formation processes and contextual associations, which are fundamental to all subsequent interpretations. Although micromorphological samples are small in comparison to bulk flotation samples of charred plant remains, their size is similar to phytolith and pollen samples. In this paper, key taphonomic issues are examined in the study of: fuel; animal dung, animal management and penning; building materials; and specific activities, including food storage and preparation and ritual, using selected case-studies from early urban settlements in the Ancient Near East. Microarchaeological residues and experimental archaeology are also briefly examined.
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This paper explores the relationship between discourse and action in practices involved in making and consuming texts. Texts are produced through the process of ‘entextualization’ in which strips of action and discourse are extracted from their original contexts and recontextualized into other situations. Different technologies for turning actions into texts affect the kinds of social actions and social identities that are made possible both at moments of entextualization and at future moments of recontextualization. In particular, I focus on how digital technologies affect the practices and participation structures around entextualization. Digital photography and video have had a profound effect on social practices and relationships around the making of texts. Specifically, they have made processes of entextualization more immediate, more contingent and more communal. Implications of these features of digital text making are discussed in light of previous work on literacy and orality.
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This paper describes the recent development of identity and community among gay men in China. It focuses both on the ways emerging forms of gay identity relate to larger ideological and discursive shifts within society, and on the ways these new forms of identity and community affect situated social interaction among gay men themselves. In particular, it addresses the question of how these emerging forms of gay identity and gay community affect the ways gay men in China understand the threat of HIV and make concrete decisions about sexual risk and safety. Among the chief tactics used by gay men in China to forge identity and community involves appropriating and adapting elements from dominant discourses of the Party-State and the mass media. This strategy has opened up spaces within which gay men can claim “cultural citizenship” in a society in which they have been heretofore marginalized. At the same time, this strategy also implicated in the formation of attitudes and social practices that potentially increase the vunerability of Chinese gay men to HIV infection.
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This paper explores the way risk is constructed in the stories gay men tell of their sexual experiences. It focuses on how tellers use such stories to portray themselves both as rational actors and as legitimate members of their social groups by reconstructing the ‘orderliness’ of sexual encounters. An analysis of a corpus of stories derived from a diary study of gay male sexual behaviour in Hong Kong using current theories of discourse analysis reveals how narrators organize their experiences along two primary vectors of engagement: a sequential vector along which the trajectory of the sexual encounter is presented as a chain of occurrences, each occurrence contingent upon previous ones and warranting subsequent ones, and a hierarchical vector along which processes perceived on longer timescales are portrayed as exerting pressure on the ways processes on shorter timescales unfold. Examining how men portray these vectors in their accounts of risk behaviour can help us better understand both the situatedness of risk behaviour and the ways it is linked to larger social practices, identity projects and community histories
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This paper examines the concept of ‘culture’ and its relationship to HIV prevention. Culture is here seen as the interaction between human beings and the various ‘cultural tools’ they appropriate when taking action. Among these tools are ways of speaking which encode certain meanings, ideologies and social practices. When individuals take action with regard to AIDS, what they do is mediated through voices which they borrow strategically from their environ- ment. The textual tools that are available and the ways individuals adapt and combine them work to either limit or amplify their participation in HIV prevention. What are traditionally seen as ‘cultures’ or ‘sub-cultures’, or worse, ‘risk groups’, are, in this perspective, viewed as ‘communities of practice’, groups of individuals who share particular cultural tools and ways of using them. This conceptual framework is applied to recent discourses of homosexuality and AIDS prevention in China. An instance of ‘of� cial’ discourse in the form of an AIDS education pamphlet for ‘gays’ is analysed for the voices it contains and how these voices are strategically marshalled by the authors and mixed with other voices in ways which amplify participation in AIDS prevention for some and limit it for others. This ‘offical’ discourse is then compared to the discourse of homosexually active Chinese men recently interviewed in Beijing and Fuzhou to examine which of these of� cial voices and other voices they appropriate, and how they adapt these voices in responding to HIV.
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We investigate the practices by which bilingual university students in Hong Kong appropriate texts in producing utterances, particularly written texts. Following Wertsch and his colleagues we ask: • To what extent do our students appropriate texts in constructing their own discourses? • What linguistic means do they use to do this? • What can these processes tell us about what they now can do with discourse representation; and • What do we need to teach them? This research shows that our students' writing displays considerable intertextuality and interdiscursivity. Responses to this writing in tutorial sessions indicate that they are skilled at orchestrating the multiple voices within their own discourses. The commonly stated concern that our students do not know how to do quotation and citation correctly is somewhat misplaced and researchers need to move the focus away from the mechanisms of citation and attribution to the social practices of textual appropriation.
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The significance of inhibition: a contribution to the agency-structure debate A central problem in social theory today is how to integrate agency and structure. The vital question is how to explain social reality by proceeding from both the notion of people doing things which affect the social relationships in which they are embedded (agency) and the idea of the social context moulding social activity (structure). Sociologists as Pierre Bourdieu, Anthony Giddens and Jürgen Habermas call attention to social practices as the ”missing link” between agency and structure. In accentuating social practices, the aim is to explain how people in their daily encounters actively contribute to the production and reproduction of social structures. This article puts forth the posthumous contribution of George Herbert Mead to the agency-structure debate. I argue that his social pragmatist theory gives us a compound and thorough– but not fully recognized – explanation of the dynamics and the course of events in structurally framed encounters. By especially emphasizing the importance Mead ascribes to the inhibited social act, I examine how his theory deepens the understanding of social practices as a bridge between agency and structure.
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O objetivo do presente estudo foi investigar se o Curso de Dinâmica de Grupo na Educação oferecido pelo NUTES/CLATES pôde trabalhar a capacidade de instituir (criar ou transformar) do professor-participante. Para alcançar este objetivo as seguintes questões foram colocadas: (lº) Ao buscarem o curso DGE os professores pretendiam ver satisfeitas que necessidades? (2ª) Até que ponto coordenadores e professores-participantes buscaram no curso DGE trabalhar sua capacidade de instituir? (3ª) Quais são os obstáculos detectados na literatura que poderiam limitar o atingimento do objetivo - trabalhar a capacidade de instituir - e que podem ser encontrados no curso DGE do NUTES/CLATES? Quanto a primeira questão, buscou-se resposta na análise das expectativas diante do curso DGE e avaliações realizadas após o seu término. A resposta a segunda questão foi feita especialmente a partir da análise dos protocolos de cada curso. Finalmente a terceira questão foi respondida de acordo com a visão de Lewin, Moreno, Rogers, Pages, Freud, Bion, e Loureau e Lapassade, estes últimos representando o movimento da Análise Institucional. Os resultados indicaram, em relação a primeira questão, que o curso foi buscado explicitamente por necessidades intelectuais de aprendizagem de técnicas e recursos didáticos e implicitamente por necessidades afetivas (identificadas nas comunicações interpessoais manifestadas durante a realização do curso DGE). Quanto a segunda questão, os resultados se ofereceram a uma dupla interpretação: se se fixa a realidade do grupo apenas no período do curso DGE pode-se afirmar que houve exercício da capacidade de instituir; se se aceita ao contrário que a realidade do grupo é a sua transversalidade que supera o "aqui e agora", a resposta seria que não se trabalhou a capacidade de instituir porque não houve busca de atuação na realidade através da análise da transversalidade. Os principais obstáculos detectados a partir da literatura que teriam limitado o trabalho da capacidade de instituir nos cursos DGE do NUTES/CLATES e que formalizam a resposta a terceira questão foram: o contexto social maior (Lewin); o não-trabalho do papel do professor (Moreno); a idealização do papel de chefe (Freud e Bion); o não enfoque das práticas sociais como reprodutoras de modelos impostos (Pages); o silêncio diante da transversalidade grupal (Lapassade e Loureau). Não se detectou obstáculos tendo Rogers como referência, na bibliografia pesquisada. As conclusões em numero de três foram: (1) reforçou-se a separação dos componentes afetivos e intelectuais do comportamento humano nos cursos DGE; (2) trabalhou- se a capacidade de instituir na medida em que o contexto social o permitiu; (3) os principais obstáculos foram tempo, organização social autoritária no Brasil, adoção de urna perspectiva mecanicista da dinâmica grupal. Frente aos resultados e conclusões sugeriu-se as seguintes modificações na realização de futuros DGE: (1) ampliação do "aqui e agora"; (2) visão dialética do processo grupal; (3) incorporação do conceito de transversalidade; (4) discussão das relações entre técnica e ideologia.
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O objetivo deste texto é refletir sobre o trabalho organizado em redes sociais produtivas, tomando-se como exemplo a Rede de Agroecologia Ecovida, situada nos estados de Santa Catarina, Paraná e Rio Grande do Sul. A pesquisa privilegiou a complexidade inerente à configuração do trabalho em rede, desenvolvido pelos agricultores familiares em dois núcleos desta rede no estado de Santa Catarina. Foram investigadas, dentre outras, as peculiaridades da produção agroecológica, as inovações técnicas na forma de produzir, a revalorização das práticas sociais tradicionais no meio rural, assim como a ampliação dos riscos para o pequeno produtor. A reflexão se concentrou nas formas de organização em redes sociais produtivas, caracterizadas como projetos alternativos de produção, que apresentam duplo direcionamento - o da cooperação e o da orientação para resultados econômicos. Mais especificamente, se pretendeu investigar as consequências e desafios destas relações, atentando para a configuração atual do trabalho na sociedade.
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Pesquisa em foco: Social practices and the construction of trust and engagement in online brand fan pages - 2011. Pesquisadora: Professora Dra. Eliane Pereira Zamith Brito
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The objective of this dissertation is understand the relationships built between subjects who occupy buildings in a state of abandonment to revitalize them - called okupas, noting which individuals construct such meanings on the practice of occupation and how to organize the construction and maintenance of a collective life project. Having the Okupa Squat Torém, located in the neighborhood of Fatima in the southern city of Fortaleza-CE, as locus and observed through the ethnographic method, followed the social practices of urban segment. I invested in a data collection revealed that the custom of okupas and their domestic habits, inside and outside of okupa, emphasizing the interaction situations, like most appropriate occasions to observe the constant negotiation and refinement of his cunning to intervene in the city . Among the objectives of this research, the main thing is to observe which senses are assigned to the practice of the occupation by okupas. For this, reflecting from the specifics of this urban phenomenon and talking mostly with the tradition of research in the field of anthropology, I tried to address some issues regarding the practice of okupação and organization of the group, which the principles and movements that make these contacts with city etc. The appropriation made by the subjects on the urban space here means understanding them as a cultural expression of a number of collective values, resulting from experience and perception of okupas like themselves. The intention is to show how this practice intervention and collective action has appeared in contemporary times and how my ethnography can contribute to a dialogue on the practices of mobilization and update of the city, considering the Theory of Recognition Axel Honneth (2003) as an analytical category useful to describe the forms of reciprocity experienced by okupas