509 resultados para dress
Resumo:
The changing ways of clothing in Australia, which has communicated disaffection within the public sphere, is enquired. The relationship between clothes as protested in everyday public life, and those exceptional, socially disruptive clothes on view at specific protest gatherings, are also explored. It is shown that dissident dress in the 1980s demonstrated a greater degree of solidarity in its radical difference from mainstream dress of 2000s. It is suggested that building on reconceptualised notion of protest dressing as process not fixity, the relationship of dissident dress to the mainstream has become, for the most part, less dichotomous.
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Échelle(s) : [1:4 100 000 environ], Mille Pas Geometriques, ou Mille d'Italie 180 [= 8 cm]
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Échelle(s) : [1:4 100 000 environ], Mille Pas Geometriques, ou Mille d'Italie 180 [= 8 cm]
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Échelle(s) : [1:5 000], échelle d'1 pour 5000
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Échelle(s) : 1:2 500
Migrating concepts: Immigrant integration and the regulation of religious dress in France and Canada
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Religion in general, and Islam in particular, has become one of the main focal points of policy-making and constitutional politics in many Western liberal states. This article proposes to examine the legal and political dynamics behind new regulations targeting individual religious practices of Muslims. Although one could presuppose that church-state relations or the understanding of secularism is the main factor accounting for either accommodation or prohibition of Muslim religious practices, I make the case that the policy frame used to conceptualize the integration of immigrants in each national context is a more significant influence on how a liberal state approaches the legal regulation of individual practices such as veiling. However, this influence must be assessed carefully since it may have different effects on the different institutional actors in charge of regulating religion, such as the Courts and the legislature. To assess these hypotheses I compare two countries, France and Canada, which are solid examples of two contrasting national policy frames for the integration of immigrants.
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[Acte royal. 1607-1885]