Results 171 to 180 of about 388,275 (287)

Dance in Canada : Contemporary Perspectives [PDF]

open access: yes, 2008
Johnson, Sherry   +2 more
core   +1 more source

Rethinking the ‘Defeminization of Agriculture’: Land Consolidation and Crop Diversification in Vietnam's Red River Delta

open access: yesDevelopment and Change, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Over the past two decades, agricultural restructuring in Vietnam — driven by land consolidation, crop diversification and modernization — has shifted farming from labour‐intensive to capital‐intensive production. This article argues that agrarian change in Vietnam has not simply resulted in the marginalization of women, a finding that ...
Nga Dao, Quang Phung
wiley   +1 more source

Seeing Others as Objects: Perceptual Objectification & Affordances

open access: yesEuropean Journal of Philosophy, EarlyView.
Abstract In discussions of objectification, the use of visual language is ubiquitous. It is striking that the literature often talks about treating and seeing someone as an object in the same breath. Yet accounts of objectification focus on objectifying treatment and leave the notion of objectifying perception unexplained.
Paulina Sliwa, Tom McClelland
wiley   +1 more source

Potential Predictors of Injury Among Pre-Professional Ballet and Contemporary Dancers

open access: gold, 2023
Rebecca K. Yau   +5 more
openalex   +1 more source

Kant, Constitutivism, and the Shmagency Objection

open access: yesEuropean Journal of Philosophy, EarlyView.
Abstract Many interpreters have recently defended constitutivist interpretations of Kant's moral theory, but they have largely overlooked the most prominent challenge to constitutivism: the shmagency objection. In this paper, I argue that Kant employs a form of constitutivism in the Groundwork not to vindicate the authority of morality to a sceptic ...
Vinicius Carvalho
wiley   +1 more source

Racialised violence: Riots, space and temporality

open access: yesThe Geographical Journal, EarlyView.
Abstract This short intervention offers a historical geography‐informed approach to shape understandings of the events and racialised violence of summer 2024 in the United Kingdom. We draw upon Black British Cultural Studies to foreground the importance of temporality and spatial relations for understanding racialised violence. In doing so, we identify
Paul Griffin   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

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