Results 201 to 210 of about 15,259 (309)
ABSTRACT Family financial assistance with home ownership has attracted significant scholarly attention in recent years. However, the role of culture and ethnicity, transnational ties, and migration in this practice remains significantly under‐addressed.
Julia Cook
wiley +1 more source
The Cost of Love: Emotional Labour and Moral Tensions in the Lives of Chinese Young Carers
ABSTRACT Like adults, children also provide care. This article explores the emotional labour of young carers who care for ill or disabled family members in China, a context where children's caregiving remains largely invisible in both policy and scholarship.
Kefan Xue, Kaidong Guo
wiley +1 more source
Embodied distress in reproductive psychiatry. [PDF]
Chandra PS.
europepmc +1 more source
Opaque Idioms in Arabic and English: A Perspective Analysis of their Semantic Anomaly
Abdalla Elkheir Elgobshawi
openalex +2 more sources
The Supreme Court of Canada interprets the fitness to stand trial test in R v. Bharwani
Abstract At the core of the common law, rooted in fairness, is the principle that an accused must be “fit” or “competent” to answer charges pursued by the state. Fitness rules vary considerably across jurisdictions but generally share the requirement that the accused be able to actively participate in the conduct of their defense.
Dennis Curry, Jason Quinn
wiley +1 more source
Digital activism in Kenya: moving from the digital center to the digital periphery of Long Covid experience. [PDF]
Mendenhall E +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
Improvement in the English Translations of Albrecht von Haller's Usong (1771)
Abstract The political novel Usong (1771), written by the Swiss physiologist Albrecht von Haller (1708–1777), is set in the fifteenth century and tells the story of a Mongolian prince who becomes the Emperor of Persia and redesigns the government of his empire to promote the happiness of his subjects.
Laura Tarkka
wiley +1 more source
‘I, Me, Myself’: Selfhood and Melancholy in the Journals of Gertrude Savile (1697–1758)
Abstract This article examines the journals of Gertrude Savile from 1727 in light of recent scholarship on early modern and eighteenth‐century melancholy. The concept had myriad associations with medicine, physiology, the imagination, and feeling, but questions remain about how melancholy during this period was considered by those outside the narrow ...
Daniel Beaumont
wiley +1 more source
Precision Medicine: Seeing the Tree in the Forest! [PDF]
Vaishampayan U.
europepmc +1 more source
South Africa: The Ambiguities of a Middle Power
ABSTRACT South Africa represents an interesting species of a middle power. This derives from its inherited economic muscle as Africa's powerhouse and the liberation struggle against apartheid, both of which have shaped its democratic transition. The traditions of liberation and democracy, in turn, have profoundly influenced how South Africa has ...
Garth L. le Pere
wiley +1 more source

