Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- Sociology (4)
- Psychology (3)
- Agriculture (2)
- Clinical Psychology (2)
- Life Sciences (2)
-
- Agricultural and Resource Economics (1)
- Criminology (1)
- Criminology and Criminal Justice (1)
- Domestic and Intimate Partner Violence (1)
- Economics (1)
- Family, Life Course, and Society (1)
- Food Security (1)
- Geography (1)
- Growth and Development (1)
- Human Geography (1)
- Inequality and Stratification (1)
- Legal Studies (1)
- Place and Environment (1)
- Keyword
-
- Food justice (2)
- Food movement (2)
- Alternative agri-food systems (1)
- Alternative food networks (1)
- Anti-sprawl policy (1)
-
- Antiracism (1)
- Collaborative environmental management (1)
- Critical landscape studies (1)
- Cultural geography (1)
- Cyber-bullying (1)
- Exurbia (1)
- Facilitation (1)
- Food security (1)
- Food sovereignty (1)
- Gangs (1)
- Growth management (1)
- Intergenerational continuity (1)
- Maltreatment (1)
- Peri-urban fringe (1)
- Political ecology (1)
- Psychopahy (1)
- Safe stable and nurturing relationships (1)
- Selection (1)
- Social Media (1)
- Toronto (1)
- Trauma (1)
- Urban rural interface (1)
- Violence (1)
Articles 1 - 7 of 7
Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
Cyber Violence: What Do We Know And Where Do We Go From Here?, Jillian K. Peterson, James Densley
Cyber Violence: What Do We Know And Where Do We Go From Here?, Jillian K. Peterson, James Densley
College of Liberal Arts All Faculty Scholarship
This paper reviews the existing literature on the relationship between social media and violence, including prevalence rates, typologies, and the overlap between cyber and in-person violence. This review explores the individual-level correlates and risk factors associated with cyber violence, the group processes involved in cyber violence, and the macro-level context of online aggression. The paper concludes with a framework for reconciling conflicting levels of explanation and presents an agenda for future research that adopts a selection, facilitation, or enhancement framework for thinking about the causal or contingent role of social media in violent offending. Remaining empirical questions and new directions …
Psychopathy: What Mental Health Professionals Need To Know, Jillian K. Peterson, Jerrod Brown
Psychopathy: What Mental Health Professionals Need To Know, Jillian K. Peterson, Jerrod Brown
College of Liberal Arts All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Psychopathy In The Criminal Justice System, Jillian K. Peterson, Jerrod Brown
Psychopathy In The Criminal Justice System, Jillian K. Peterson, Jerrod Brown
College of Liberal Arts All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Notes On The Practice Of Food Justice In The U.S.: Understanding And Confronting Trauma And Inequity, Rachel Slocum, Kirsten Valentine Cadieux
Notes On The Practice Of Food Justice In The U.S.: Understanding And Confronting Trauma And Inequity, Rachel Slocum, Kirsten Valentine Cadieux
College of Liberal Arts All Faculty Scholarship
In this article, we focus on one of the four nodes (trauma/inequity, exchange, land and labor) around which food justice organizing appears to occur: acknowledging and confronting historical, collective trauma and persistent race, gender, and class inequality. We apply what we have learned from our research in U.S. and Canadian agri-food systems to suggest working methods that might guide practitioners as they work toward food justice, and scholars as they seek to study it. In the interests of ensuring accountability to socially just research and action, we suggest that scholars and practitioners need to be more clear on what it …
What Does It Mean To Do Food Justice?, Kirsten Valentine Cadieux, Rachel Slocum
What Does It Mean To Do Food Justice?, Kirsten Valentine Cadieux, Rachel Slocum
College of Liberal Arts All Faculty Scholarship
'Food justice' and 'food sovereignty' have become key words in food movement scholarship and activism. In the case of 'food justice', it seems the word is often substituted for work associated with projects typical of the alternative or local food movement. We argue that it is important for scholars and practitioners to be clear on how food justice differs from other efforts to seek an equitable food system. In the interests of ensuring accountability to socially just research and action, as well as mounting a tenable response to the 'feed the world' paradigm that often sweeps aside concerns with justice …
Breaking The Cycle Of Maltreatment: The Role Of Safe, Stable, And Nurturing Relationships, Terence P. Thornberry, Kimberly L. Henry, Carolyn A. Smith, Timothy O. Ireland, Sarah J. Greenman, Rosalyn D. Lee
Breaking The Cycle Of Maltreatment: The Role Of Safe, Stable, And Nurturing Relationships, Terence P. Thornberry, Kimberly L. Henry, Carolyn A. Smith, Timothy O. Ireland, Sarah J. Greenman, Rosalyn D. Lee
College of Liberal Arts All Faculty Scholarship
Purpose
We examine two research questions. First, does a history of child maltreatment victimization significantly increase the likelihood of maltreatment perpetration during adulthood? Second, do safe, stable, and nurturing relationships (SSNRs) during early adulthood serve as direct protective factors, buffering protective factors, or both to interrupt intergenerational continuity in maltreating behaviors?
Methods
Data come from the Rochester Youth Development Study that followed a community sample from age 14 to 31 with 14 assessments. Maltreatment victimization records covering birth through age 17 were collected from Child Protective Services records as were maltreatment perpetration records from age 21 to 30. Data on …
Landscape Ideology In The Greater Golden Horseshoe Greenbelt Plan: Negotiating Material Landscapes And Abstract Ideals In The City's Countryside, Kirsten Valentine Cadieux, Laura E. Taylor, Michael F. Bunce
Landscape Ideology In The Greater Golden Horseshoe Greenbelt Plan: Negotiating Material Landscapes And Abstract Ideals In The City's Countryside, Kirsten Valentine Cadieux, Laura E. Taylor, Michael F. Bunce
College of Liberal Arts All Faculty Scholarship
We analyze the role of landscape ideology in the recent Ontario Greater Golden Horseshoe (GGH) Greenbelt Plan. Focusing on the “Protected Countryside,” the major land-use designation in the Plan that structures the Greenbelt framework, we explore tensions between abstract ideals of countryside used by policy makers to elicit support for the Plan and people's lived experience of material landscapes of the peri-urban fringe. Approaching “countryside” from the combined perspectives of landscape studies and political ecology, we show how the abstract ideals used to build support for the protection of countryside in the high-level political arena are in tension with existing …