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Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
The Strategic Uses Of Gender In Household Negotiations: Women Workers On Mexico’S Northern Border, Leslie C. Gates
The Strategic Uses Of Gender In Household Negotiations: Women Workers On Mexico’S Northern Border, Leslie C. Gates
Sociology Faculty Scholarship
The study illustrates the potential of the ‘doing gender’ perspective to explain why employment helps women win some negotiations at home but not others. Eighteen in-depth interviews with women maquiladora workers in Mexico suggest that employment may help women gain new rights and extend the limits of respect accorded them by male companions and parents. Women were more successful when they used negotiating strategies that conformed to their gender identity, such as making offers, than when they used negotiating strategies that challenged traditional gender norms, such as withdrawing services or making threats.
A State’S Gendered Response To Political Instability: Gendering Labor Policy In Semi-Authoritarian El Salvador (1944-1972), Leslie C. Gates, Kati L. Griffith
A State’S Gendered Response To Political Instability: Gendering Labor Policy In Semi-Authoritarian El Salvador (1944-1972), Leslie C. Gates, Kati L. Griffith
Sociology Faculty Scholarship
Unlike much of the gender and welfare literature, this study examines why a regime that constrains pressure from below would adopt gendered social policies. The Salvadoran case (1944-1972) suggests that political instability rather than societal pressures may prompt semi-authoritarian regimes to adopt gendered labor reforms. We extend the motivations for adopting gendered labor reforms to include co-opting labor by examining gendered labor reforms in the context of El Salvador’s historically contingent labor strategy. This gendered analysis helps explain how a semi-authoritarian regime secured political stability and reveals the special appeal gendered labor reforms may have to semi-authoritarian regimes.
Philanthropy And 9/11: How Did We Do?, David R. Jones, David A. Campbell
Philanthropy And 9/11: How Did We Do?, David R. Jones, David A. Campbell
Public Administration Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Intimate Hierarchies And Qur'anic Saliva (Tëfli): Textuality In A Senegalese Ethnomedical Encounter, Sabina Perrino
Intimate Hierarchies And Qur'anic Saliva (Tëfli): Textuality In A Senegalese Ethnomedical Encounter, Sabina Perrino
Anthropology Faculty Scholarship
This article examines the multimodal textuality of a videotaped ethnomedical
encounter between a Senegalese healer and his patient and considers these
findings in light of metadiscourses on healing that were collected in interviews.
The article demonstrates how a cultural figure of the healing process
is precipitated out of patterns of co-occurrence (or "textures") of linguistic,
paralinguistic, and nonlinguistic semiotic devices and suggests that this
approach is well equipped to illuminate ethnomedical practice in Senegal and
elsewhere.