Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Celilo (Or.) -- Environmental conditions (1)
- Dalles Dam (Or. and Wash.) -- History (1)
- Ecofeminism (1)
- Ethnology -- Authorship (1)
- Feminist criticism (1)
-
- Feminist sociology (1)
- Gender-nonconforming people (1)
- Indians of North America -- Fishing -- Oregon -- Celilo (1)
- Indians of North America -- Land tenure -- Oregon -- Celilo (1)
- Indians of North America -- Relocation -- Oregon -- Celilo (1)
- Intersectionality (Sociology) (1)
- Prison-industrial complex -- Environmental aspects (1)
- Shame -- Social aspects (1)
- Women -- Political activity (1)
- Women prisoners (1)
Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
A Society That Can Heal: An Autoethnography Of A Feminist Framework About Shame And How We Can Recover. A Women’S And Queer Identified Outlook To Social Emotion, Jenna L. Williams
A Society That Can Heal: An Autoethnography Of A Feminist Framework About Shame And How We Can Recover. A Women’S And Queer Identified Outlook To Social Emotion, Jenna L. Williams
Student Research Symposium
The purpose of this study is to investigate the ways an individual resists dehumanization and/or disempowerment in the face of marginalizing societal forces, and it theorizes about the relationship among vulnerability, shame, and resiliency for women and queer-identified persons resisting dehumanization/disempowerment. Using autoethnography and other qualitative research methods (i.e., surveys and interviews), the author explores the lived experiences of shame and vulnerability in herself and others. The author applies resiliency theory and an intersectional lens to illuminate vulnerability, shame, and the ways they play themselves out in individual lives and in institutional systems. The author offers the reader insights for …
Pollution, Prisons, And The Power Of Women: Does Women's Leadership In Government Decrease Emissions Caused By The Prison Industrial Complex?, Chanel Ison, Julius Mcgee
Pollution, Prisons, And The Power Of Women: Does Women's Leadership In Government Decrease Emissions Caused By The Prison Industrial Complex?, Chanel Ison, Julius Mcgee
Student Research Symposium
Pollution caused by large corporations is the primary reason for environmental degradation and the prison industrial complex is no exception. The purpose of this study is to contextualize the carceral system and its relationship to climate change from a critical ecofeminist perspective. Critical ecofeminism contends that the patriarchal nature of capitalism forces women to generate forms of resistance against essentialist systems--which attributes to their broader understanding of environmental degradation and the oppression of marginalized identities. Using the Fact Sheet Archive on Women in State Legislatures (1997-2016) which reports the percentage of women-identified legislators and governors in the US, this study …
Damming The Columbia River And Its Impact On Celilo Falls, Dalton R. Stormo
Damming The Columbia River And Its Impact On Celilo Falls, Dalton R. Stormo
Young Historians Conference
This paper discusses the history of Native Americans at Celilo Falls and in the Dalles Area, as well as the impact of white settlers moving there. It focuses on the impact this had on the river itself, through fisheries and various damming projects, and how it affected the lives of the various tribes surrounding the river. It examines the impacts of damming the Columbia River at various points along the river, and what that did to life for the River Tribes. The thesis of this paper is that the flooding of Celilo Falls by the Dalles Dam was a final …