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Articles 1 - 30 of 111
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Eastern European Orthodox Christian Immigrant Women: A Pilot Study And Needs Assessment, Kimberly A. Babich-Speck
Eastern European Orthodox Christian Immigrant Women: A Pilot Study And Needs Assessment, Kimberly A. Babich-Speck
Doctor of Nursing Practice Scholarly Projects
The healthcare perceptions of the Eastern European Orthodox Christian immigrant women (EEOCIW) to the United States (U.S.) are under-represented in the literature. Although they appear similar to Americans, their cultural and religious traditions are outside the mainstream American culture. This pilot study and health needs assessment examines the women’s healthcare perceptions of 14 EEOCIW and identifies similarities and differences with 25 U.S. born Orthodox Christian women (USOCW). Between September and November 2020, interviews were conducted with Orthodox Christian immigrant women from Eastern Europe and Orthodox Christian women born in the U.S. Questions covered the perceptions of women’s healthcare, factors influencing …
Sibyl 2016, Otterbein University
Inside And Out: The Interaction Of The U.S. Immigration System And Indian Immigrant Families In Columbus, Ohio, Madeline English
Inside And Out: The Interaction Of The U.S. Immigration System And Indian Immigrant Families In Columbus, Ohio, Madeline English
Undergraduate Distinction Papers
The purpose of this study is to consider how Indian immigrant families, who come from cultures that are shaped around culturally distinct forms of family, navigate and adapt to U.S. culture and institutions that are structured based on the idealized American family form. The main research questions being considered are: How is family defined by immigration policies? How are Indian immigrant families affected by these policies? An ethnographic methodological approach, including participant observation and semi-structured interviews, is used to gather data in the Columbus metro area in order to address the above questions. Observations and semi-structured interviews were completed with …
Sibyl 2015, Otterbein University
Temporary Protection, Enduring Contradiction: The Contested And Contradictory Meanings Of Temporary Immigration Status, Miranda Cady Hallett
Temporary Protection, Enduring Contradiction: The Contested And Contradictory Meanings Of Temporary Immigration Status, Miranda Cady Hallett
Sociology Faculty Scholarship
In the construction of immigration status categories in law and social practice, the power of the nation-state to define migrants' status is pervasive but far from absolute. In this article, I examine the conditioned legality known as Temporary Protected Status ( TPS) in US immigration law through a discussion of legal structures, historical frames, local discourses, and Salvadoran migrants' lived experiences with liminal legality in rural Arkansas in the first decade of the twenty-first century. I argue that migration policy, though fraught with ambiguity and contradiction (see Coutin 2007; Coutin and Yngvesson 2008), functions both to reproduce and to mask …
Sibyl 2014, Otterbein University
Sibyl 2014, Otterbein University
Otterbein University Yearbooks
Table of Contents:
Pg 1: A Place to Belong, Towers Hall Spring 2014
Pg 2-3: Table of Contents
Pg 4-5: Student Life Candids
Pg 6-17: Campus Events
Pg 18: Campus Changes
Pg 19-25: Theatre and Dance
Pg 26-31: Music
Pg 32-54: Undergraduate Commencement
Pg 55-61: Graduate Commencement
Pg 62-75: Campus Activities/Organizations
Pg 76-99: Athletics
Pg 100: Editor's Note
Sibyl 2013, Otterbein University
"Better Than White Trash": Work Ethic, Latinidad And Whiteness In Rural Arkansas, Miranda Cady Hallett
"Better Than White Trash": Work Ethic, Latinidad And Whiteness In Rural Arkansas, Miranda Cady Hallett
Sociology Faculty Scholarship
Diverse sites in the US South are being transformed by "new Latino immigration." Rather than being a homogeneous process, experiences of migrant settlement are shaped by the racialized social worlds of particular historical social communities -- and may in turn transform local racial formations (Winders, 2005). In one small town in rural Arkansas, Latina and Latino migrants perform boundary work (Lamont, 2000; Hartigan, 2010), constructing their identities as "good" workers and neighbors. Although migrants assert belonging and dignity by framing themselves as "better than White trash," nonetheless this belonging is predicated on the reproduction of racial and class hierarchy as …
Sibyl 2009, Otterbein University
Sibyl 2008, Otterbein University
Sibyl 2007, Otterbein University
Sibyl 2006, Otterbein University
Sybil 2005, Otterbein University
Sibyl 2004, Otterbein University
Sibyl 2003, Otterbein University
Sibyl 2002, Otterbein University
Sibyl 2001, Otterbein University
Sibyl 2000, Otterbein University
Sibyl 1999, Otterbein University
Sibyl 1998, Otterbein University
Sibyl 1997, Otterbein University
Sibyl 1996, Otterbein University
Sibyl 1995, Otterbein University
Sibyl 1994, Otterbein University
Sibyl 1993, Otterbein University
Sibyl 1992, Otterbein University
Sibyl 1991, Otterbein University
Sibyl 1990, Otterbein University
Sibyl 1989, Otterbein University
Sibyl 1988, Otterbein University