Academic literature on the topic 'Domestic relations – Majorca (Spain)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Domestic relations – Majorca (Spain)"

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Yrigoy, Ismael. "Beyond parasitism: Unpacking land rentiership relations in Magaluf (Majorca, Spain)." Geoforum 116 (November 2020): 81–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2020.07.010.

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Grydehøj, Adam. "Guest Editorial Introduction: Understanding island cities." Island Studies Journal 9, no. 2 (2014): 183–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.24043/isj.300.

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Island studies research has traditionally focused on relatively rural, peripheral, and isolated communities, yet island cities (strongly urbanized small islands or archipelagos or major population centres of large islands or archipelagos) also represent an important research area. Island spatiality has a host of historical and continuing effects on urban development, influencing urban densification and agglomeration, zonal differentiation, and neighbourhood formation in cities both big and small. This special section of Island Studies Journal includes papers on the island cities and urban archipelagos of Peel (Isle of Man, British Isles), Nuuk (Greenland), Palma de Majorca (Spain), Belize City (Belize), and Mumbai (India). The Island Cities and Urban Archipelagos research network seeks to help enrich wider island studies scholarship and contribute to introducing the island dimension to urban studies.
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León, Margarita. "Migration and Care Work in Spain: The Domestic Sector Revisited." Social Policy and Society 9, no. 3 (June 1, 2010): 409–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1474746410000126.

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This paper explores the increasing significance of domestic workers in Spain, a country that has the highest figures of registered household employees in the EU, many of them female migrant workers. The paper focuses on how the domestic sector has grown in recent years along with mass migration flows. The growth of the household sector in Spain is situated within the context of the welfare and migration regimes. The household sector in Spain is currently absorbing a large part of the demand for childcare and elderly care provision. Although the domestic sector in Spain is more regulated than in many other countries, greater efforts to formalise and improve the labour and employment rights of household employees are needed to counterbalance occupational segregation and social inequality.
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Cherkasova, E. "Spain and Crisis: Political Aspects." World Economy and International Relations, no. 9 (2013): 33–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.20542/0131-2227-2013-9-33-41.

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The article considers the causes and the nature of the economic crisis which was a heavy blow for Spanish economy being in need of structural reforms. The domestic political consequences of the crisis included the change of government, the emergence of new protest movements and strengthening of separatism. Under the Brussels' pressure, Spain was forced to make significant adjustments to its national anti-crisis strategy which had a high social price. Particular attention is given to relations with the EU and the impact of the crisis on the country's foreign policy.
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Closa, Carlos. "The Formation of Domestic Preferences on the EU Constitution in Spain." Comparative European Politics 2, no. 3 (December 2004): 320–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/palgrave.cep.6110041.

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Kryukova, Elena. "Victorious powers and Spain in the post-war world order." Cuadernos Iberoamericanos, no. 4 (December 28, 2017): 16–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.46272/2409-3416-2017-4-16-19.

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The article deals with the foreign policy and domestic policy of Spain in the first years after the end of the Second World War. The author analyzes the relationships between the Francoist Spain and the USA, England, France and the USSR during the difficult period of entry of the country into the new system of the international relations.
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Murray, N. Michelle. "On Feminist Paradoxes: Transnational Domestic Encounters in Contemporary Spain." Letras Femeninas 41, no. 1 (May 1, 2015): 265–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/44733782.

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Abstract This essay analyzes Spanish feminisms through an exploration of the domestic sphere and its transformations, as represented in two recent novels: Ángeles Caso’s Contra el viento (2010) and José Ovejero’s Nunca pasa nada (2007). In these works, the juxtaposition of Spanish women and immigrant women in the domestic sphere creates sites of solidarity between nationals and immigrants as women. While the relations between these two groups of women are steeped in power paradigms that reflect the asymmetries extant in the global world system, the influence the foreign women wield within this space as transmitters of (inter)national culture is tremendous. Further, Caso’s and Ovejero’s novels engage histories of gendered oppression by reevaluating the experiences of Spanish women from earlier generations in relation to those of immigrant women today. Through these unexpected juxtapositions, the novels reveal the ways in which the liberation of Spanish women has resulted in the marginal ization of foreign women—often women of color and the formerly colonized—and the falsehoods intrinsic to Spanish women’s liberation as they are subtly demonized for requiring domestic assistance. My readings of Contra el viento and Nunca pasa nada are in dialogue with second-wave feminist critiques of capitalism and domesticity and third-wave critiques that consider the roles of race, class, and citizenship in women’s movements. My analyses will use feminist critiques to argue that these domestic encounters ostensibly rooted in colonization, marginalization, and social anonymity can fuel resistance, change, and solidarity.
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Suri, Gayatri. "Gendered Orientations around Domestic Objects; A Study of Home Truths: Gender, Domestic Objects and Everyday Life." New Literaria 04, no. 01 (2023): 100–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.48189/nl.2023.v04i1.014.

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When Daniel Miller asked ‘Why some things matter?’, it became critical to question why they matter differently for various genders. This paper is an attempt to analyze how ‘orientations’ around objects play out differently for the female gender in Sarah Pink’s (2004) Home Truths: Gender, Domestic and Everyday Life. The domestic space of research informants in England and Spain is taken up to explore not only how orientations are different for the female genders, but how they also go on to reinforce gender roles. Thus works of foundational thing theorists like Bill Brown, Bruno Latour and Daniel Miller’s ideas of subject-object relations are critiqued and revealed to be inadequate until gender is factored in. Additionally, the paper also reveals how bodies then purposely attempt to break out of gender roles by molding their subject-object relations. Ultimately, things end up shaping our mind more than we can fathom.
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Øystein Pharo, Helge. "Small State Anti-Fascism: Norway’s Quest to Eliminate the Franco Regime in the Aftermath of World War II." Culture & History Digital Journal 7, no. 1 (July 6, 2018): 008. http://dx.doi.org/10.3989/chdj.2018.008.

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In the early postwar years Norway was among the most active in the campaign against Franco’s Spain, supporting the policy of keeping Spain out of the UN, and pushing for UN members to break off diplomatic relations with Spain. Within a few years the policy of ostracism was seen to fail as it appeared to strengthen rather than weaken the Franco regime. Spain was then gradually allowed into the warmth. Until the early 1950s Norway’s retreat from its 1946 position was very reluctant, and it was in 1949 the last Western European state to accept normalization. Spain retaliated with economic pressures, and by 1951 Norway had relented and joined in the general reestablishment of normal diplomatic relations, and in 1955 accepted the package deal that brought Spain into the UN. The article discusses the foreign policy concerns and the domestic political struggles that explain Norwegian policies, including the veto on Spanish NATO membership that was never given up.
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Rubio, Sónia Parella. "Immigrant women in paid domestic service. The case of Spain and Italy." Transfer: European Review of Labour and Research 9, no. 3 (August 2003): 503–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/102425890300900310.

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In the familistic welfare state regimes of Italy and Spain, the resurgence in live-in domestic work and the demand for migrant domestic workers is stronger than in other European countries. Organising and regulating services in order to help with the burden of caring for one's family is not an important objective of social policy in southern European countries. It is taken for granted that the family (‘women') is the main provider of social protection. In the absence of policy decisions in this field, the increase in local women's labour market participation in recent decades has led to households recruiting non-EU immigrant women in order to help them balance the needs of their family with the demands of paid employment. These immigrants constitute an enormous supply of low-cost labour and there is a shortage of local female workers in paid domestic work.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Domestic relations – Majorca (Spain)"

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Jones, Rachel. "Beyond the Spanish state? : relations between the EU, central government and domestic actors in Spain." Thesis, Loughborough University, 1998. https://dspace.lboro.ac.uk/2134/32994.

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This thesis examines relations between domestic actors and central government or the state during the EC accession negotiations and EC/EU membership in Spain. It presents three theoretical perspectives on the role of the state: a state-centric approach which focuses on the state as autonomous actor; a two-level game framework which considers the state as gatekeeper between the European and domestic arenas; and a multi-level governance perspective where the state becomes an arena in which a number of different actors participate. A dynamic approach to the analysis is adopted, highlighting sets of changing conditions in the Spanish political system expected to influence the access to policy-making for actors other than central government, which it terms the domestic opportunity structure. The analysis of the high level of state autonomy during the EC accession negotiations acts as an essential baseline for an examination of the policy process during EC/EU membership when the state's autonomy is expected to be reduced by a more open opportunity structure. This changed context is explored in the specific areas of cohesion policy and fisheries, when the input of domestic actors is seen to depend on the particular policy setting, the policy-making stage and the type of decision, termed the EU opportunity structure. A combination of theoretical approaches is considered necessary to explain the changing levels of opportunity. Given that considerable evidence exists for the state's retention of its role as key decision-maker in the policy process, this thesis concludes that the state-centric approach is still relevant to the case of Spain. However, at certain stages of the process, particular sets of actors have gained greater access to policy-making during EC/EU membership, as illustrated by the increasing involvement of regional authorities in the implementation of the structural funds, thus indicating that theoretical insights which place greater emphasis on the influence of domestic actors other than. the state may be needed to supplement a purely statist approach.
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Drummond, Susan G. (Susan Gay) 1959. "Legal itineraries through Spanish Gitano family law : a comparative law ethnography." Thesis, McGill University, 2001. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=38447.

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In the context of globalization, the idea of place is reputed to be losing its footing. This thesis explores the implications of these developments with respect to the way that place is constructed in law by focusing on tensions between the concept of jurisdiction and the ways that the contexts of law overspill it, threatening to engulf comparative analysis. Central to the idea that jurisdiction is losing its familiar moorings is the implication that other forms of thinking about legal normativity are emerging as more commonsensical alternatives to the state-based idea of jurisdiction that emerged in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The thesis explores this hypothesis by bringing elements of the discipline of comparative law (conventionally state based) into play with elements of the discipline of legal anthropology (conventionally culture based). The focus for this theoretical intrigue is an Gitano population in the South of Spain that served as the fieldwork locale for seven months of ethnographic fieldwork carried out in 1995. Investigations are centered on the theme of family law. Familiar notions of state and culture, and the legal sensibilities associated with each, are examined through exploring the interplay between local expressions of Gitanitude in Jerez de la Frontera and regional, national, international, and global forces that structure legal sensibilities in the area. The first chapter explores the interplay by focusing on the context surrounding Spain's reforms to family law in the 1980s. The familiar frontiers of the state are prodded through this analysis. The second chapter then explores the frontiers of culture through an examination of a variety of expressions of Gitanitude in Spain. The third chapter brings modified versions of state and culture together in a reconceptualisation of family law. As a whole, the thesis suggests a new way of approaching the problematic relationship between context and the disciplines of comparative law an
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GOMILA, GRAU Antonia. "Familia y derecho :la influencia del codigo civil espanol en la organizacion de la reproduccion social de la familia en MallorcaSineu, Vilafranca y Capdepera 1860-1980." Doctoral thesis, 1996. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/5772.

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Defence date: 27 September 1996
Examining board: Prof. Robert Rowland (Instituto Universitario Europeo) ; Dr. Isabel Moll (Universidad de las Islas Baleares) ; Dr. Joan Bestard Camps (Universidad Central de Barcelona) ; Dr. Rafaelle Romanelli (Instituto Universitario Europeo) ; Dr. Gerard Delille (Instituto Universitario Europeo)
PDF of thesis uploaded from the Library digitised archive of EUI PhD theses completed between 2013 and 2017
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BORZEL, Tanja A. "The Domestic Impact of Europe : Institutional adaptation in Germany and Spain." Doctoral thesis, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/5182.

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Defence date: 1 March 1999
Examining Board: Prof. Adrienne Héritier (EUI, Supervisor) ; Prof. Yves Mény (EUI, Co-supervisor) ; Prof. Alberta Sbragia (University of Pittsburgh) ; Prof. Fritz W. Scharpf (Max-Planck-Institut für Gesellschaftsforschung)
PDF of thesis uploaded from the Library digitised archive of EUI PhD theses completed between 2013 and 2017
Tanja Borzel argues that the effect of Europeanization on the politics and institutions of the EU's member states depends on the degree of conflict between European and domestic norms and rules. The thesis examines the relationship between the central state and regions in Germany and Spain, showing how Europeanization has served to weaken the powers of the regions. In both countries, the regions were forced to cooperate more closely with the centre, but the institutional impact in the two countries has been strikingly different. In Germany the existing cooperative Federal system was reinforced, but in Spain the traditional competitive relationship between the levels of government could not continue. Europeanization has led to a significant change in the pattern of Spanish politics, turning rivalry into cooperation. This thesis thus presents an important analysis of the impact of Europeanization on domestic politics, and on the relationship between states and regions in particular.
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Books on the topic "Domestic relations – Majorca (Spain)"

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Stoeltie, Barbara. Landhäuser auf Mallorca =: Country houses of Majorca. Köln: Taschen, 2000.

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Treverton, Gregory F. Spain: Domestic politics and security policy. [London]: International Institute for Strategic Studies, 1986.

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Spain: Domestic politics and security policy. [London?]: International Institute for Strategic Studies, 1986.

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Selke, Angela S. The Conversos of Majorca: Life and death in a crypto-Jewish community in XVII century Spain. Jerusalem: Magnes Press, Hebrew University, 1986.

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Assis, Yom Tov. The Jews of Santa Coloma de Queralt: An economic and demographic case study of a community at the end of the thirteenth century. Jerusalem: Magnes Press, Hebrew University, 1988.

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Mexico and the Spanish Civil War: Domestic politics and the Republican cause. Brighton: Sussex Academic Press, 2014.

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author, Sánchez Alonso Marta, ed. Manual de actuaciones en sala: Técnicas prácticas de los procesos de familia. Las Rozas, Madrid: La Ley, 2013.

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Waldren, Jacqueline. Insiders and outsiders: Paradise and reality in Mallorca. Providence: Berghahn Books, 1996.

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Jones, Rachel. Beyond the Spanish state: Central government, domestic actors and the EU. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire [England] ; New York, N.Y.[USA]: Palgrave, 2000.

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Piñeyro, Magdalena. Feminismos : miradas desde la diversidad. Madrid, Spain: Oberon, 2020.

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Book chapters on the topic "Domestic relations – Majorca (Spain)"

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SIMON, LARRY J. "Muslim-Jewish Relations in Crusader Majorca in the Thirteenth Century:." In Christians, Muslims, and Jews in Medieval and Early Modern Spain, 125–40. University of Notre Dame Press, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvpj7bxm.10.

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Costa, Oriol, and Margarita León. "Domestic policy analysis by international actors." In Policy Analysis in Spain, 124–38. Policy Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447353744.003.0007.

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In this chapter we look at the relationship between international organisations (IGOs) and domestic policy analysis in Spain. We do this by focusing on crisis management relations of the two most recent transborder crises: The Great Recession and the Covid-19 Pandemic. In line with the objectives of this edited volume we interrogate whether IGOS act as promoters or as producers of policy analysis and the factors that might facilitate or prevent this role. We claim that IGOs have a differentiated role depending on the type of crisis, the policy domains to which they pertain and the degree of sovereignty exercised at state level. Whilst policy actions of European institutions during the Great Recession took the form of coercion, the World health Organization acted as ‘teachers of norms and policies’ during the Covid-19 crisis.
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Kastoryano, Riva. "Between Spain and the Maghreb." In Burying Jihadis, translated by Cynthia Schoch, 138–52. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190889128.003.0009.

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Spain is the gateway for entering the European Union from the south, a country of legal and illegal immigration from the African continent, particularly via Morocco and Algeria. The constant trips back and forth between Spain and the Maghreb made by the “birds of passage”4 that perpetrated the 11M attacks attest to the intensity of exchanges between the two shores of the Mediterranean. The Madrid attack thus brings to light transnational relations and actions, in that they transcend borders and defy Spain’s foreign, European and domestic policy as well as the policies of the countries of emigration.
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