Books on the topic 'Leisure constraints'

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1

Xiu xian ti yu xing wei fa zhan jie duan dong ji he huo xian zhi yin su yan jiu: Research on the motivations and constraints of the stages of leisure physical activity. Hangzhou: Zhejiang da xue chu ban she, 2009.

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2

Fred, Coalter, and Leisure Studies Association (Great Britain), eds. Freedom and constraint: The paradoxes of leisure : ten years of the Leisure Studies Association. London: Routledge, 1989.

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3

Mullineaux, Mark. Provision of leisure opportunities for the unemployed: freedom, constraint or contestation. [Coventry]: typescript, 1990.

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4

Jackson, Edgar L. Constraints To Leisure. Venture Pub, 2005.

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5

G, Wade Michael, ed. Constraints on leisure. Springfield, Ill., U.S.A: C.C. Thomas, 1985.

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6

Chambers, Deborah A. The constraints of work and domestic schedules on women's leisure. Spon, 1986.

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7

Association, Leisure Studies, ed. Women with physical disabilities and the negotiation of leisure constraints. London: E. & F. N. Spon, 1995.

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8

The relation of self-esteem to constraints on leisure among adolescents. 1992.

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9

The relation of self-esteem to constraints on leisure among adolescents. 1992.

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10

The relation of self-esteem to constraints on leisure among adolescents. 1992.

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11

The relation of self-esteem to constraints on leisure among adolescents. 1992.

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12

Watmough, Kay. The constraints on people with disabilities attending Swiss Cottage leisure centre, Camden & Kelmscott leisure centre,Waltham Forest. PNL, 1990.

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13

Ian, Henry, Green Eileen 1947-, Hebron Sandra, Woodward Diana, Wimbush Erica, and Leisure Studies Association, eds. Women's leisure: Constraints and opportunities : papers from the ESRC, Sports Council, LSA seminars. [Eastbourne]: Leisure Studies Association, 1987.

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14

Stalker, Glenn J. Work and leisure in daily life: Constraints on and opportunities for social engagement in public and private spheres. 2005.

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15

Coalter, Fred, and Leisure Studies Association (Great Britain) Staff. Freedom and Constraint. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

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16

Freedom and Constraint. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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17

Willcocks, Daniel. Do constraints play the greater part in the decision to participate in a leisure activity or do perceptions of the individual have a more predominant bearing ?. SIHE, 1992.

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18

Howe, Justine. All-American Islam. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190258870.003.0004.

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This chapter examines the role of consumer culture and leisure in the performance of American Muslim culture. The Webb community embraces American culture as the fullest expression of their Muslim identity. Its members locate these efforts in two foundational narratives: that of premodern generations of Muslims, who embraced local cultures as their own, and that of white ethnic immigrants, who successfully made previously suspect religious traditions into mainstream ones. These practices demonstrate both the possibilities and constraints of Webb’s mission to rehabilitate American representations of Islam. Through leisure activities centered on the nuclear family unit, the community builds relationships among parents and their children, as well as among peers. Webb youth and parents also participate regularly in community service, partnering with various local organizations to provide assistance to less privileged communities.
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19

Coalter, Fred. Freedom and Constraint: The Paradoxes of Leisure. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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20

Coalter, Fred. Freedom and Constraint: The Paradoxes of Leisure. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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21

Jappelli, Tullio, and Luigi Pistaferri. The Response of Consumption to Anticipated Changes in Income. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199383146.003.0008.

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The intertemporal models studied so far postulate that people use savings in order to smooth income fluctuations, and that unless there are liquidity constraints, consumption responds little if at all to changes in income that were expected. When this major theoretical prediction is violated, researchers conclude that consumption is excessively sensitive to anticipated income changes. In this chapter we review some of the empirical approaches researchers have taken to estimate the response of consumption to anticipated income changes. We point out that empirically it is very hard to identify situations in which income changes in a predictable way. But even if the empirical difficulties can be surmounted, there are many plausible explanations for the rejection of the implications of the theoretical models, including liquidity constraints, non-separability between consumption and leisure, home production, the persistence of habits, aggregation bias, and the durability of goods.
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22

Jappelli, Tullio, and Luigi Pistaferri. Conclusions. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199383146.003.0015.

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The final chapter summarizes the material covered by the book, offering our perspectives on areas of consent, disagreement, and future research. The book analyzes how consumers respond to changes in their economic environment and react to risks they face during the life cycle. In addressing these issues, the basic life-cycle permanent-income model is augmented with other significant features of consumers’ preferences and environment: precautionary motives for saving, borrowing constraints, life span uncertainty, intergenerational transfers, non-separability between consumption and leisure, habits, and financial sophistication. By and large, one can reconcile some puzzling facts present in the empirical data by means of relatively modest modifications of the basic version of the model, such as provision for home production and non-separable preferences between consumption and leisure. However, in order to explain other “anomalies” and “puzzles” observed in individuals’ actual saving and financial behaviors, more important modifications to the standard framework are required.
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23

Calhoun, Cheshire. Living with Boredom. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190851866.003.0006.

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Rejecting the standard focus on boredom as a cultural or personal problem, this chapter examines how boredom illuminates the kinds of problems that evaluators face just in being evaluators. The chapter explores five reasons for boredom: (1) loss of temporal meaning; (2) normative constraints; (3) disappointment with present value qualities given the standards of what is worth attending to that one sets for oneself; (4) value satiety when spending extended time with a particular value quality exhausts one’s capacities to do anything more with it; and (5) leisure, whereby the agent is burdened with the task of finding things to do with herself.
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24

Fred, Coalter, ed. Freedom and constraint: The paradoxes of leisure : ten years of the Leisure Studies Association. London: Routledge, 1988.

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25

Leisure Studies Association (Great Britain). Freedom and Constraint: The Paradoxes of Leisure : Ten Years of the Leisure Studies Association (Comedia). Routledge, 1989.

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26

Leisure Studies Association (Great Britain). Freedom and Constraint: The Paradoxes of Leisure : Ten Years of the Leisure Studies Association (Comedia). Routledge, 1989.

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27

Mirola, William A. Religion and the Trajectory of Labor Reform Movements. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252038839.003.0008.

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This concluding chapter discusses the theoretical implications of Protestant engagement with the eight-hour movement for developing a broader understanding of the possibilities and constraints surrounding religion as a basis for activism around economic and industrial issues. Protestant beliefs underlying moralities of work and leisure permeated the culture of life in nineteenth-century Chicago. Clergy constructed their responses to the principle of shorter hours around them. Workers also constructed religious understandings of the eight-hour system out of this common religious language. However, shared religious understandings of industrial conditions and community life are only a beginning for movements seeking to mobilize the religious community as an ally. Differences in how those beliefs were interpreted by clergy and workers as well as differing understandings of their implications for economic life meant that efforts to transform religious ideas into practical reform efforts would face serious obstacles.
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28

Spracklen, Karl. Developing a Cultural Theory of Music Making and Leisure. Edited by Roger Mantie and Gareth Dylan Smith. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190244705.013.2.

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People listen to music in their leisure time, in leisure spaces, as a supposedly free act of agency. Yet social and cultural theorists show that leisure choices and spaces are constrained by hegemonic power, and that cultural forms such as music are products of commodification. This chapter explores these key claims for the use of music and the consumption of music in leisure spaces. It uses the work of Baudrillard on simulacra to explore the potential meaning and purpose of music in the lives of makers, listeners and fans—as a key device in constructing alternative hyperrealities to the capitalized reality of late modernity.
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29

The gendered experience of aerobic exercise classes: Exploring body image as a leisure constraint for undergraduate students. 1993.

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