Academic literature on the topic 'Oregon, genealogy'

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Journal articles on the topic "Oregon, genealogy"

1

Ka‘ula, Leialoha, Jonathan Cruz, Natlie Dutro, Donna Ching, Kawehilani Wong, and Alexandra Malia Jackson. "Growing Kalo (Taro) in the Continental United States." Health Promotion Practice 24, no. 6 (October 25, 2023): 1083–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/15248399231190361.

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As an increasing number of Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander adults move to the continental United States, the development and implementation of resources that promote access to cultural foods and support food sovereignty on the continent is crucial to perpetuate cultural practice and connection to the ʻāina (land that feeds). Kalo (taro) is an important cultural food central to Native Hawaiian identity. Native Hawaiians connect their genealogy as far back to the cultivation of kalo and the creation of kalo itself. In this practice note, we describe the creation of a māla kalo (cultivated field for taro) in Oregon by the Kaʻaha Lāhui O ʻOlekona Hawaiian Civic Club. An ongoing project over the past 3 years, the creation of a māla kalo exceeded expectations. Not only did the māla allow the cultivation of kalo outside of Hawaii, the māla became a place for the community to unite toward common goals of connecting with the land, promoting mental health, and creating a sense of place in their diaspora. This project indicates that not only is the creation of māla kalo in Oregon feasible, it may also be an important opportunity for the growing number of Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders adults living on the continent to improve health outcomes through connections with cultural foods and practices.
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2

Mitchell, Roger Haydon. "The centrality of the poor to the work of the kingdom of God in the 21st century West." Kenarchy Journal 1 (May 2020): 76–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.62950/vzwpl16.

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This paper centres around three foci: incarnational hermeneutics, the social impact of spiritual renewal and the cultivation of emerging new political space. Firstly, the implications of an incarnational or ‘Jesus’ hermeneutic for reinstating the poor as the primary focus for theology is considered. This emphasises the centrality of the poor as a defining characteristic of the Jesus narrative and includes accounting for the displacement of Jesus’ focus on the poor throughout the history of the church. Secondly, a personal and historical genealogy of the last three generations of spiritual renewal is evaluated as testimony to the reinstatement of the poor as primary agents of the gospel. Thirdly, an attempt is made, drawing on the work of contemporary political theologians, to explain and delineate the new post-secular political space in the western world with reference to the inroads of Islamic extremism, Trump’s populism and the UK’s Brexit. Conceiving this space as a fulfilment of the consequences of empire, the poor are presented as a current political category. Finally, the role of the ecclesia as servants with the poor in cultivating the emerging space is configured as an expression of the politics of love. The paper draws on the findings of my own research into the subsumption of transcendence by sovereignty in Church, Gospel and Empire: How the Politics of Sovereignty Impregnated the West (Eugene, Oregon: Wipf and Stock, 2011) and the experience of The Poverty Truth Commission, http://www.faithincommunityscotland.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Poverty-Truth-Commission-8_opt.pdf and particularly the Morecambe Bay Poverty Truth Commission.
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Greytak, Ellen M., Janet Cady, Nici Vance, CeCe Moore, and Steven L. Armentrout. "Investigative genetic genealogy for unidentified human remains cases in Oregon." Forensic Science International: Genetics Supplement Series, October 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fsigss.2022.10.081.

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Przybylinski, Stephen. "Revealing Properties of Citizenship through Landscape: Enacting “Block 16” through Dispossession and Displacement." Antipode, July 3, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/anti.13074.

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AbstractThis paper examines the relationship between property and citizenship by engaging in a genealogy of one property in Portland, Oregon, “Block 16”, which details how this property was first enacted and then maintained into the 21st century. The paper foregrounds how normative definitions of liberal subjectivity were applied to Indigenous peoples originally living on this land, as well as valuations of citizenship for marginalised renters and the residents of a homeless encampment “illegally” occupying this property, to justify the dispossession and displacement of the groups using this same plot of land over time. I argue that the spatial enactment and maintenance of private property is contingent upon producing political subjects demarcated as “improper”, deviants from the normative or ideal liberal subject and citizen. To highlight how property shapes propriety, the paper engages in landscape analysis to reveal how the social relations producing land as property rely upon representations of impropriety and moral deficit to maintain the ownership model of private property against the historical use values of the land.
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Books on the topic "Oregon, genealogy"

1

Bill, Lee. Zumwalt in Oregon. Smithfield, Utah (P.O. Box 93, Smithfield 84335): B. and L. Lee, 1989.

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2

Oregon County Historical Society. History Book Committee., ed. Oregon County, Missouri. [Alton, Mo.?]: Oregon County Historical Society, 1992.

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3

1953-, Brush Debra, and Samard Eileen, eds. History of Tangent, Oregon. Dallas, Tex: Curtis Media Corp., 1993.

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4

R, Clarke Stanley, and Healy Janice M, eds. Oregon burial site guide. Portland, Or: Binford & Mort Pub., 2001.

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5

Research in Oregon. Arlington, Va: National Genealogical Society, 1992.

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6

Bill, Lee. Oswald and Oswalt in Oregon. Smithfield, UT (P.O. Box 93, Smithfield 84335): B. Lee, 1990.

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7

Lenzen, Connie. Oregon guide to genealogical sources. Portland, OR (1410 SW Morrison St., Suite 812, Portland 97205): Genealogical Forum of Oregon, 1991.

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8

Strom, Ora. Josephine County, Oregon, Williams, Oregon, cemeteries: Sparlin, Gotcher, Hartley. Medford, Or. (125 S. Central, Suite 204, Medford 97501): Rogue Valley Genealogical Society, 1986.

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9

Parry, Evelyn. Lincoln County, Oregon, marriage records. Eugene, Or. (P.O. Box 10306, Eugene 97440-2306): Oregon Genealogical Society, 1989.

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10

Polk County Historical Society (Polk County, Or.), ed. History of Polk County, Oregon. Monmouth, Or: Polk County Historical Society, 1987.

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