Articoli di riviste sul tema "Activist learnings"

Segui questo link per vedere altri tipi di pubblicazioni sul tema: Activist learnings.

Cita una fonte nei formati APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard e in molti altri stili

Scegli il tipo di fonte:

Vedi i top-50 articoli di riviste per l'attività di ricerca sul tema "Activist learnings".

Accanto a ogni fonte nell'elenco di riferimenti c'è un pulsante "Aggiungi alla bibliografia". Premilo e genereremo automaticamente la citazione bibliografica dell'opera scelta nello stile citazionale di cui hai bisogno: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver ecc.

Puoi anche scaricare il testo completo della pubblicazione scientifica nel formato .pdf e leggere online l'abstract (il sommario) dell'opera se è presente nei metadati.

Vedi gli articoli di riviste di molte aree scientifiche e compila una bibliografia corretta.

1

Moreira, Martha Cristina Nunes. "Configurations of atypical parenting activism in disability and chronicity". Ciência & Saúde Coletiva 27, n. 10 (ottobre 2022): 3939–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1413-812320222710.07572022en.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
Abstract This article aims to reflect on the configurations of atypical parenting in the field of disability and chronicity. The atypical emic category composes with these fields. Associative symbolicities are explored with an ethnography in social media and interviews with activists. We indicate ongoing processes in the anticapacitist struggle that dialogue with agendas of Politics as Care. We conclude that “atypical activist parenting” operates with meanings and learnings of living and being familiar with disability/chronicity/rarity in proximity to a son/daughter, not being restricted to biographical ruptures.
2

Espinar-Ruiz, Eva, e Mónica Moreno-Seco. "LIFE-COURSE EFFECTS OF WOMEN’S POLITICAL ACTIVISM: PUBLIC AND PRIVATE TRAJECTORIES FROM ANTI-FRANCOISM TO THE 15-M IN SPAIN". Mobilization: An International Quarterly 27, n. 2 (1 giugno 2022): 211–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.17813/1086-671x-27-2-211.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
Using life stories, this article analyzes the effects that youthful political participation during the final years of Spain’s Francoist dictatorship had on the public and private life-course trajectories for a group of activist women. Noteworthy among our conclusions is the fundamental role that political engagement plays, becoming a key element of the interviewed women’s identities. They associated political activity with mainly positive emotions, learnings, and empowerment, as well as with the creation of social networks that became especially relevant when reengaging in activism later in their lives. Similarly, their political activism favored the development of heterodox attitudes and behaviors. In general, their personal trajectories were marked by political and social commitments, regardless of the differences in relation to formal participation in political parties and other organizations.
3

Stewart, Nathaniel D., e Lauren Thompson. "Black and Indigenous Solidarity in Social Sciences: Leaning into Our Nuanced Racialized Identities and Healing Together". Social Sciences 12, n. 6 (12 giugno 2023): 347. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/socsci12060347.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
Our co-authored piece contributes to Black and Indigenous solidarity juxtaposed to our nuanced and convergent lived experiences as racialized people. Lauren and I (Nate)co-explore how our racialized identities and stories may complexify Black-and-Indigenous-led movements. We say “racialized” to acknowledge white supremacists’ racecraft to subjugate Black and Indigenous people. Lauren, an Indigenous educator activist, and I, a Black scholar activist, both with white maternal lineage, connected after storying about our journeys to, through, and beyond the teaching profession. Black and Indigenous educators have centered theories of we are not free until we are all free. Our knowledge contributions further complexify freedom-for-all by offering Black and Indigenous knowledge on nuanced ancestry within the U.S. racialization project. Conversational data stemmed from an educator activist collective project where Lauren and I had many conversations about our similar and unique journeys toward our justice orientation. Our conversations yielded many Black and Indigenous solidarity learnings. These co-learnings included: building solidarity through weaving our unique stories, extending nuanced understandings of racialized experiences, and co-regulation in societal spaces not made for us. We conclude with implications in continuing to build solidarity in social science.
4

Taha, Diane, Sally O. Hastings e Elizabeth M. Minei. "Shaping Student Activists: Discursive Sensemaking of Activism and Participation Research". Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning 15, n. 6 (27 dicembre 2015): 1–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.14434/josotl.v15i6.13820.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
As social media becomes a more potent force in society, particularly for younger generations, the role in activism has been contested. This qualitative study examines 35 interviews with students regarding their perceptions of the use of social media in social change, their perceptions of activists, and their level of self-identification as an activist. Data suggest that students use media to engage in offline participation in activist causes, because offline presents a “safe” place to begin their involvement. Findings also point to the unified pejorative connotations of the term “activist”, yet also demonstrate ways that students transform the negative stereotype of activists in a way that creates a more positive image of activists. Most participants in the study were able to see sufficient positive characteristics in behaviors they associated with activism to prompt the students to identify themselves as “activists” or “aspiring activists”. We offer 3 practical recommendations for teachers who seek to increase service learning vis a vis activism in their classrooms.
5

Costa, Ana L., Henrique Vaz e Isabel Menezes. "The Activist Craft: Learning Processes and Outcomes of Professional Activism". Adult Education Quarterly 71, n. 3 (10 febbraio 2021): 211–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0741713620988255.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
Work as a place of activism is a vast field to be explored in adult education research, particularly within educational, social, and community intervention with people in situations of vulnerability. This qualitative study aims to unveil the richness of activists’ learning processes and outcomes by reflecting on the pedagogy of professional activism, with professionals working in Portugal. Their sharing reveals a thematic influence and interdependence between the dimensions “How?” and “What?” of professional activism learning and the themes composing them—respectively, “political socialization” and “work experience”; and “critical, social and political consciousness,” “sense of (in)justice and empathy,” and “know-how to speak out.” As professionals learn how to become activists, they also construct this praxis, and themselves as professionals, giving meaning and (re)defining their activist craft, through a learning-creative process.
6

Ålund, Aleksandra, e René Léon-Rosales. "Becoming an Activist Citizen: Individual Experiences and Learning Processes within the Swedish Suburban Movement". Journal of Education and Culture Studies 1, n. 2 (13 maggio 2017): 123. http://dx.doi.org/10.22158/jecs.v1n2p123.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
<p class="STYCKEEFTERRUBRIK"><em>Focusing on activism within a new “suburban movement” (förortsrörelse) in Sweden, this article explores the processes of becoming an activist from the perspective of post-migrant youth. The authors ask how individual identities are formed under conditions of social subordination and cultural stigmatization. Using interviews with urban activists the authors elaborate how this experience is contingent on individual and collective learning processes, and related to place struggle; the notion of self-identification for a “justice movement” among Swedish activists in ethnically mixed suburban areas</em><em>. The article is based on </em><em>Megafonen, a youth led organization grounded in Husby, a Stockholm suburb</em><em>.</em><em> Employing the notions of active and activist citizen, the interconnection of racialization and resistance, as well as how conditions of a racialized being affects the options of becoming an activist citizen, are explored. </em></p>
7

McIver, Karen. "Engaging Youth to Explore Activism: An Educational Framework for Supporting an Ecological Justice-Oriented Citizenry". Canadian Journal of Action Research 21, n. 1 (30 novembre 2020): 102–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.33524/cjar.v21i1.521.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
The range of social and ecological justice issues our world is currently experiencing is vast. Youth are speaking out and are identifying as activists. Education, and more specifically environmental education, has a role to play in developing justice-oriented citizens committed to taking action on issues. The present study used action research with participation from youth to investigate the role place has played in maintaining the identities of activists committed to social and ecological justice. The secondary focus of the research was to examine whether youth involvement in a participatory, critical learning experience of creating live radio shows with activists as their guests helped the youth to develop and maintain their own activist identity and community. In addressing these questions of activist identity in relation to place, the study is presented in two sections. Part 1 involved research participants producing two live radio shows focused on the role of place in maintaining activism. Part 2 addresses how the youth participants perceived the process of interviewing activists on a radio show as having contributed to their own activist identities. Profiles of each youth participant are presented to explore their perceptions of creating radio shows with older generations of activists. The article concludes with a living theory of education for social and ecological justice.
8

Claybrook, M. Keith. "Africana Studies, 21st Century Black Student Activism, and High Impact Educational Practices: A Biographical Sketch of David C. Turner, III". Journal of Black Studies 52, n. 4 (22 febbraio 2021): 359–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0021934721996366.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
This article examines the relationship between academia and activism. It explores the undergraduate experience of veteran 21st century Black student activist, David C. Turner, III, revealing the foundations of his academic and activist career in higher education. Framed in the context of student engagement and high impact educational practices, this paper argues that 21st century Black student activists are motivated by a belief in a society and world free from overt, insidious, and institutional racism. Furthermore, it argues that activism offers academically relevant learning opportunities. The article draws upon informal conversations and interactions, formal interviews, and Turner’s published and unpublished writings. It chronicles Turner’s undergraduate experiences at CSU, Dominguez Hills majoring in Africana Studies, president of the Organization of Africana Studies, and research and conference opportunities revealing the foundations of his pursuit of cultural grounding, academic excellence, and social responsibility. Furthermore, it highlights the links between intellectual and academic work, with activism and organizing.
9

Rahul, Patley, K. Rakesh Chander, Manisha Murugesan, Adarsha Alur Anjappa, Rajani Parthasarathy, Narayana Manjunatha, Channaveerachari Naveen Kumar e Suresh Bada Math. "Accredited Social Health Activist (ASHA) and Her Role in District Mental Health Program: Learnings from the COVID 19 Pandemic". Community Mental Health Journal 57, n. 3 (16 gennaio 2021): 442–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10597-021-00773-1.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
10

Storey, Valerie, e Roschanda Fletcher. "Developing Scholar Activists". Impacting Education: Journal on Transforming Professional Practice 8, n. 1 (27 febbraio 2023): 1–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.5195/ie.2023.277.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
A qualitative descriptive approach was followed in the research, starting with a theoretical conceptualization of scholar activism within doctoral education as a basis for further inquiry. Seventeen doctoral candidates described how they conceptualized and applied the Carnegie Project on the Education Doctorate's (CPED) Framework for the Emerging EdD Activist to their experiences in an online program. Study respondents gave accounts of growing confidence to engage in active, vocal advocacy, which they attributed to their new knowledge and understandings gained through participation in the program. However, for some mid-career students, increased vocal advocacy in the workplace was perceived as endangering career prospects. The data draw attention to the complexity of the professional learning process, calling into question the current input-output model of activism. Further research is necessary to develop a greater understanding of the relationship between a developing scholar-activist and the impact of the EdD and precisely how that can be measured. The findings from this study have implications for program developers and doctoral students wishing to become scholar-activists and agents of change.
11

Kaur Luthra, Sangeeta. "Remembering Guru Nanak: Articulations of Faith and Ethics by Sikh Activists in Post 9/11 America". Religions 12, n. 2 (10 febbraio 2021): 113. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rel12020113.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
This paper explores the role of activism as an inflection point for engagement with religious and cultural identity by younger generations of Sikhs in the US. The response of young Sikh activists and the effects on the community are examined in the context of the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks in the US. The paper begins with the reflections of a Sikh activist about her personal journey learning about Sikh faith and history, and her activism and personal interests. Important themes that reflect the attitudes of contemporary Sikh activists and organizations are discussed. The effects of the post-9/11 backlash against Sikhs in the US are compared to Guru Nanak’s experiences of and response to violence, strife, and injustice. The social, psychological, and spiritual benefits of service for those who provide service and care are explored in relation to Sikh philosophy, and from the point of view of contemporary cultural and historical studies of Sikh seva (selfless service) and humanitarianism. The paper concludes that many Sikhs, particularly those coming of age in the late 20th and early 21st century, often referred to as millennial and Generation Z, view social justice activism, humanitarianism and Sikh seva as central and equal to other pillars of Sikhism like worship and devotional practices.
12

Ardiwansyah, Bayu. "STUDI KOMPARASI PRESTASI BELAJAR PAI ANTARA SISWA AKTIVIS DAN NON AKTIVIS ROHIS". At-Tajdid : Jurnal Pendidikan dan Pemikiran Islam 3, n. 01 (17 settembre 2019): 34. http://dx.doi.org/10.24127/att.v3i01.975.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
This study aims to 1) find out the significance of the differences in PAI learning achievement between activist students and Spiritual non-visionary students in Accounting majors at SMKN 1 Metro 2) knowing the causes of differences in PAI learning achievement between activist students and non-religious Spiritual students in Accounting at SMKN 1 Metro. Rohis activist students referred to in this study are students who in addition to learning, they are also active in carrying out the activities of the Rohis organization. Whereas the non-religious Spiritual students referred to in this study were students who did not follow the Rohis organization. The results of the research at SMK Negeri 1 Metro, which researchers did to students Spiritual and Non-activist Rohis activists concluded that: 1) There are differences in learning achievement of Islamic Education between activist students and Non-Christian Spiritual Accounting Department at Metro 1 Vocational School. Where the learning achievements of Spiritual activist PAI students are better than the learning achievements of Rohan Nonaktivis students. The difference in learning achievement of Islamic Education between activist students and Spiritual Non-Service Students is significant, based on the results of t count = 4.630 consulted with t table (tt) at the significance level of 5% = 1.998 and at 1% significance level = 2.655. or 1,998 <4,630> 2,655. which means significant. 2) There are causes of differences in PAI learning achievements between activist students and non-religious Rohis students in the Accounting Department at SMK Negeri 1 Metro.Keywords: Activists, Non Activists, PAI Achievements, Comparative
13

Larri, Larraine J. "Lifelong learning, well-being, and climate justice activism: Exploring social movement learning among Australia’s Knitting Nannas". International Journal of Population Studies 10, n. 2 (15 marzo 2024): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.36922/ijps.381.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
The participation of older people in social movement learning presents a unique perspective on lifelong learning opportunities and well-aging in later life. Australia&rsquo;s Knitting Nannas Against Gas and Greed exemplifies how older women have challenged the &ldquo;double jeopardy of old age&rdquo; embodied in ageist sexism and become well-regarded anti-coal seam gas environmental activists. This article explores how engagement in environmental activism has fostered a learning ecology, which promotes transformative and emancipatory learning dispositions that benefit well-aging. A significant gap exists in transformative environmental adult educational research in relation to the motivation for and engagement of older women in environmentalism. Drawing on my Ph.D. research, I identify how women acquire environmental and ecological literacy, develop activist skills, and cultivate emancipatory learning dispositions. They benefit from being part of a supportive community of older women, enhancing their quality of life. This phenomenon is referred to as &ldquo;Nannagogy.&rdquo; &nbsp;
14

Arya, Dena, e Matt Henn. "COVID-ized Ethnography: Challenges and Opportunities for Young Environmental Activists and Researchers". Societies 11, n. 2 (7 giugno 2021): 58. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/soc11020058.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
This article offers a critical and reflective examination of the impact of the enforced 2020/21 COVID-19 lockdown on ethnographic fieldwork conducted with UK-based young environmental activists. A matrix of researcher and activist challenges and opportunities has been co-created with young environmental activists using an emergent research design, incorporating a phased and intensive iterative process using online ethnography and online qualitative interviews. The article focuses on reflections emerging from the process of co-designing and then use of this matrix in practice. It offers an evidence base which others researching hard-to-reach youth populations may themselves deploy when negotiating face-to-face fieldwork approval at their own academic institutions. The pandemic and its associated control regimes, such as lockdown and social distancing measures, will have lasting effects for both activism and researchers. The methodological reflections we offer in this article have the potential to contribute to the learning of social science researchers with respect to how best to respond when carrying out online fieldwork in such contexts—particularly, but not only, with young activists.
15

Alvarez, Antonia R. G., Val Kalei Kanuha, Maxine K. L. Anderson, Cathy Kapua e Kris Bifulco. "“We Were Queens.” Listening to Kānaka Maoli Perspectives on Historical and On-Going Losses in Hawai’i". Genealogy 4, n. 4 (15 dicembre 2020): 116. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genealogy4040116.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
This study examines a historical trauma theory-informed framework to remember Kānaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian) and lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and/or māhū (LGBTQM) experiences of colonization in Hawai`i. Kānaka Maoli people and LGBTQM Kānaka Maoli face health issues disproportionately when compared with racial and ethnic minorities in Hawai’i, and to the United States as a whole. Applying learnings from historical trauma theorists, health risks are examined as social and community-level responses to colonial oppressions. Through the crossover implementation of the Historical Loss Scale (HLS), this study makes connections between historical losses survived by Kānaka Maoli and mental health. Specifically, this manuscript presents unique ways that Kānaka Maoli describe and define historical losses, and place-based themes that emerged. These themes were: the militarization of land; the adoption of christianity by Kānaka Maoli ali`i; the overthrow of the sovereign Hawaiian monarch; and the importance of māhū and LGBTQ perspectives. Each of these themes will be presented in detail. Written by a queer, mestiza Pinay-American scholar, her mentor, a lesbian Kanaka Maoli scholar/activist, with contributions from Community Advisory Board members, there will also be discussion about ethics of research with and for Kānaka Maoli.
16

Farago, Flora, Beth Blue Swadener, Jennifer Richter, Kimberly Eversman e Denisse Roca-Servat. "Local to Global Justice: Roles of Student Activism in Higher Education, Leadership Development, and Community Engagement". Alberta Journal of Educational Research 64, n. 2 (22 giugno 2018): 154–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.55016/ojs/ajer.v64i2.56382.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
This study examined how organizing an annual social justice forum and festival through involvement in a multi-issue, progressive, activist student organization called Local to Global Justice (LTGJ; www.localtoglobal.org) impacted students’ academic experiences and professional development (e.g., scholar-activism, critical thinking, applied learning), leadership development, and community engagement and activism. Current and alumni student leaders (n = 33; 90% graduate students), faculty mentors (n = 3), and community members (n = 4) of LTGJ (N = 40) completed a close- and open-ended question online survey about their educational experiences and related activism, and shared their perceptions about the value of student activism to higher education. The study is grounded in Paulo Freire’s notions of critical consciousness and praxis, and illustrates how activism, regarding local and global justice struggles, enriches students’ educational experiences within and beyond the university. Findings indicate that student activism and organizing the LTGJ Forum and Festival benefited students academically, professionally, and personally in intersecting and intertwining ways. Themes emerged around the roles that activism played in the development of scholar-activism, critical thinking, applied learning, career and professional development, leadership development, and community engagement and activism. Findings also revealed that involvement with LTGJ was an avenue for engaging with communities outside of academia. The article concludes with implications for multi-issue activist groups on college campuses. Cette étude porte sur l’impact qu’a eu l’organisation d’un forum et festival annuel sur la justice sociale, par l’implication dans une organisation étudiante progressiste, activiste et axée sur la défense de causes multiples : Local to Global Justice (LTGJ; www.localtoglobal.org), sur les expériences académiques, le développement professionnel (par ex., l’activisme, la pensée critique, l’apprentissage appliqué), le développement en leadership, et l’implication et l’activisme communautaires des étudiants. Des leaders étudiants, anciens et actuels (n = 33; 90% étudiants diplômés), mentors du corps professoral (n = 3) et des membres de la communauté (n = 4) LTGJ (N = 40) ont complété un questionnaire en ligne. Les questions, ouvertes ou fermées, portaient sur les expériences éducatives et l’activisme connexe des étudiants et leur donnaient l’occasion de partager leurs perceptions de la valeur de l’activisme étudiant dans le contexte des études supérieures. Cette étude repose sur les notions de Paulo Freire sur la conscience critique et la pratique, et elle illustre dans quelle mesure l’activisme portant sur les luttes locales et globales pour la justice enrichit les expériences éducatives des étudiants, pendant et après l’université. Les résultats indiquent que l’activisme et l’organisation du forum et festival LTGJ avaient procuré aux étudiants une gamme d’avantages entrelacés sur les plans académique, professionnel et personnel. Des thèmes sont ressortis autour des rôles que joue l’activisme dans le développement de la pensée critique, l’apprentissage appliqué, le développement professionnel, le développement du leadership et l’implication et l’activisme communautaires. Les résultats ont également révélé que l’implication auprès de LTGJ était une piste vers l’implication dans d’autres communautés en dehors du monde académique. La présentation d’implications pour les groupes activistes œuvrant sur les campus universitaires et axés sur la défense de causes multiples vient terminer l’article. Mots clés : activisme étudiant, leadership étudiant, conscience critique, pratique, implication communautaire
17

Reynolds, Kristin, Daniel R. Block, Colleen Hammelman, Brittany D. Jones, Jessica L. Gilbert e Henry Herrera. "Envisioning radical food geographies: shared learning and praxis through the Food Justice Scholar-Activist/Activist-Scholar Community of Practice". Human Geography 13, n. 3 (28 settembre 2020): 277–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1942778620951934.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
Food justice scholarship and activism have coevolved and at times been intertwined over past decades. In some instances, there are clear distinctions between “scholarly” and “activist” activities. However, individuals, groups, and actions often take on characteristics of both, producing knowledge at multiple sociopolitical scales. Recognizing and building upon these dynamics is important for strengthening food justice work. This is especially salient in an era in which academia, including geography, seeks more public engagement, yet has a complicated history of appropriating and/or dismissing experience-based knowledge, exacerbating uneven power-knowledge dynamics. These topics are of direct relevance to geography and intersect with radical geography traditions through engagement in social and political action and putting socio-spatial justice theory into practice. Since 2014, a small-but-growing group of individuals interested in the intersections between scholarship, activism, and geography have cultivated a Food Justice Scholar-Activist/Activist-Scholar Community of Practice (FJSAAS). This article examines the evolution and praxes of FJSAAS focusing on power-knowledge and radical geographies. Based on an analysis of FJSAAS records and recollections of participants since its founding, we discuss challenges encountered, the broader relevance for similarly positioned communities of practice, and offer recommendations for those engaging in food justice scholarship, activism, and/or radical geography. We conclude that radical geographies, concepts of radical food geographies, and scholar-activist/activist-scholar praxis are mutually reinforcing in recognizing experience-based knowledge as part of envisioning and putting into place a more just food system.
18

Park, Gwi Ja, e Sangok Park. "A Study on the Human Agency of Ma-eul Education Community Activists". Korean Society for the Study of Lifelong Education 29, n. 4 (31 dicembre 2023): 49–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.52758/kjle.2023.29.4.49.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
This study was conducted to understand the proactive and active behaviors of Ma-eul education community activists not merely at a personal level, but within a dimension that includes social structures and cultural characteristics. To achieve this, in-depth interviews were conducted with seven research participants to capture and analyze the manifestation of activists' agency traits using the relational agency conceptual model. The results revealed that the practice of activist agency characteristics emerged in the formation of social intimacy, intentional value sharing, relationship building that supports empowerment, harmonizing practices with convictions, and problem-solving through relationships. These were further facilitated through personal and relational reflection and learning. Based on these findings, the activists' agency was defined as the power of solidarity for forming 'our' relationships. The study discussed and organized the practice of activist agency into relationship-centered practice, forms of agency practice, the cyclical nature of agency manifestation, the characteristics of learning that mediate the manifestation of agency, and the implications of agency practice. This research offers a new perspective for understanding the practice experiences of activists through the concept of agency and attempts to define the concept of activist agency, distinguishing it from previous studies. Additionally, it proposes strategies for the revitalization of village education communities and suggestions for future research.
19

Hansson, Niklas, e Kerstin Jacobsson. "Learning to Be Affected: Subjectivity, Sense, and Sensibility in Animal Rights Activism". Society & Animals 22, n. 3 (22 aprile 2014): 262–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15685306-12341327.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
Abstract Becoming an animal rights activist is not just a process of identity change and re-socialization but also implies, as this article suggests, a “re-engineering” of affective cognitive repertoires and processes of “sensibilization” in relation to nonhuman animals. Activists thereby develop their mental responsiveness and awareness and refine their embodied sensitivity and capacity for sensing. The article proposes a theoretical perspective for understanding these processes. Empirically, this article examines the development of affective dispositions informing activists’ subjectivity and embodied sensibilities. It looks at the ways in which visceral, bodily, or affective responses are cultivated to reinforce activist commitments. First, the analysis identifies “micro-shocks” and “re-shocking” experiences as mechanisms for sustaining commitment. Second, “emphatic identification” and “embodied simulation” are highlighted as mechanisms for nurturing empathy towards animals. Finally, it identifies the role of “affective meat encounters” and the cultivation of disgust as mechanisms for nurturing sensibilities. The analysis is based on a case study of animal rights activists in Sweden.
20

De Sario, Beppe. "Narrazioni transnazionali: rappresentazione e racconto nei movimenti alterglobalisti, tra traduzione culturale e attivazione della protesta". PARTECIPAZIONE E CONFLITTO, n. 2 (marzo 2009): 135–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.3280/paco2009-002006.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
- The article focuses on the role of representations (particularly visual and medial representations), of storytelling (biographical, memory of activism, training to global activism), of personal experience (travels, experience included in counter-summits and protests) and more generally examines cultural practices in the building of basis of mutual recognition and identity for people involved in the networks of alterglobal movements. Representations, narratives and experience have a decisive role in the developing of a globalization from below, giving a sort of cultural ground to communication and organizational networks. In this sense, the "activist experience" acts as a device of mediation and cultural translation in the emerging alterglobal movements, becoming a fundamental dimension of movements which should be considered "transnational" not only on the level of organization, agenda setting, activation of protest, but also at level of subjectivity. The article develops in three parts. In the first part, it's the analysis of representations of alterglobal movements in Genoa (counter-summit and protests against G8 summit) emerging from audiovisual products and documentary films. The second one focuses on biographical stories of activists about learning and training to experience activism in the new environment of protest taking place in Genoa. The third part summarizes concepts and theoretical approaches about a culturalist perspective in the study of alterglobal movements. Keywords: alterglobal movements, transnational subjectivity, cultural experience, representations, narratives. 174
21

Panelli, Ruth, e Wendy Larner. "Timely Partnerships? Contrasting Geographies of Activism in New Zealand and Australia". Urban Studies 47, n. 6 (maggio 2010): 1343–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0042098009360226.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
Analyses of activism have inspired geographers for many years, but most of this work has focused on relatively short time-frames, events and struggles. This paper suggests that there is much to be gained from a greater engagement with issues of time and time—spaces. It outlines and applies the contrasting conceptions of chrono/ chora and kairo/ topos notions of time—space as potentially useful ways to interrogate geographies of activism. The paper focuses on two specific forms of activism—an Australian women’s ‘Heritage Project’ and a New Zealand ‘Fishbowl’ evaluation of a community development programme— to show how politics is contingent on diverse temporal as well as spatial conditions. It reveals the complex navigations that are made as these politics are negotiated via both mutual learning processes and the forging of new activist—state relations. It is concluded that these ‘timely partnerships’ have involved moving beyond adversarial conceptions of ‘state’ and ‘activist’, but at the risk of reconstituting activism as ‘social capital’.
22

Pavey, Steve, e Marco Saavedra. "“Make Holy the Bare Life”". Mission Studies 32, n. 2 (3 giugno 2015): 271–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15733831-12341404.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
This article examines thevivencias en la vida cotidiana(everyday lived experiences) of undocumented youth activists in theusaat the intersection where dislocated “bare lives” encounter the hegemonic sovereign power of the nation-state (Agamben 1998). As nearly 2.1 million undocumented immigrant youth in the United States face the precarious reality of “learning to be illegal” (Gonzales 2011) and the threat of “deportability” (De Genova and Peutz 2010), a growing movement of undocumented youth fight for the dignity and liberation of their community while the light of their activism illuminates the majority who remain in the shadows. Based on three years of ethnographic research and action within the undocumented youth activist movement, this article utilizes a dialogical framework through collaborative and participatory based research methods to examine the theological dimensions of “illegal” and “bare” lives on the margins lived between the borders of citizenship and human dignity, between nation-states and the kingdom of God. The research and writing are grounded in a methodological and theological praxis with the marginalized, embodied most poignantly in the co-authors collaborative work and friendship.
23

Kowasch, Matthias, Joana P. Cruz, Pedro Reis, Niklas Gericke e Katharina Kicker. "Climate Youth Activism Initiatives: Motivations and Aims, and the Potential to Integrate Climate Activism into ESD and Transformative Learning". Sustainability 13, n. 21 (20 ottobre 2021): 11581. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su132111581.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
For about two years, the climate youth activism initiative Fridays for Future has addressed climate emergency, receiving considerable attention because of their consistent protests every week in many different locations worldwide. Based on empirical studies in Austria and Portugal, this paper investigates the motivations of students to participate in the movement and the solutions proposed by young activists to fight against climate emergency. Moreover, we discuss the integration of climate change activism into ESD (education for sustainable development) and transformative learning processes, and how this enables environmental citizenship. The results of the studies reveal that emotions and feelings of solidarity and collective aims are motives to participate in the strikes. The young activists sometimes propose innovative and sometimes radical solutions to climate emergency. Both demonstrations and exhibitions as forms of bottom-up climate activism initiatives contribute to engagement in political dialogue and scientific knowledge transfer. They can be seen as “triggers of change” for transformative learning.
24

Finn, Sarah. "Broadening the Scope of Community Engagement". Pedagogy 21, n. 1 (1 gennaio 2021): 159–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15314200-8692754.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
This article explored a community-engaged, first-year writing course that partnered students with student activist groups on campus at Northeastern University in Boston. Their placement with peers connected them with the campus network and illuminated the ways that they could advocate for social justice in their new community. Students wrote in multiple genres as they attended the meetings and events of different groups involved with environmentalism, food justice, adjunct rights, and more. As students connected their social-change work to the classroom, they learned more about different genres of writing, from scholarly inquiries to multi-modal “deliverables” supporting their student groups. These final “deliverables” included posters, videos, prezis, banners, and even original music to be played at meetings or events. The fact that student worked with peers alleviated some common challenges of community-engaged learning, such as a sense of saviorhood. Instead, students felt a sense of civic investment and developed rhetorical flexibility that they implemented in the classroom and with their groups. Students found the course meaningful and valued the opportunity to get involved with campus activism. As they developed as activists and writers, students felt that the classroom and community spheres overlapped and informed each other.
25

Atique, Muhammad. "Comparison Of Learning Styles Used By Clinical Faculty Of Hospital And General Practitioners For Their Professional Development". Proceedings 37, n. 3 (31 luglio 2023): 44–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.47489/szmc.v37i3.259.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
Aims & Objectives: To compare the learning styles used by hospital clinical faculty and general practitioners for their professional development/ continued medical education. Place and Duration of Study: This was a Comparative cross-sectional study carried out at Pakistan Kidney and Liver institute and research canter Lahore from October 2019 to November 2020. Material & Methods: Total number of seventy-six medical professionals comprising thirty-eight members of clinical faculty and similar number of general practitioners were included in the study. Amongst these, 45 were males and 31 females’ Learning style questionnaire adopted from Honey and Mumford was distributed to all the participants. According to the learning styles they were grouped into Activists, reflectors, theorists and pragmatists with preference categorization of Very strong, strong, moderate, low and very low. Data was entered and analyzed usin SPSS version 22 Chi-square test was applied to see the significant difference in two groups and P value was calculated and value of less than 0.05 was considered significant. Results: There were 45 males and 31 females with ratio of 1.45:1 .In general practitioners the strongest learning style was reflector, followed by theorist, activist and pragmatists.While in the clinical faculty the strongest preference was again for reflectors, followed by activists then theorists and finally pragmatists, the significant difference statistically was only seen in the moderate preference in activist group which was 0.038. Conclusion: Reflector type of learning style based on pondering, experiencing and observing different perspectives was strongly observed in both genders of consultants and general practitioners. However, a moderate degree of activist type of learning style influenced by doing and feeling was also noted in the general practitioners. Further planning instructional strategy and assessment based on these learning styles could benefit the career growth of these two groups of health professionals.
26

Pahnke, Anthony Robert. "The Political Economy of Learning in Agrarian Contention". Contention 11, n. 2 (1 dicembre 2023): 57–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/cont.2023.110204.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
Abstract This article explains how an interracial alliance that promotes a radical restructuring of agriculture, featuring African American small-scale producers, farmers of Euro-American descent, Latino farmworkers, and Indigenous people, has come into existence. As I argue, this coalition formed due to changes in international political economy and within transnational activist networks. Specifically, the implementation of neoliberal international trade deals beginning in the 1970s disrupted farmers’ livelihoods in the Global North and South. It drove migrants from countries such as Mexico and Guatemala to the United States with their experiences of agrarian reform, and it saw US farmers simultaneously begin to engage farmers of color in new and important ways. The transnational activist networks that facilitated visits and meetings subsequently provided opportunities for activists to learn from one another and have new experiences, which, as I explore, led people from diverse backgrounds to agree on various principles and forge a common vision.
27

Laes, Tuulikki, e Patrick Schmidt. "Activism within music education: working towards inclusion and policy change in the Finnish music school context". British Journal of Music Education 33, n. 1 (11 gennaio 2016): 5–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0265051715000224.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
This study examines how interactions between policy, institutions and individuals that reinforce inclusive music education can be framed from an activist standpoint. Resonaari, one among many music schools in Finland, provides an illustrative case of rather uncommonly inclusive practices among students with special educational needs. By exploring this case, contextualised within the Finnish music school system, we identify the challenges and opportunities for activism on micro, meso and macro levels. On the basis of our analysis, we argue that Resonaari's teachers are proactive because, within an inclusive teaching and learning structure, they act in anticipation of future needs and policy changes, engaging in what we call teacher activism. We claim that this type of activism is key for inclusive practices and policy disposition in music education.
28

Budziszewska, Magdalena, e Zuzanna Głód. "“These Are the Very Small Things That Lead Us to That Goal”: Youth Climate Strike Organizers Talk about Activism Empowering and Taxing Experiences". Sustainability 13, n. 19 (8 ottobre 2021): 11119. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su131911119.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
Climate change is one of the most pressing issues we face, and the Fridays for Future wave of protests is unique both in its youth character and global reach. However, still not enough is known about how young activists experience their involvement and how the experience of climate activism connects to their personal development and psychological well-being. To gain an enhanced understanding of this issue, we conducted a qualitative study based on eight in-depth interviews with individuals deeply involved in the Youth Climate Strike in Poland. We analyzed the interviews using a rigorous multi-stage thematic analysis. Results showed that the empowering aspects of activism were associated with a heightened sense of agency, a sense of belonging to a community, a sense of duty and ethical integrity, of finding one’s voice and learning new skills, and a sense of personal growth. Activists also indicated aggravating aspects of involvement, such as involving the struggle for balance between activism and other spheres of life, overwork, and conflicts within a peer group. In conclusion, in contrast to the pressing nature of the climate change conundrum, climate activism is often experienced by its young participants as a mostly empowering experience.
29

Diem, Sarah, Anjalé D. Welton e Jeffrey S. Brooks. "Antiracism Education Activism: A Theoretical Framework for Understanding and Promoting Racial Equity". AERA Open 8 (gennaio 2022): 233285842211265. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/23328584221126518.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
Although antiracism activism has contributed to substantive progress under certain circumstances and in certain contexts, little research attempts to theorize how antiracism activism is manifest across contexts. In this article, we explore individual and collective antiracist actions within and outside schools. We introduce a theoretical framework that identifies four domains of activism—policy, community, leadership, and teaching and learning—in which activists operate to make a positive difference in promoting racial equity and antiracism in education. The framework offers a systemic way of thinking about antiracist activism in education and the importance of recognizing that several aspects of antiracist activism usually conceived as distinct are interrelated within and across domains. Indeed, antiracist education activism must be understood holistically and systemically if we seek to dismantle the racism that is woven into every piece of the education system.
30

Akrich, Madeleine. "From Communities of Practice to Epistemic Communities: Health Mobilizations on the Internet". Sociological Research Online 15, n. 2 (maggio 2010): 116–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.5153/sro.2152.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
This paper describes the emergence of new activist groups in the health sector, spinning off from internet discussion groups. In the first part, it shows how self-help discussion groups can be considered as communities of practice in which, partly thanks to the Internet media, collective learning activities result in the constitution of experiencial knowledge, the appropriation of exogenous sources of knowledge, including medical knoweldge and the articulation of these different sources of knowledge in some lay expertise. In the second part, it describes how activist groups might emerge from these discussion groups and develop specific modes of action drawing upon the forms of expertise constituted through the Internet groups. Activists groups together with self-help groups might form epistemic communities ( HAAS 1992 ), i.e. groups of experts engaged in a policy enterprise in which knowledge plays a major role : in the confrontation of health activists with professionals, the capacity to translate political claims into the langage of science appears as a condition to be (even) heard and be taken into consideration.
31

DeJordy, Rich, Maureen Scully, Marc J. Ventresca e W. E. Douglas Creed. "Inhabited Ecosystems: Propelling Transformative Social Change Between and Through Organizations". Administrative Science Quarterly 65, n. 4 (7 febbraio 2020): 931–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0001839219899613.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
Two research streams examine how social movements operate both “in and around” organizations. We probe the empirical spaces between these streams, asking how activism situated in multi-organizational contexts contributes to transformative social change. By exploring activities in the mid-1990s related to advocacy for domestic partner benefits at 24 organizations in Minneapolis–St. Paul, Minnesota, we develop the concept of inhabited ecosystems to explore the relational processes by which employee activists advance change. These activists faced a variety of structural opportunities and restraints, and we identify five mechanisms that sustained their efforts during protracted contestation: learning even from thwarted activism, borrowing from one another’s more or less radical approaches, helping one another avoid the traps of stagnation, fostering solidarity and ecosystem capabilities, and collaboratively expanding the social movement domain. We thus reveal how activism situated in multi-organizational contexts animates an inhabited ecosystem of challengers that propels change efforts “between and through” organizations. These efforts, even when exploratory or incomplete, generate an ecosystem’s capacity to sustain, resource, and even reshape the larger transformative social change effort.
32

Groves, Julian McAllister. "Learning to Feel: The Neglected Sociology of Social Movements". Sociological Review 43, n. 3 (agosto 1995): 435–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-954x.1995.tb00610.x.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
This paper discusses the experience and ideology of emotions among animal rights activists, and more broadly, the applicability of the sociology of emotions to the field of social movements. I examine the case of a social movement which relies heavily on empathy in its initial recruitment, and which has been derisively labeled by outsiders as ‘emotional’. I explain recruitment to animal rights activism by showing how activists develop a ‘vocabulary of emotions’ to rationalize their participation to others and themselves, along with managing the emotional tone of the movement by limiting the kinds of people who can take part in debates about animal cruelty. The interactive nature in which emotions develop in social movements is stressed over previous approaches to emotions in the social movement literature, which treat emotions as impulsive or irrational.
33

Scharff, Christina. "Creating Content for Instagram: Digital Feminist Activism and the Politics of Class". Astrolabio, n. 31 (28 luglio 2023): 152–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.55441/1668.7515.n31.39411.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
This article explores some of the classed dynamics of doing digital feminist activism. Based on 30 qualitative in-depth interviews with feminist activists, who are based in Germany and the UK, the article examines the ways in which class background and class inequalities shape feminists’ experiences of being politically active on Instagram. Taking Instagram’s visual focus as a starting point for analysis, the article demonstrates the know-how and editorial skills required to produce visually appealing content. Access to this form of expertise is not equally available, however, and class background affects —though does not determine— who feels confident and at ease in producing visually engaging content. Shifting to a different set of knowledges, the second part of the article homes in on a widely shared sense amongst the activists that they had to know and say the “right” things when taking part in activism online. Self-education was deemed an important feature of doing digital feminist activism, and this article critically explores the classed, but also racialised politics of digital “learning cultures”, and the ways in which the apparent requirement “to know” may have exclusionary effects.
34

Sahu, Sanjib, Nagarajan Shyama, Maulik Chokshi, Tushar Mokashi, Satyabhushan Dash, Taruna Sharma, Amrita Pal, Akshata Gupta e Gautam Saxena. "Effectiveness of Supply Chain Planning in Ensuring Availability of CD/NCD Drugs in Non-Metropolitan and Rural Public Health System". Journal of Health Management 24, n. 1 (16 febbraio 2022): 132–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/09720634221078064.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
Several studies have reported on the shortage of drugs with the changing demographic and disease profile, especially triggered by the growing burden of lifestyle diseases. However, very few have evaluated the demand-side challenges from the objective of universalisation of healthcare. Therefore, this study was designed to evaluate the factors that have impeded access to affordable generic and essential drugs in non-metropolitan urban and rural India. The study was conducted in six states and responses were elicited from a sample of doctors, pharmacists, nurses, accredited social health activist (ASHA) workers, state officials, warehouse managers and patients across the study states. The study reveals that while the acceptance of prescribing generic drugs has improved over the last decade, the use of branded drugs has been restricted only to complex cases or where generic drug efficacy has not been established. The centralised procurement efficiencies seem to have hit a plateau in terms of assuring drug availability to the last mile, thereby impacting local purchase, especially pandemic procurement. Most states have also established dedicated corporations for drug procurement, albeit at different levels of organisational maturity as far as adherence to the processes and systems are concerned. However, supply chain phenomena like the bullwhip effect gets accentuated given the levels of our public health system. Learnings from other consumer-facing sectors with similar challenges of increased variability and uncertainty are yet to be explored for the health sector to leapfrog towards achieving improved ‘drug availability’ or ‘zero stock-out’. Standardising drug categories, regular updating of the essential drug list (EDL) reflecting the demographic and disease profile, various practices like complete digitisation, rolling forecasts, stock-keeping unit rationalisation, flexible public procurement contracts, etc., have been explored as potential solutions in this paper. Creating a dedicated team of forecasters within the procurement organisations, well adept at using analytics, could be key to real-time demand estimation, paving the way for a quarterly rolling forecast to facilitate procurement using well-designed rate contracts with suppliers that captures variability in such rolling forecasts.
35

Burt, Jane. "Research for the People, by the People: The Political Practice of Cognitive Justice and Transformative Learning in Environmental Social Movements". Sustainability 11, n. 20 (12 ottobre 2019): 5611. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su11205611.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
This paper describes how Changing Practice courses, developed by environmental activists in South Africa and based on social learning practice, have seeded cognitive justice action. For the educator-activists who facilitated these courses, it became apparent that we needed a bold emancipatory pedagogy which included cognitive justice issues. This enabled us and the activist-researcher participants to understand the extent to which local, indigenous, and spiritual knowledge had been excluded from water governance. The paper investigates how participants in the ‘Water and Tradition’ change project, established by the Vaal Environmental Justice Alliance (VEJA, engaged with cognitive justice, to demonstrate how African spiritual practice offers a re-visioning of the natural world. Finally, using the tools of critical realist theory, the paper reviews how VEJA bring about transformative social action through their participation in the Changing Practice course.
36

Lammert, Catherine. "Preservice Literacy Teachers “Bringing Hope Back” Through Practice-Based Research". Literacy Research: Theory, Method, and Practice 69, n. 1 (8 luglio 2020): 230–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2381336920937263.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
This descriptive case study explored literacy preservice teachers’ (PTs) learning for the use of practice-based research and the impact of research experiences on their literacy teaching. This project spanned two courses and two contexts: a learning and development course focused on PTs’ stance as inquirers, activists, and practice-based researchers, with work in a field placement classroom, and a reading methods course, focused on literacy teaching through inquiry and activism, with a mediated literacy mentoring experience. The researcher employed framings of communities of practice and transformative activism in analyzing PTs’ identity development as researchers, identifying resources and design features that supported PTs’ learning, and understanding connections between PTs’ stances as inquirers and use of inquiry as literacy curriculum. Findings indicate the ongoing identity development PTs experienced as they used practice-based research to envision and enact transformative possibilities in literacy teaching.
37

Cortes, Krista L. "AfroBoriqua Mothering: Teaching/Learning Blackness in a Bay Area AfroPuerto Rican Community of Practice". Journal of Ethnic and Cultural Studies 7, n. 2 (5 luglio 2020): 127. http://dx.doi.org/10.29333/ejecs/351.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
This article puts forth the notion of Afroboriqua mothering to understand the types of conditions that allow communal, proleptic practices of blackness to exist within AfroPuerto Rican communities. Afroboriqua mothering is an act that occurs within a community of practice that queers how we understand mothering through activism that always centers blackness and anti-colonial Puerto Ricanness. Through participant-observation and a series of interviews with members of one AfroPuerto Rican community in Northern California, Afroboriqua mothering surfaced as a way to describe teaching and learning (or teaching/learning) within AfroLatinx multi-generational communities that centers blackness as an ancestral, cooperative, and activist practice.
38

Curnow, Joe, e Tanner Vea. "Emotional configurations of politicization in social justice movements". Information and Learning Sciences 121, n. 9/10 (16 novembre 2020): 729–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ils-01-2020-0017.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
Purpose This paper aims to trace how emotion shapes the sense that is made of politics and how politicization can remake and re-mark emotion, giving it new meaning in context. This paper brings together theories of politicization and emotional configurations in learning to interrogate the role emotion plays in the learning of social justice activists. Design/methodology/approach Drawing on sociocultural learning perspectives, the paper traces politicization processes across the youth climate movement (using video-based interaction analysis) and the animal rights movement (using ethnographic interviews and participant observation). Findings Emotional configurations significantly impacted activists’ politicization in terms of what was learned conceptually, the kinds of practices – including emotional practices – that were taken up collectively, the epistemologies that framed social justice work, and the identities that were made salient in collective action. In turn, politicization reshaped how social justice activists made sense of emotion in the course of activist practice. Social implications This study is valuable for theorizing social justice learning, so social movement facilitators and educators might design spaces where learning about gender, racialization, colonialism and/or human/more-than-human relations can thrive. By attending to emotional configurations, this study can help facilitate a design that supports and sustains learning for justice. Originality/value Emotion remains under-theorized and under-analyzed in the learning sciences, despite indications that emotion enables and constrains particular learning opportunities. This paper proposes new ways of understanding emotion and politicization as co-constitutive processes for learning scientists interested in politics and social justice.
39

Aedo, María Paz, e Gabriela Cabaña. "Affects, activisms and resistances facing the impacts of Capitaloceno: an embodied learning experience in Chile". Matter: Journal of New Materialist Research 1, n. 2 (24 luglio 2020): 97–122. http://dx.doi.org/10.1344/jnmr.v1i2.31971.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
The planetary transformations of Capitalocene affect us in multiple and heterogeneous forms. In this context, activisms emerging as embodied, experiential and situated manifestations of affectation. This article is an exploration of the activisms and resistances against impacts that Capitalocene -specifically, the extractivism- has had in Chilean society, from the perspective and experience of our own trajectories as global south academics and activists, committed to the entanglements that emerge constantly in the face of the impacts. Our work refers to the affects and resistances that we as authors have had the chance to experience in spaces of training and companionship of activists who resist in territories affected by the mining, agro-export and energy industry; and those who studied the Diploma in Social Ecology and Political Ecology from the Group of Agroecology and the Environment at the University of Santiago, offered between 2013 and 2017. Based on these experiences, we argue that the "affective turn" offers an indispensable perspective about hegemony, resistances and political changes in the current crisis.
40

Sadlier, Stephen T. "Care work by convocation: Activist packages on streets to pedagogical packages in schools". Global Studies of Childhood 8, n. 1 (marzo 2018): 38–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1035719x18760874.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
This portrait of activist education, drawn from a larger ethnographic study into critical literacies and teacher activism in Oaxaca, Mexico in the wake of a teacher-driven social movement, showcases the celebrating of a popular, contentious national hero, Benito Juárez. In Mexico’s poorest region, where teacher mobilization on the streets and learning strategies in schools intersect, resistance to authoritarianism and instructional compliance with officialdom often overlap. Although critical multicultural approaches advocate for teaching to reduce the achievement gap or to critique extant power structures and practices, this article locates the repositioning of a mainstream historical personage as a pedagogical package, an allegory for justice and equality. Deploying the hero as a pedagogical package, the activist teachers established democratic education, altering formal timetables and curricular maps and humanizing the formal learning spaces in school in the aftermath of intensified conflict. Celebrating a popular hero on his birthday in school is a convocation for community members, parents, teachers and students to gather. The contentious relationships between teachers and the village community softened, particularly among men, and classroom learning and street-level mobilization formed part of a continuum of teacher practice.
41

Ara, Shawkat, Md Abul Kashem Mir, Syeda Shahria Samad e Rasel Ahmed. "A comparative study on violent and aggressive attitudes and activism among students and non-students". Rajshahi University Journal of Life & Earth and Agricultural Sciences 40 (15 gennaio 2015): 15–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.3329/rujleas.v40i0.21610.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
The purpose of this study was to investigate the violent and aggressive attitudes for student activists, non-student activists and student non-activists of different educational institutions within the framework of socio-cultural background. The study has been developed under the theoretical interpretation of biological theory of aggression and violence, and social learning theory of aggression and violence. It uses a multidimensional co relational approach with a criterion group design.The study was conducted into two phases. In the first phase criterion groups of student activists, non student activists and student non activists were selected on the basis of an activism criteria questionnaire. To achieve the goal 360 respondents was equally taken from student activists, non-student activists and student non-activists. Each sample group was sub-divided into upper middle and lower middle SES background. The violent and aggressive attitudes composed of five dimensions– such as political violence, social violence, institutional violence, administrative violence and sex violence in the violence - nonviolence continuum. The main objective of the present investigation was to make a comparative study of the pattern of the attitudes of student activists, non-student activists and studentnon-activists. In this Study it was hypothesized that student activists would score higher on the attitudinal variables of violent and aggressive attitudes as compared to non-student activists and student non-activists respectively. The data were analyzed to obtain Mean, SD & t-test to test hypothesis. The result revealed that student activists were found to possess higher score on the attitudinal variable of violent and aggressive attitudes as compared to non-student activists and student non-activists respectively.
42

Wuetherick, Brad. "Teaching Activism: Reflections on Developing “Leaders of Tomorrow” through Activist Approaches to Community Service-Learning". Engaged Scholar Journal: Community-Engaged Research, Teaching, and Learning 4, n. 1 (28 maggio 2018): 107–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.15402/esj.v4i1.312.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
“Educating leaders of tomorrow” is a common refrain for many in higher education around the world, but what does it mean to educate leaders of tomorrow? What would a curriculum designed to educate leaders look like across disciplines? This article explores leadership, conceptualized as the capacities (knowledge, skills, and attitudes) required for students to act as positive change agents in society, as an attribute we aim to develop in all students. It also calls on educators to consider how community service-learning grounded in activist pedagogies might provide exceptional opportunities to develop students’ capacities to be leaders across the disciplines.
43

Fazio, Michele, Aimee Zoeller, Mark F. Fernandez, Court Carney e Gustavus Stadler. "Taking the Great Leap Forwards: Teaching Woody Guthrie in the College Classroom". Journal of Working-Class Studies 7, n. 2 (24 dicembre 2022): 18–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.13001/jwcs.v7i2.7603.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
This essay explores the work of Woody Guthrie and other folk artists who have followed in his tradition of documenting working-class people’s experiences in song. In addition to outlining the creation of the Teaching Woody Guthrie Faculty Learning Collective–a group of teacher-scholars, activists, and musicians who are dedicated to collaborating across disciplines to illustrate Woody Guthrie’s relevance in today’s precarious world–the essay includes suggested curriculum to teach folk music and political activism in the college classroom.
44

Nasrullah, Arif, Saipul Hamdi e Hafizah Awalia. "Moderasi Beragama di Kalangan Aktifis Dakwah Kampus Kota Mataram-NTB". Ulumuddin: Jurnal Ilmu-ilmu Keislaman 13, n. 2 (15 dicembre 2023): 343–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.47200/ulumuddin.v13i2.1687.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
Religious moderation is an issue that always arises, especially after the reformation and the collapse of the WTC 9/11 in the United States and 2002 Bali Bombing. The Minister of Religion of the Republic of Indonesia made religious moderation a flagship program out of 7 existing programs. The research entitled Religious Moderation among Campus Da'wah Activists in Mataram-West Nusa Tenggara, seeks to explore the views of religious moderation among students, especially Campus Da'wah Activists. Campus Da'wah activists (ADK) became objects of research because ADK carried out an important preaching task. If Campus Da’wah Activists have problems in understanding their religion, the contents of their da'wah and objects of da'wah automatically contain intolerance content that can endanger security. Conversely, if the religious moderation views of the ADK are tolerant, then the content of their da'wah will be calming and constructive. This research uses a qualitative method with phenomenological approach, data obtained by observing and interviewing campus da'wah activist at 6 universities in Mataram City who are members of the Nusa Tenggara Campus Da'wah Institution Gathering Forum (FSLDK) then enriched by a documentation study. From this research it was found that Form of moderation campus da’wah activists is tolerance towards people of other religions by respecting differences in beliefs and understandings, learning and doing assignments together, gathering and organizing regardless of religious, ethnicity and class background. Some activists do not agree with some doctrines different from what they believe in, such as Shia and Ahmadiyya, even so they reject violent ways of responding to these understandings.
45

Shoemaker, Deanna. "Stepping Into Prison: Communication Activism and Pedagogy Beyond Classrooms". Cultural Studies ↔ Critical Methodologies 20, n. 5 (17 aprile 2019): 448–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1532708619843560.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
Autoethnographic methods are used to examine and reflect on my experiences over seven years as a volunteer participant and co-facilitator of communication-based workshops in prison settings. Framing practice-based discoveries as engaged scholarship, I consider the potential impact of immersive, embodied co-learning processes with inmates and the ways in which scholars, artists, and activists can help bridge divides between prisons, communities, and campuses. Situating this work within the U.S. history of mass incarceration, I argue that Alternatives to Violence Project workshops function as critical communication pedagogies that work to build community and the compassion needed to support activist movements for decarceration and social justice.
46

Gutierrez Keeton, Rebecca, Corina Benavides López e José M. Aguilar-Hernández. "“It Shaped Who I Am”: Reframing Identities for Justice Through Student Activism". Association of Mexican American Educators Journal 15, n. 1 (11 febbraio 2021): 1–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.24974/amae.15.1.414.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
On May 6, 1993, students of California State Polytechnic University, Pomona (Cal Poly Pomona [CPP]) protested what they believed was a lack of diversity on campus. Over 25 years later, this qualitative study explores the identity development of undergraduate students who led that movement, which resulted in the founding of five cultural centers at CPP in 1995. In doing so, this study adds to the growing literature on activism and Chicana/o/x and Latina/o/x identity development. Today, student-led movements shine light on continued inequities in higher education. The reframing identities for justice (RIJ) identity development model serves as a lens to explore how six students’ historical narratives offer a unique glimpse into the impact of activism on their identity development. We found participants’ identity development was influenced by (a) experiencing meaningful interactions along their developmental journeys, (b) making sense of oppression and privilege, (c) discovering praxis between previous learning and activism at CPP, and (d) building coalitions and kinship. Findings show that students act for social justice before they explore multiple identities. We conclude that activism impacts student identity development and offer recommendations for how to enhance this development to student activists, faculty, and administrators.
47

Kairė, Sandra. "Education in the Anthropocene: From Theorists towards Young Climate Activists". Acta Paedagogica Vilnensia 47 (30 dicembre 2021): 10–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.15388/actpaed.2021.47.1.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
This paper continues the scientific discussion on education in the Anthropocene and focuses on the complexity of future education from the learner’s perspective. The first part of the paper explores proposals for education in the Anthropocene from the posthumanist perspective, based on the critical remarks and ideas of different theorists, such as Annette Gough, Nathan Snaza, and Brad Petitfils. The second part focuses on the children of the Anthropocene as the reality of today’s education. The third part looks at the case of young climate activists, who can be considered to be children of the Anthropocene, and how their relationship with education is changing. Young climate activists experience doubts, distrust, and disappointment over formal education, its practice, and its future. Therefore, climate activism movements can be treated as a unique learning environment for young people that also compensates what children of the Anthropocene are missing in formal education.
48

Rasch, Elisabet Dueholm. "Hacking the System". Contention 10, n. 1 (1 giugno 2022): 65–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/cont.2022.100106.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
In this paper, I explore how teaching can be an act of activism; a way of hacking the neoliberal university. In doing so, I draw on our experiences with the course “Resistance, Power and Movements.” I argue that activist teaching not only involves teaching about issues related to social justice and resistance, but also engaged, horizontal teaching methods, as well as self-reflection. This implies a process of double contention. On the one hand, the course resists the outcome-oriented university that we work in by focusing on learning as a process and a form of reflection. On the other hand, the lecturers of the course seek to equip students with tools and knowledge to not only understand social change, but also become part of it.
49

Tilley, Elizabeth, Paul Christian, Susan Ledger e Jan Walmsley. "Madhouse". Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies: Volume 15, Issue 3 15, n. 3 (1 agosto 2021): 347–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/jlcds.2021.27.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
Until the very end of the twentieth century the history of learning difficulties was subsumed into other histories, of psychiatry, of special education and, indeed, of disability. Initiatives to enable people with learning difficulties and their families to record their own histories and contribute to the historical record are both recent and powerful. Much of this work has been led or supported by The Open University’s Social History of Learning Disability Research (SHLD) group and its commitment to developing “inclusive history.” The article tells the story of the Madhouse Project in which actors with learning difficulties, stimulated by the story of historian activist Mabel Cooper and supported by the SHLD group, learned about and then offered their own interpretations of that history, including its present-day resonances. Through a museum exhibition they curated, and through an immersive theatre performance, the actors used the history of institutions to alert a wider public to the abuses of the past, and the continuing marginalization and exclusion of people with learning difficulties. This is an outstanding example of history’s potential to stimulate activism.
50

Underhill, Helen. "Agonistic possibilities for global unlearning: Constraints to learning within global citizenship education and social movements". International Journal of Development Education and Global Learning 11, n. 2 (5 dicembre 2019): 204–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.18546/ijdegl.11.2.06.

Testo completo
Gli stili APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO e altri
Abstract (sommario):
The continued rise of populisms and divisions alongside widening inequalities nationally and globally give increasing urgency to the question of how educators and activists can respond. This article examines the possibilities that emerge from the connections between global citizenship education (GCE) and learning in social movements, both spaces where people seek to engage others in ideas of how the world is, could and should be. Drawing on Mouffe's (2005) theory of agonistic pluralism to engage conflict and emotion with possibilities for learning and unlearning, the case study reveals the significance of recognizing constraints created by histories and narrations of the 'other'. The article calls for more work on the intersections of unlearning and agonism in order to create agonistic pedagogies for activism and GCE.

Vai alla bibliografia