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Women Crossing Boundaries

Women Crossing Boundaries
Author: Oliva Espin
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 203
Release: 2013-08-21
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1135963851

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First published in 1999. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.


Women Crossing Boundaries

Women Crossing Boundaries
Author: Oliva Espin
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 214
Release: 2013-08-21
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1135963843

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First published in 1999. This book looks at the consequences of border crossings and immigration on women and their culture and sexual orientations. Espin demonstrates how deeply sexuality, language and gender affected by this large life change with the aid of 43 biographies of adolescent and adult women.


Crossing Boundaries, Building Bridges

Crossing Boundaries, Building Bridges
Author: Annie Canel
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 601
Release: 2005-08-08
Genre: History
ISBN: 1135286809

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Women engineers have been in the public limelight for decades, yet we have surprisingly little historically grounded understanding of the patterns of employment and education of women in this field. Most studies are either policy papers or limited to statistical analyses. Moreover, the scant historical research so far available emphasizes the individual, single and unique character of those women working in engineering, often using anecdotal evidence but ignoring larger issues like the patterns of the labour market and educational institutions. Crossing Boundaries, Building Bridges offers answers to the question why women engineers have required special permits to pass through the male guarded gates of engineering and examines how they have managed this. It explores the differences and similarities between women engineers in nine countries from a gender point of view. Through case studies the book considers the mechanisms of exclusion and inclusion of women engineers.


Crossing Boundaries

Crossing Boundaries
Author: Susan J. Bandy
Publisher: Human Kinetics Publishers
Total Pages: 311
Release: 1999
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 9780736000888

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An international anthology of poetry, short stories, drama, memoirs, and journalism describes the experiences of women in sports


Borders & Boundaries

Borders & Boundaries
Author: Ritu Menon
Publisher: Rutgers University Press
Total Pages: 296
Release: 1998
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780813525525

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On the sufferings of women during the partition of India in 1947; includes personal narratives.


Ecological and Social Healing

Ecological and Social Healing
Author: Jeanine M. Canty
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 188
Release: 2016-10-04
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1317273419

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This book is an edited collection of essays by fourteen multicultural women (including a few Anglo women) who are doing work that crosses the boundaries of ecological and social healing. The women are prominent academics, writers and leaders spanning Native American, Indigenous, Asian, African, Latina, Jewish and Multiracial backgrounds. The contributors express a myriad of ways that the relationship between the ecological and social have brought new understanding to their experiences and work in the world. Moreover by working with these edges of awareness, they are identifying new forms of teaching, leading, healing and positive change. Ecological and Social Healing is rooted in these ideas and speaks to an "edge awareness or consciousness." In essence this speaks to the power of integrating multiple and often conflicting views and the transformations that result. As women working across the boundaries of the ecological and social, we have powerful experiences that are creating new forms of healing. This book is rooted in academic theory as well as personal and professional experience, and highlights emerging models and insights. It will appeal to those working, teaching and learning in the fields of social justice, environmental issues, women's studies, spirituality, transformative/environmental/sustainability leadership, and interdisciplinary/intersectionality studies.


Crossing Gender Boundaries

Crossing Gender Boundaries
Author: Andrew Reilly
Publisher: Intellect (UK)
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2020
Genre: Clothing and dress
ISBN: 9781789381535

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This volume presents a collection of the most recent knowledge on the relationship between gender and fashion in historical and contemporary contexts. Through fourteen essays divided into three segments--how dress creates, disrupts, and transcends gender--the essays investigate gender issues through the lens of fashion. Crossing Gender Boundaries first examines how clothing has been, and continues to be, used to create and maintain the binary gender division that has come to permeate Western and westernized cultures. Next, it explores how dress can be used to contest and subvert binary gender expectations, before a final section that considers the meaning of gender and how dress can transcend it, focusing on unisex and genderless clothing. The essays consider how fashion can both constrict and free gender expression, explore the ways dress and gender are products of one other, and illuminate the construction of gender through social norms. Readers will find that through analysis of the relationship between gender and fashion, they gain a better understanding of the world around them.


Crossing Boundaries

Crossing Boundaries
Author: Giuseppina Marsico
Publisher: IAP
Total Pages: 405
Release: 2013-07-01
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1623963966

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This book brings in the focus on the borders between different contexts that need to be crossed, in the process of education. Despite the considerable efforts of various groups of researchers all over the World, it does not seem that traditional educational psychology has succeeded in illuminating the complex issues involved in the schoolfamily relationship. From a methodological perspective, there is no satisfactory explanation of the connection between representations and actual practice in educational contexts. Crossing Boundaries is an invitation to cultural psychology of educational processes to overcome the limits of existing educational psychology. Eemphasizing social locomotion and the dynamic processes, the book try to capture the ambiguous richness of the transit from one context to another, of the symbolic perspective that accompanies the dialogue between family and school, of practices regulating the interstitial space between these different social systems. How family and school fill, occupy, circulate, avoid or strategically use this space in between? What discourses and practices saturate this Border Zone and/or cross from one side to the other? Crossing Boundaries gathers contributions with the clear aim of documenting and analysing what happens at points of contact between family culture and scholastic/educational culture from the perspective of everyday life. This book is in itself an attempt to cross the border between the "theorizing on the borders" (and how “the outside world” and “the others” are perceived from a certain point of view) and “the practices" that characterize the school-home interaction.


Migrant Women

Migrant Women
Author: Gina Buijs
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Total Pages: 224
Release: 1993
Genre: Psychology
ISBN:

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Most of the women studied in this volume hoped to retain their original culture and lifestyle at least to some extent but found that the exigencies of being migrants and refugees forced them to examine their preconceptions and to adopt roles, both social and economic, which they would have rejected at home. This remaking of self was often a traumatic experience with serious repercussions on their relationships with their menfolk.


Crossing Boundaries

Crossing Boundaries
Author: Julie Thompson Klein
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Total Pages: 302
Release: 1996
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9780813916798

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Boundary work studies examine how boundaries of knowledge are formed, maintained, broken down and reconfigured. This text investigates the claims, activities and institutional structures that define and legitimate interdisciplinary practices.