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1
A Gender Analysis of NGOs’ Advocacy and Program Reports with Respect to Child Marriage
Gaudreau-Lebel, Edith. - : Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa, 2021
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2
Reimagining linguistic landscape : online discourses of Israeli human rights organizations ...
Broome, Amy Evangeline. - : The University of Texas at Austin, 2019
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3
Reimagining linguistic landscape : online discourses of Israeli human rights organizations
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4
Artivismo y ONG: Relación entre imagen y «engagement» en Instagram
In: Comunicar: Revista científica iberoamericana de comunicación y educación, ISSN 1134-3478, Nº 57, 2018 (Ejemplar dedicado a: Artivismo. Arte y compromiso social en un mundo digital), pags. 29-38 (2018)
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Análisis lingüístico y valoración de la eficacia de los nombres de marca de las ONG españolas ; Linguistic analysis and assessment of the effectiveness of spanish ngos brand names
Tarazona-Belenguer, Nereida; Jorda-Albiñana, Begoña; Gonzalez-del-Rio, Jimena. - : Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2018
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6
The translation challenges of INGOs: professional and non-professional translation at Amnesty International
In: Tesseur, Wine orcid:0000-0003-4882-3623 (2017) The translation challenges of INGOs: professional and non-professional translation at Amnesty International. Translation Spaces, 6 (2). pp. 209-229. ISSN 2211-3711 (2017)
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7
Bosnian Women Focused Trauma NGOs Impact on Subject Formation With Regard to Health and Gender
Topalovic, Ivana. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2017
In: Topalovic, Ivana. (2017). Bosnian Women Focused Trauma NGOs Impact on Subject Formation With Regard to Health and Gender. UC Riverside: Anthropology. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/4p42t4fg (2017)
Abstract: The war in Bosnia officially ended in 1995 following outrage over the Srebrenica massacre, in which over 8,000 civilians were slaughtered over only a few days. Twenty years later, long after the foreign aid apparatus had vanished, the only two surviving Non- Governmental Organizations are focused on trauma and resilience of Bosnian women. However ,while their work began with overcoming traumatic events, locally run NGOs find themselves as grassroots organizers and support mechanism for living with austerity and the political manipulation and constant revival of trauma. The state becomes further divorced from power because the triple presidency—a separate government for each of the major ethnicities in the region—tends to cancel each other’s decision. Moreover, the support superstructure --management and funding brought in from the outside to to organizations helping with rebuilding and basic services—that was created by departing foreigners has largely been abandoned. The result is that the remaining grassroots NGOs face the continuing need with fewer or no external resources to help. The study focuses on two particular NGOs in the region, Bosfam and Medica Zenica. While both are dealing with the same issues outlined above, the communities in which they are embedded make for two very distinct approaches. Tuzla, in which Bosfam is located, has a strong tradition of worker-managed factories, based in Marxist tradition, for which Tuzla has been famous over the past 50 years through the Yugoslav exclusive worker management programs. To this day Tuzla is the least ethnically divided of Bosnia’s larger towns and cities. Zenica, where Medica Zenica operates, had little exposure to warfare: the trauma here is deindustrialization--a loss of 20,000 jobs during the war which were never regained. As the region tries to recover from the never-ending transition into a democratic civil society, Bosfam uses a return to unity through interethnic traditional female labor within the neoliberal construct of Oxfam, by selling their product and pulling themselves up out of poverty. Departure from the neoliberal model is shown in the way Bosfam conceptualized the effort as communal rather than individual support. Medica Zenica, on the other hand, provides medical and psycho-social support for the more urban community of the previously industrial town of Zenica. Their focus is on domestic violence and the perception of women within the community, courts, and politics. Both of the models tend to exclude young men and non-Srebrenica victims. Their success is seen as an affront to excluded groups and is used by politicians for divisive politics. In this setting, the NGOs created different types of subjects in dialectical relationship to the circumstances of the communities and populations served. Typically, subject formation is theorized as a top-down imposition or an institutionally created process if seen as bottom-up. The project questioned these formulations and suggests a dialectical process of community-NGO subject formation, with resultant diversity in the kinds of subjectivity created.
Keyword: Bosnia; Craft; Cultural anthropology; East European studies; NGO; Political science; Post Socialism; Trauma; Women
URL: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/4p42t4fg
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8
Estilo comunicativo súbito en Twitter: efectos sobre la credibilidad y la participación cívica
Franco Rodríguez, Oziel; Alvídrez, Salvador. - : Universidad de Huelva, 2016
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9
Estilo comunicativo súbito en Twitter: efectos sobre la credibilidad y la participación cívica
In: Comunicar: Revista científica iberoamericana de comunicación y educación, ISSN 1134-3478, Nº 47, 2016, pags. 89-97 (2016)
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10
The Analysis of Measures for Disadvantaged Groups to Carry Out Leisure Activities
In: Cross-Cultural Communication; Vol 12, No 11 (2016): Cross-Cultural Communication; 16-20 ; 1923-6700 ; 1712-8358 (2016)
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11
Sense-making, Agency, and Globalization: Local Representations of Development Encounters in Nicaragua
Love-Nichols, Jessica Amber. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2015
In: Love-Nichols, Jessica Amber. (2015). Sense-making, Agency, and Globalization: Local Representations of Development Encounters in Nicaragua. 0035: Linguistics. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/2jf529r2 (2015)
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12
NGO Translation and Translator Practices Explored Through an Ideological Lens
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13
Brokers of Power: Can Bloody Hands & Bleeding Hearts Get Along?
In: DTIC (2014)
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14
Through a Critical Sociocultural Lens: Parents’ Perspectives OF An Early Childhood Program In Guatemala
In: Master's Capstone Projects (2014)
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15
Through the Camera Lens of Development: An Exploration of NGOS' Representations of Africa
In: Master's Capstone Projects (2014)
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16
Beyond PRONADE: NGOs and the Formal Education Sector in Guatemala
In: Master's Capstone Projects (2012)
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17
Fixing Intel: A Blueprint for Making Intelligence Relevant in Afghanistan
In: DTIC (2010)
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18
The Bunong culture of silence: Exploring Bunong perspectives on participation at the interface between Bunong culture and development organisations.
Smith, Philip. - 2010
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19
Power and counter-power in a global information age: public relations and new media technologies in China
SIMA, YANGZI. - 2010
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20
Visual word proximity and linguistic for semantic video indexing and near-duplicate retrieval
In: http://vireo.cs.cityu.edu.hk/papers/cviu09_jiang.pdf (2009)
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