Adolescents' family obligation and activities in rural and urban Vietnam: Implications for social change

Author(s):  
Heejung Park ◽  
Bahr Weiss ◽  
Lam T. Trung ◽  
Victoria K. Ngo ◽  
Anna S. Lau
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chung Ngai Nicholas Wong

“We need a base to set down our Being and realize our possibilities (potential). A here from which to discover the world and a there to which we can return to.” (Relph, Edward. Geographical Experiences, Dwelling, Place and Environment, p.27) In China, architecture is currently employed with a focus towards rapid urbanization in the midst of globalization carried out to satisfy abstract economic goals rather than improving livelihood. This thesis asserts that architecture can serve as a support for rural migrants to aid their transition to urban life. The dynamics of urbanization is embodied in the journey of rural migrant workers who travel to cities and struggle with the disparity between rural and urban living. The lack of availability of services for migrant workers hinders them from reaching their potential. Architecture can transcend its role as merely a device for economic gain and stimulate social change. Architecture can serve as catalyst to create this here and there.


Social Change ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 004908572110120
Author(s):  
Surajit Deb

The tenth part of the Social Change Indicators series gives an account on the living conditions that work as barriers against social distancing in different states of India: This segment especially focusses on aspects, such as the percentage of households (rural and urban) that own a house, the percentage share of nuclear households (rural and urban), the mean number of persons sleeping per room in households, the percentage of households (rural and urban) in which cooking is done in a separate room, the percentage of households (rural and urban) in which water is not treated prior to drinking, the percentage of households (rural and urban) with an improved non-sharable sanitation facility and the proportion of households living in slums.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chung Ngai Nicholas Wong

“We need a base to set down our Being and realize our possibilities (potential). A here from which to discover the world and a there to which we can return to.” (Relph, Edward. Geographical Experiences, Dwelling, Place and Environment, p.27) In China, architecture is currently employed with a focus towards rapid urbanization in the midst of globalization carried out to satisfy abstract economic goals rather than improving livelihood. This thesis asserts that architecture can serve as a support for rural migrants to aid their transition to urban life. The dynamics of urbanization is embodied in the journey of rural migrant workers who travel to cities and struggle with the disparity between rural and urban living. The lack of availability of services for migrant workers hinders them from reaching their potential. Architecture can transcend its role as merely a device for economic gain and stimulate social change. Architecture can serve as catalyst to create this here and there.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 31
Author(s):  
Murale Venugopalan ◽  
Bettina Lynda Bastian ◽  
P. K. Viswanathan

Entrepreneurship has been increasingly promoted as a means to achieve women’s empowerment in the pursuit of gender equal societies by international development organizations, NGO’s as well as national and local governments across the world. Against this, the paper explores the role and influence of multi-actor engagement on successful empowerment of women based on a case study of Kudumbashree program in a regional context of Kerala, in South India. Our objective is to examine the women empowerment outcomes of the Kudumbashree initiatives, implemented within a multi-actor engagement framework supportive of women’s empowerment through capacity building and social inclusion programs. The case study demonstrates ‘how multiple-level engagements help enhance women’s development and support broad sustainable social change, in view of their sensitivity to the embeddedness of women’s agency under specific socio-political and cultural contexts’. We find that Kudumbashree programs, through its multi-actor engagement, strives for an equilibrium between social change through policy and regulatory change (top down) and social change via mobilizing the people (bottom-up). From a policy angle, the key learnings from the successful outcomes of Kudumbashree may be considered for designing rural and urban community development programs with a focus on the multidimensional empowerment as well as social and economic inclusion of women and other marginalized communities.


Author(s):  
Timothy P. Barnard

In the 1950s and 1960s Malaya/Malaysia was undergoing a tremendous amount of social change. One method of examining how this period was understood is through Malay film. A number of Malay writers and activists found work in the vibrant film industry of the Peninsula, which was centred on Singapore at the time, and proceeded to infuse many of the films with their ideas, hopes, and understandings of the society they saw around them. As part of these developments, and perhaps due to the phenomenon of repetition, blindness became a metaphor in a number of films to address the issue of modernity and tradition, and the tension between rural and urban. In films produced in the early 1950s blindness occurs among kampung-based characters, or among supporting players within the larger drama. Their blindness is usually caused or compounded by a sadness in their lives. In these films, an urban-based character attempts to arrange for an operation that will remedy the condition, but only after a character has had to deal with the underside of modernity. The use of blindness as a trope for moral/ethical failure is alien to traditional Malay culture. Thus, its use and repetition represent the external influences and ideas of modernity in Malay filmmaking of the period. While the city was frightening, it held the possibility of change for the better. Characters in these films had to deal first with the negative sides of such a life, but if they retained the positive traditional values of Malay culture, all would be well. By the early 1960s, however, after the promise of independence had transitioned to debates over merger, identity, and economic and social disruption, the metaphor of blindness had also shifted. Although technologycould cure the condition, the world that accompanied this technology was one that was unbearable. Unlike the earlier supporting characters facing a sightless life, it was now the main character who becomes blind in a manner that is violent and irreversible. It was a world that promoted selfishness and materialism. Blindness now became an act of mutilation, not a symbol of sadness but one of alienation.


Social Change ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 50 (4) ◽  
pp. 584-588
Author(s):  
Surajit Deb

The ninth part of the Social Change Indicators series gives an account of the poor and migrants in different states of India by focussing on the following aspects: Percentage of population belonging to the lowest two wealth quintiles, percentage of households (rural and urban) without any agricultural land, percentage composition of inter-state migration in India by source states, percentage composition of inter-state migration in India by destination states, per cent composition of employment as the reason for migration in inter-state out-migration of source states and the per cent unemployment rate (rural and urban) according to the usual status.


2009 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhammad Anas

Culture becomes the core and the starting point as well in building a great civilization. It includes various thinking system, cultural characteristics, social wishes, and cultural products. Ibn Khalduns concept of culture includes many more elements. Umran (culture) as human creation has a historical dimension. According to Khaldun, culture is not only a heritage from the previous culture, but also umran in becoming. Then, the principle of infisal (discontinue) becomes typical characteristics of society because the principle of separation or discontinuity views that all elements in universe are unrelated to each other. The principle of discontinuity is based on the influence of geographical condition. Besides, some sociological and cultural characteristics also influence rural and urban social lives. For Khaldun, culture is not only the heritage of the previous culture, but also umran in becoming. That is a finding of the concept of culture in designing Islamic culture in the future by considering historical aspects and factors supporting social change in Islam. This concept can be used as a reference in discussing the characteristics of Moslem society in the future and a progressive dimension of change in Islam.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Trupti Ambalal Chandalia

The main purpose of this research was to find out the mean difference between modernization and social change of rural and urban Adolescence. The total 480 sample were taken, out of 480 sample 240 were rural Adolescence & 240 urban adolescence were taken from Rajkot and Junagadh District. The research tool for comprehensive modernization, Prof. S. P. Ahluwalia & Dr. Ashok Kalia comprehensive modernization inventory (1985) was used for social change, Dr. Rama Tiwari, Agra, Miss Romapal and Miss Radha Pandey’s social change inventory used. Here Gujarati Adaption used t-test was applied to check the difference of modernization and social change. Check relation Karl-person ‘r’ method used. Result revels that significant difference in Modernization and social change with respect both rural and urban adolescence. While the co-relation between modernization and social change reveals positive significant difference. that means modernization are more so social change are more.


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