Pro ASP.NET Core Identity

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adam Freeman
Keyword(s):  
2016 ◽  
pp. 919-948
Author(s):  
ADAM FREEMAN
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
pp. 1035-1070
Author(s):  
Adam Freeman
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
pp. 1007-1033
Author(s):  
Adam Freeman
Keyword(s):  

2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 321-346 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ching-fang HSU

AbstractWhere does the legal profession’s identity originate from? How do we explain the intra-professional variations, as multiple legal professions diverge in their political orientations? This paper argues that the legal profession critically develops their core identity resisting incumbent rule when the state undergoes fundamental power reconfiguration. It is their political position as opposed to power in a critical juncture of state transformation that determines the legal profession’s collective ideal of who they are and what actions they take. Drawing on 133 interviews with Taiwanese judges, lawyers, and prosecutors, extensive fieldwork, and archival data up to the 1990s, this paper demonstrates how democratization shapes professional identity. As respective professions experienced different levels and models of authoritarian containment, they took separate trajectories to challenge the Kuomintang’s party-state and pledge to different normative commitments. Taiwanese judges categorically defend judicial independence, lawyers advocate for people’s rights, and prosecutors marshal under justice to check abuse of power.


Author(s):  
Andrew C. Willford ◽  
S. Nagarajan

This chapter analyzes the transformation of the plantation industry in Malaysia's commercial heartland, primarily in the state of Selangor, to understand how the bureaucratization of ethnic entitlement affected the politics of development—which in turn had economic and symbolic consequences for Tamil communities experiencing displacement. Development politics have brought about a dramatic demographic shift in the ethnic composition of Malaysia's industrial heartland. This was the intended goal all along. To develop the nation's core identity, politically constructed around Malay ethnicity and Islam, the two being increasingly synonymous, it was argued that Malays had to be united and strong—particularly at the center. In addition to reforming and thereby policing Malay identity, incentives and privileges created a culture of privilege and increasing self-rationalization of these purported entitlements.


Author(s):  
Margaret S. Mahler ◽  
Fred Pine ◽  
Anni Bergman

Author(s):  
Verity Combe

This chapter explores performance as a tool to demonstrate and negotiate contemporary conflict resolution through analysis of Facing The Enemy, the performance practice of Jo Berry and Patrick Magee. Berry is daughter of Sir Anthony Berry, Conservative MP killed in the attack on the Grand Hotel in Brighton and Magee is the former IRA member responsible for the attack. Performance theory offers a framework to assess the theatrical “performativity” of the work, raising awareness of the issues surrounding the Troubes in Britain. Performance allows them to face a personal dimension of conflict resolution while using it as a tool to explore this paradigm. I argue for the authority of a performance practice whereby the performers retain their core identity throughout, while negotiating enough to accommodate the other.


2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jayne C. Lammers ◽  
Valerie L. Marsh

This article reconsiders theoretical claims of identity fluidity, stability, and agency through a longitudinal case study investigating one adolescent’s writing over time and across spaces. Qualitative data spanning her four years of high school were collected and analyzed using a grounded theory approach with literacy-and-identity theory providing sensitizing concepts. Findings uncovered how she laminated identity positions of perfectionism, expertise, risk taking, and learning as she enacted her passionate writer identity in personal creative writing, English classrooms, an online fanfiction community, and theater contexts. Using “identity cube” as a theoretical construct, the authors examine enduring elements of a writer’s identity and the contextual positioning that occurs when youth write for different audiences and purposes. Findings suggest that adolescents approach writing with a durable core identity while flexibly laminating multiple sides of their identity cube, a reframing of identity that has implications for literacy-and-identity research.


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