Education for Aborigines

1975 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 42-54

Over the last two years Australians have become more aware through the bitter comments of Aborigines in the media that a new government cannot overnight solve problems which have been festering for more than a century. It is still possible for the National Population Inquiry Report to note in 1975 that ‘in every conceivable comparison, the Aborigines and Islanders … stand in stark contrast to the general Australian society, and also to other “ethnic” groups, whether defined on the basis of race, nationality, birthplace, language or religion. They probably have the highest growth rate, the highest death rate, the worst health and housing, and legal status of any identifiable section of the Australian population’. They also have the least schooling.

1981 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 23-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Catchpole

A number of issues critical to Aboriginal Studies Courses are extrapolated from the literature. These issues are expressed as questions important for evaluators of Aboriginal Studies Courses to ask. They may also be seen as guidelines for the construction of Aboriginal Studies Courses. In conclusion, a summary of the developed guidelines is presented.The Commission of Inquiry into Poverty (1975:183) reported of Aborigines and Islanders: …they stand in stark contrast to the general Australian society, and also to other ethnic groups whether defined on the basis of race, nationality, birthplace, language or religion. They probably have the highest death rate, the worst legal status of any identifiable section of the Australian population.The National Aboriginal Education Committee (1980:4) notes that the Australian Schools Commission Report (1975) adds that they also have the least schooling. With this in mind the NAEC, in its policy statement on Aboriginal Education (1980:3), says: Since 1788 the Aborigines of Australia have been subjected in varying degrees to an authoritarian system which has rationalised their dispossession from the land, and deprecated their cultures. This dispossession forced indigenous people from their land and from the source of their own rich cultural background and uniqueness.


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 64-91
Author(s):  
Mellie Torres ◽  
Alejandro E. Carrión ◽  
Roberto Martínez

Recent studies have focused on challenging deficit narratives and discourses perpetuating the criminalization of Latino men and boys. But even with this emerging literature, mainstream counter-narratives of young Latino boys and their attitudes towards manhood and masculinity stand in stark contrast to the dangerous and animalistic portrayals of Latino boys and men in the media and society. Utilizing a mixed-methods approach, the authors draw on the notion of counter-storytelling to explore how Latino boys try to reframe masculinity, manhood, and what they label as ‘responsible manhood.’ Counter-storytelling and narratives provide a platform from which to challenge the discourse, narratives, and imaginaries guiding the conceptualization of machismo. In their counter-narratives, Latino boys critiqued how they are raced, gendered, and Othered in derogatory ways.


Prospects ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 21 ◽  
pp. 471-490 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hamilton Cravens

In post-Darwinian times, Americans have usually thought of the national population as divided into many distinct races and ethnic groups. The notions and definitions they have used for a race and an ethnic group have varied from one age to another. Although Americans have not needed the resources of science to believe that some races and ethnic groups are superior to others, in these times science has become a powerful symbol of cultural authority. For the racist, the assistance of science has often been useful. In this essay, it is important to distinguish between the scientific discourse on race and ethnicity whose participants do not necessarily assume that groups differ in value, and that of scientific racism, whose participants might or might not be scientists, but who have consistently assumed that science proves the existence of permanent group differences and legitimates the assertion that some groups are inherently superior to others. Here we shall discuss the latter.


Sociologija ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 63 (1) ◽  
pp. 72-95
Author(s):  
Smiljana Milinkov ◽  
Dinko Gruhonjic

The paper problematizes the presence of political clientelism in the media in the Republic of Serbia. The aim of this research is to point out the examples of establishing mechanisms of clientelistic practice in the media, using the News agency Tanjug as an example. Three analytical categories, which are relevant for perceiving the problem of clientelism, have been included: regulatory framework, financial allocations from the state budget and the reporting of the news agency Tanjug. The results of the research show that the illegal functioning, the unsolved ownership issue, non-transparent financing and unprofessional reporting are characteristics of the media work of Tanjug agency. According to the law, the former state agency was scheduled to stop work by the end of 2015. However, Tanjug still, with unclear legal status and significant financial help from the state, publishes information, some of which were proven to be disinformation. The analysis of examples of unobjective and unprofessional reporting points out to the ignoring of public interest, in order to satisfy the particular interest of the governing political structure, which financially makes Tanjug?s functioning possible, in an illegal manner. This case represents a closed circle of interrelationships on the relation politics-economy-media, through which clientelism is defined, using quid pro quo practice.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 362-362 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan A. Landau ◽  
Eugen Tausch ◽  
Sebastian Böttcher ◽  
Chip Stewart ◽  
Ivana Bozic ◽  
...  

Abstract Clonal evolution in response to therapy is a central feature of disease relapse. This raises a fundamental question in cancer biology: what enables the relapse clone to replace the pre-treatment clone? In other words, is the increased fitness of the relapse clone due to a lower death rate during therapy (less sensitivity to therapy) or a higher growth rate following therapy (superior ability to compete during repopulation)? We sought to address this question in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), as its relatively indolent disease kinetics enable the study of serially collected samples from the same patient over time. We recently reported the genetic characterization of 278 samples from patients enrolled in the German CLL Study Group CLL8 trial (Nature, in press). These samples were collected prior to first therapy with FC or FCR, and studied using whole-exome sequencing (WES). From this cohort, we further analyzed by WES 59 patients (FC [n = 28] or FCR [n = 31]) at time of relapse. We found that clonal evolution is the rule rather than the exception (57 / 59 CLLs), with TP53 alterations found in relapse in 15 cases. This series constitutes a unique opportunity to dissect the clonal dynamics of treated CLL. We therefore quantified clone-specific death and growth rates by targeted deep sequencing of serial peripheral blood samples, beginning at pre-treatment and ending at relapse. Given the expected minimal mutation detection sensitivity (0.1-1%) by targeted deep sequencing, we only selected samples with >1% CLL cells by flow cytometry. Such samples were available for 23 of 59 patients, with a median of 6 samples/patient (range 3-10). Based on the mutations identified by WES in the pre-treatment and relapse samples, we designed patient-specific multiplexed assays for targeted deep sequencing (median sequencing depth - 6561). A series of normal samples were sequenced together with patient samples to account for sequencing errors. The measurements of the CLL cell fraction in the sample, by sequencing and by flow cytometry, were highly correlated (r=0.89, p<0.001). Moreover, variant allele fraction estimations, by WES and deep sequencing, were highly concordant (RMSE = 0.0894), confirming that deep sequencing provides accurate allelic fractions. Clone-specific growth rates following therapy were calculated based on the measurements taken after therapy end, following exponential growth rate calculation. To calculate the clone-specific death rate during therapy, we applied two complementary approaches. First, measurements were taken after 3 cycles of therapy and the death rate per cycle was calculated. Second, clone-specific growth rates were back extrapolated to estimate the size of the population at the end of therapy, a method we have validated with an ultrasensitive emulsion droplet sequencing approach for targeted mutation detection. We discerned different mechanisms of relapse based on whether the relapse clone harbored mutated TP53 (TP53mut) or other mutations. In CLLs where the relapse clone contained TP53mut(n=10), the TP53mut clone showed lower death rate during therapy compared with the pre-treatment TP53 wildtype (TP53wt) clone (2.4 and 3.8 median log10 reduction, respectively; P = 0.02). On the other hand, the TP53mut clone showed only modestly higher growth rates during repopulation compared with the TP53wt clone (median growth rate of 0.8%/day vs. 0.56%/day, P = 0.13). Thus, differential sensitivityto therapy plays a primary role in TP53mut clonal evolution. In contrast, in the remaining cases whose relapse clone harbored mutations other than in TP53 (e.g., NOTCH1, ATM, SF3B1), we did not find differential sensitivity (median log10 clone reduction of 3.9 for the pre-treatment clone vs. 3.8 for the relapse clone, P=0.9). The primary engine leading to takeover by the relapse clone was a median of 1.5-fold higher growth rate during repopulation compared with the pretreatment clone. These data uncover evolutionary mechanisms in a personalized fashion directly from patient samples. Complementary efforts to apply these methods to define evolutionary mechanisms with targeted therapy are well under way. Thus, precise quantitation of clone-specific fitness in the context of therapy provides the required knowledge infrastructure to design the next generation of therapeutic algorithms, to maximize overall tumor elimination, instead of merely selecting one clone over another. Disclosures Tausch: Gilead: Other: Travel support. Fink:Roche: Honoraria, Other: travel grant. Hallek:Mundipharma: Honoraria, Other: Speakers Bureau and/or Advisory Boards, Research Funding; Boehringher Ingelheim: Honoraria, Other: Speakers Bureau and/or Advisory Boards; Celgene: Honoraria, Other: Speakers Bureau and/or Advisory Boards, Research Funding; Janssen: Honoraria, Other: Speakers Bureau and/or Advisory Boards, Research Funding; Roche: Honoraria, Other: Speakers Bureau and/or Advisory Boards, Research Funding; Gilead: Honoraria, Other: Speakers Bureau and/or Advisory Boards, Research Funding; AbbVie: Honoraria, Other: Speakers Bureau and/or Advisory Boards, Research Funding; Pharmacyclics: Honoraria, Other: Speakers Bureau and/or Advisory Boards, Research Funding. Stilgenbauer:AbbVie, Amgen, Boehringer-Ingelheim, Celgene, Genentech, Genzyme, Gilead, GSK, Janssen, Mundipharma, Novartis, Pharmacyclics, Roche: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding.


2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 54-68
Author(s):  
Gulmira Mussagulova ◽  
Zulfiya Kassimova

The article is devoted to the consideration and study of the creativity of the most prominent representatives of the musical art of national ethnic groups, the role of the Assembly of the People of Kazakhstan, the identification of various criteria for the relationship of ethnic groups living in the territory of the Republic of Kazakhstan, the peculiarities of their life, way of life, spheres of life, their relationship and views on the modern State, created by the first President of the Republic of Kazakhstan – Nursultan Nazarbayev. The core of the projects completed in the period from 2012 to 2017 includes not only historical facts and materials found from the State Archives, Central Scientific Library and the National Library of the Republic of Kazakhstan, but also an overview of active participation in many events related to the Assembly of the People of Kazakhstan, to the 20th and 25th anniversaries of the Assembly of the People of Kazakhstan, associated with the considered ethnocultural centers and representatives of certain ethnic groups. Through the media, participation in international scientific and practical conferences, previously unknown facts of the studied ethnic groups were highlighted, and their relationship with the main population of the republic, their contribution to the multinational culture of Kazakhstan, which in turn confirms the prudent, orderly, and wise policy of Elbasy (The Head of the State). The authors use the following methods in the study: historical-chronological, source study, analytical, comparative, and interviewing. Since 2012, in Kazakh musicology, the musical heritage of ethnic groups inhabiting Kazakhstan has been studied. A unique opportunity for a full-fledged study of their work is presented thanks to the activities of the Assembly of the People of Kazakhstan and systematic state policy, under the leadership of the First President. In 2017, the second book, entitled "The Historical Significance of the Assembly of the People of Kazakhstan in Interethnic Cultural Integration", was published, which became a fruitful result of the research project in 2015–2017. This book is a kind of continuation of the series, which began in the previous collective monograph "The Musical Art of the People of Kazakhstan", which was published at the end of 2014 and has undergone extensive testing not only among professionals, but also among fans of the musical culture of multinational Kazakhstan. Such research projects, which were not previously carried out in the domestic humanitarian science, are significant and in demand, since before their appearance in domestic musicology there were only separate reports on the activities of cultural centers, articles in the media and on Internet sites, a brief analysis of the work of specific masters in publications devoted to the study of the history of musical art of numerous national cultures. They give only fragmentary ideas about the art of the ethnic groups in question. The relevance and insufficient elaboration of these problems served as the basis for the study "The historical significance of the Assembly of the People of Kazakhstan in interethnic cultural integration", carried out by the Department of Musicology of the M. Auezov Institute of Literature and Art of the Committee of Science of the Ministry of Education and Science of the Republic of Kazakhstan. The implementation of such a complex and significant topic for the national musical art, coverage of the activities of large cultural centers of different ethnic groups, and much more makes it possible to determine the contribution of each of them to the history of Kazakhstan's development and outline ways to preserve the traditional folklore heritage and identity. In this regard, these projects are relevant and socially and politically significant at the state level.


2020 ◽  
pp. 796-814
Author(s):  
Afu Isaiah Kunock

Cameroon has recently become a target of deadly attacks including shootings, kidnappings and suicide bombings by the Islamic insurgent group Boko Haram. Cognizant of the fact that Cameroon has not experienced anything like this since independence, the Cameroon mass media is challenged as to how to appropriately report this insurgency in a manner that will result in conflict containment and management rather than escalation. The researcher set to examine the role of the media in managing this armed conflict through the critical analysis of documents as well as interviews and observations from the theoretical perspective of framing. Framing by the media has been a very effective strategy in managing the conflict by mobilizing the national population against the sect while maintaining calm and lessening panic and anxiety. This effort by Cameroon media is highly commended although more still needs to be done.


First Monday ◽  
2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hee Jhee Jiow ◽  
Rayvinder Jit Singh Athwal ◽  
Ling Ling Chew ◽  
Muhammad Helmi Elias ◽  
Nina Lim ◽  
...  

Since its advent in the 1970s, the video game industry has superseded its film counterpart, sporting a growth rate quadrupling that of other media and entertainment sectors. In contemporary times, video gaming occupations — namely game designers, professional gamers and YouTubers — have gained prominence, bolstered by the support of the media industry and government agencies. Yet, little remains known about the perceptions of these careers from the standpoint of parents and young gamers. This dearth of knowledge thus provides an impetus for research since parents’ perceptions could arguably influence the management of their children’s video gaming consumption. Results yielded through qualitative interviews with 35 respondents revealed that parental mediation was practiced via ‘distant mediation’. This is characterised by parents ostensibly withdrawing or remaining remotely detached from their children’s video gaming whilst monitoring them from afar. When perspectives of gaming careers were further scrutinised through a comparative scope, the findings also reflected that parents and children shared accommodating attitudes toward vocations in the video gaming sector.


Author(s):  
John M. Monteiro

This chapter provides a critical analysis of the concept of ethnogenesis with new perspectives on the processes of conquest and colonization from native American voices, albeit filtered through colonial sources. A growing body of ethnohistorical literature has laid to rest the idea that the impact of contact, conquest, and European expansion can be summed up in the decimation of indigenous societies. One of the key notions prominent in these new perspectives, “ethnogenesis” has been reconfigured in an attempt to capture the articulation between endogenous patterns of change and the exogenous forces introduced by European expansion. In this sense the ethnohistorical mosaic of fixed ethnic groups that covers the post-contact map of Brazil stands in stark contrast to a constantly shifting precolonial configuration that can best be described as a kaleidoscope. This chapter argues further that an intrinsic relation exists between the ethnic and social classifications imposed by the colonial order and the formation of ethnic identities.


2009 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 305-329 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sophie Esmann Andersen ◽  
Anne Ellerup Nielsen

Studies of the city have been addressed from many different approaches such as law, political science, art history and public administration, in which the economic, political and legal status of the city have played a major role. However, a new agenda for conceptualizing the city has emerged, in which the city assumes new roles. By using stakeholder theory as a framework for conceptualizing the city, we argue that the city assumes a political-economic agenda-setting role as well as providing a stage for identity constructions and relational performances for consumers, organizations, the media, politicians and other stakeholders. Stakeholder theory allows us to conceptualize the city as being constituted by stakes and relationships between stakeholders which are approached from three analytical positions (modern, postmodern and hypermodern, respectively), thereby allowing us to grasp different stakes and types of relationships, ranging from functional and contractual relationships to individualized and emotionally driven or more non-committal and fluid forms of relationships. In order to support and illustrate the analytical potentials of our framework for conceptualizing urban living, we introduce a project which aims to turn the city of Aarhus into a CO2-neutral city by the year 2030, entitled Aarhus CO2030. We conclude that applying stakeholder theory to a hyper-complex organization such as a city opens up for a reconceptualization of the city as a web of stakes and stakeholder relations. Stakeholder theory contributes to a nuanced and elaborate understanding of the urban complexity and web of both enforced and voluntary relationships as well as the different types of relationships that characterize urban life.


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