scholarly journals The urban class structure: class change and spatial divisions from a multidimensional class perspective

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-27
Author(s):  
Gijs Custers ◽  
Godfried Engbersen
2021 ◽  
pp. 004208592110165
Author(s):  
Patricia McDonough ◽  
Elvira J. Abrica

Bourdieu’s critical analysis of capital (BCAC) is a useful tool for unmasking how schools legitimate class structure and identifying the institutional, societal, and cultural forces that structure class reproduction and oppression. In this paper, we examine the ways educational researchers have constrained the critical application of Bourdieu’s concepts. We highlight the utility of BCAC for exposing the symbolic violence that educational systems enact upon students and families who are unfamiliar with the “culture of power.” Our purpose is to engage in a revitalized critique against the reproduction of educational inequalities and explicate how BCAC is useful toward these ends.


Author(s):  
Holly Rogers ◽  
Margaret Maytan

Considering the format, structure, and logistics of the Koru course, one is struck by how even these practical aspects of the model make it possible for students to learn the practice and skills being taught. A critical aspect of the model is the emphasis on both meditation and mindfulness-based stress-management skills. This chapter describes the structure and logistics involved in teaching Koru mindfulness. The following elements are reviewed: class structure, including the number and length of classes; recruitment; registration using the Koru teacher dashboard; communication with students; setting; structure; class commitments; and tools for teaching including the Koru mobile app.


2014 ◽  
Vol 587-589 ◽  
pp. 919-923
Author(s):  
Wen Li Li

Through a highway asphalt pavement condition survey and analysis of the main causes of disease, through material selection and grading design, the design of the treatment structure, class structure using the drainage layer, exclude the internal structure of the water surface; focused on solving the asphalt pavement water damage issues, effectively extending the life of the highway.


Author(s):  
Seán Damer

This book seeks to explain how the Corporation of Glasgow, in its large-scale council house-building programme in the inter- and post-war years, came to reproduce a hierarchical Victorian class structure. The three tiers of housing scheme which it constructed – Ordinary, Intermediate, and Slum-Clearance – effectively signified First, Second and Third Class. This came about because the Corporation uncritically reproduced the offensive and patriarchal attitudes of the Victorian bourgeoisie towards the working-class. The book shows how this worked out on the ground in Glasgow, and describes the attitudes of both authoritarian housing officials, and council tenants. This is the first time the voice of Glasgow’s council tenants has been heard. The conclusion is that local council housing policy was driven by unapologetic considerations of social class.


1983 ◽  
Vol 48 (10) ◽  
pp. 2735-2739
Author(s):  
Jiří Fusek ◽  
Oldřich Štrouf ◽  
Karel Kuchynka

The class structure of transition metals chemisorbing carbon monoxide was determined by expressing the following fundamental parameters in the form of functions: The molar heat capacity, the 1st and 2nd ionization energy, the heat of fusion, Pauling electronegativity, the electric conductivity, Debye temperature, the atomic volume of metal. Adsorption heats have been predicted for twelve transition metals.


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