Masculinity, Poststructuralism, and Recovery: Moving beyond Theory to Practice

2018 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 595-602
Author(s):  
Sean Ferkul

This article seeks to explore how poststructural theory can be applied to therapeutic spaces to evoke conversations around masculinity and identity. By breaking down complicated language and creating accessibility of ideas, poststructural theory has a variety of uses at the practical level. This article provides an entry point for how frontline workers can begin to apply poststructural language to begin exploring complicated themes of identity.

2018 ◽  
Vol 31 (S 02) ◽  
pp. A1-A25
Author(s):  
Philipp Schmierer ◽  
Sebastian Knell ◽  
Emanuelle Castelli ◽  
Antonio Pozzi
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Refky Fielnanda

Abstract: The rapid development of the number of islamic banks should be balanced with the availability of infrastructure to carry out daily operational practices. The operational tools include hardware as like as representative office, computerized system, reliable human resources and software as like as method, culture and financial and islamic banking knowledge. In terms of development of Islamic finance is the paper "Alternative Calculation of Return Shahibul Mal on Mudharabah Scheme on Bank Syariah" was written. During this calculation of return shahibul mal has not been standardized in a formula, thus causing two serious effects. First, in the theoretical level, the formula has not yet created a difficulty. Secondly, in practical level, the formula is not impressive enough to recalculate the complexity of return calculations obtained by shahibul mall, causing laziness of the community using the services of islamic bank. This paper using mathematical and arithmetic equations with the help of modeling made by the author to refine and improve the method of calculation that has been available. The purpose of this paper is to create a standard formula that facilitates the calculation of return earned by a shahibul mal in a mudaraba scheme in a islamic bank.  


2010 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 267-290 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan Currell

Showing how ‘modernist cosmopolitanism’ coexisted with an anti-cosmopolitan municipal control this essay looks at the way utopian ideals about breeding better humans entered into new town and city planning in the early twentieth century. An experiment in eugenic garden city planning which took place in Strasbourg, France, in the 1920s provided a model for modern planning that was keenly observed by the international eugenics movement as well as city planners. The comparative approach taken in this essay shows that while core beliefs about degeneration and the importance of eugenics to improve the national ‘body’ were often transnational and cosmopolitan, attempts to implement eugenic beliefs on a practical level were shaped by national and regional circumstances that were on many levels anti-cosmopolitan. As a way of assuaging the tensions between the local and the global, as well as the traditional with the modern, this unique and now forgotten experiment in eugenic city planning aimed to show that both preservation and progress could succeed at the same time.


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