life chances
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2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emanuela Struffolino ◽  
Hannah Zagel

This paper investigates links between social inequality and reproductive behavior. It complements the extensive research on the stratification of young adults' life chances in education and the labor market by considering changes over time in the stratification of contraceptive use at first intercourse by parental background. We seek to understand detraditionalization trends in young people’s sexually intimate behavior by investigating whether these trends were driven by particular social groups and how they were supported by policy initiatives. We study Italy from 1950-2006, which shows strong regional and socioeconomic disparities, and comparatively slow changes in religion and gender norms. Data from the “Survey on Italians’ Sexual Behavior” (2006) and macro indicators on family planning centers are used. The findings show a steep increase in contraceptive use at first sexual intercourse over time, stratified by parental background, but only for condom use. We did not find that family planning centers intervened in these relationships.


Thesis Eleven ◽  
2022 ◽  
pp. 072551362110691
Author(s):  
Anne-Maree Sawyer ◽  
Sara James

The disruptions of life in late modernity render self-identity fragile. Consequently, individuals must reflexively manage their emotions and periodically reinvent themselves to maintain a coherent narrative of the self. The rise of psychology as a discursive regime across the 20th century, and its intersections with a plethora of wellness industries, has furnished a new language of selfhood and greater public attention to emotions and personal narratives of suffering. Celebrities, who engage in public identity work to ensure their continued relatability, increasingly provide models for navigating emotional trials. In this article we explore representations of selfhood and identity work in celebrity interviews. We focus on media veterans Nigella Lawson and Ruby Wax, both of whom are skilled in re-storying the self after personal crises. We argue that interpretive capital as a peculiarly late modern resource confers emotional advantages and life chances on individuals as they navigate upheavals, uncertainties, and intimate dilemmas.


2022 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 21
Author(s):  
Zenia Hellgren ◽  
Bálint Ábel Bereményi

European history is to a significant extent also a history about racialization and racism. Since the colonizers of past centuries defined boundaries between “civilized” and “savages” by applying value standards in which the notions of race, ethnicity, culture, and religion were interwoven and imposed on human beings perceived as fundamentally different from themselves, racialization became deeply inherent in how (white) Europeans viewed the world, themselves, and others. In this Special Issue, we assume that colonialist racialization constitutes the base of a persistent and often unreflective and indirect racism. Implicit value systems according to which white people are automatically considered as more competent, more desirable, preferable in general terms, and more “European” translate into patterns of everyday racism affecting the self-image and life chances of white and non-white Europeans. In this introductory article, which defines the conceptual framework for the special issue, we contest the idea of a “post-racial” condition and discuss the consequences of ethno-racial differentiation and stigmatization for racialized groups such as Black Europeans, European Roma, and non-white migrants in general. Finally, we argue for the need to further problematize and critically examine whiteness.


2022 ◽  
pp. 349-359
Author(s):  
Lenneke Vaandrager ◽  
Lynne Kennedy

AbstractCommunities and neighborhoods have reemerged as important settings for health promotion; they are particularly effective for encouraging social processes which may shape our life-chances and lead to improved health and well-being; consequently, as Scriven and Hodgins, (2012) note, of all the settings (cities, schools, workplaces, universities, etc.), communities are the least well defined. Indeed, within the health literature, they are frequently referred to in terms of place, identity, social entity, or collective action.This chapter on communities and neighborhoods distinguishes between settings as a place (natural and built environment), identity (sense of community), social entity (cohesion, social capital), and collective action (reactive-resilience; proactive-community action) – all meaningful categories of generalized resistance resources (GRRs). Such clearly defined GRR categories would allow the study of their relative importance for developing the sense of coherence (SOC) and a newer concept – setting-specific SOC.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 13
Author(s):  
Lea Fobel ◽  
Nina Kolleck

(1) Background: The equality of life chances in Germany is often assessed along the lines of a west/east and urban/rural differentiation in which the latter usually perform worse. One currently popular proposal for addressing these inequalities is to strengthen cultural and arts education. The question arises to what extent regional characteristics genuinely influence participation opportunities and to what extent individual resources still play a decisive role. (2) Methods: Using descriptive analyses and multilevel logistic regression modelling, we investigate the distribution of and participation in non-formal cultural education amongst German youth. (3) Results: We find that differences are more complex than a simple west/east or urban/rural divides. Rather, cultural activities must be considered in terms of their character in order to assess the mechanisms at play. There seem to be differences in the dependency on district funding between very peripheral and very central districts that frame the cultural infrastructure. (4) Conclusions: Regional discrepancies are not uniformly distributed across different fields of education or infrastructure. Simplifying statements that classify peripheral regions the general losers can be refuted here. Simultaneously, more comprehensive data could yield significantly more results than we are currently able to produce.


2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 21-32
Author(s):  
Adnan Sauddin ◽  
M Ichsan Nawawi ◽  
Muhalki Muhalki

The Kaplan Meier method is one of the methods in survival analysis that is used to find out how big the chances of survival of a person suffering from a certain disease. The Kaplan Meier method calculates the patient's life by providing a definite survival proportion. The purpose of this study was to determine the relationship between age and length of treatment and patient status. The life chances of DHF patients using the Kaplan Meier method at the Lasinrang District Hospital. Pinrang. The results showed that there was no relationship between age and length of treatment as well as the status of DHF patients in Lasinrang Hospital Kab. Pinrang. The conclusion of this study is that the chance of survival of DHF patients before a patient dies is 100%. However, the chance of patient survival after 1 patient died during the observation was 99.1%. It is recommended that clinical monitoring should always be carried out, to predict the correct diagnosis of Dengue Virus Infection. And sero-epidemiological studies should continue to be carried out in many island capitals in Indonesia.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-21
Author(s):  
Clare FitzGerald ◽  
Tanyah Hameed ◽  
Franziska Rosenbach ◽  
James Ruairi Macdonald ◽  
Ruth Dixon
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
pp. 030913252110595
Author(s):  
Mark Pelling ◽  
Helen Adams ◽  
George Adamson ◽  
Alejandro Barcena ◽  
Sophie Blackburn ◽  
...  

COVID-19 recovery is an opportunity to enhance life chances by Building Back Better, an objective promoted by the UN and deployed politically at national level. To help understand emergent and intentional opportunities to Build Back Better, we propose a research agenda drawing from geographical thinking on social contracts, assemblage theory and the politics of knowledge. This points research towards the ways in which everyday and professional knowledge cocreation constrains vision and action. Whose knowledge is legitimate, how legitimacy is ascribed and the place of science, the media and government in these processes become sites for progressive Building Back Better.


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