individual perspective
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2022 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Galina Boiarintseva ◽  
Souha R. Ezzedeen ◽  
Anna McNab ◽  
Christa Wilkin

PurposeThis paper aims to investigate the idiosyncratic relationships between work and nonwork among dual-career professional couples (DCPCs) intentionally without children, considering individual members' role salience, nonwork responsibilities and care or career orientation.Design/methodology/approachInterview data from 21 Canadian and American couples (42 individuals) was used to explore the research question: How do DCPCs without children perceive their work-nonwork balance?FindingsDCPCs without children are a heterogenous demographic. Some couples are career oriented, some care oriented, some exhibit both orientations, shaping their experience of work-nonwork balance. Unlike popular stereotypes, they do have nonwork responsibilities and interests outside of their thriving careers. Similar to their counterparts with children, they face conflicts managing work and nonwork domains.Originality/valueBased on theories of role salience, work-nonwork conflict, enrichment and balance, the authors suggest that analyses of work-nonwork balance should include nonwork activities other than child caring. The authors further propose that the experience of the work-nonwork interface varies according to whether couples are careerist, conventional, non-conventional or egalitarian. The study also demonstrates that work-nonwork experiences are relational in nature and should be explored beyond a strictly individual perspective.


2022 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jinghong Liu

AbstractGrowing empirical evidence reveals the dramatic expansion in the risk of in-work poverty on a global scale over the last half-century. The current article reviews research on in-work poverty, illustrates how in-work poverty developed from a regional phenomenon into a global issue, and considers recent studies that have reexamined the concept of “in-work poverty” from the original “male family head” to further call on respecting the individual perspective and gender dimension. On the one hand, few studies have provided evidence on the gendered trends in in-work poverty; women’s situation in in-work poverty has not been particularly researched, and the gender dimension is often invisible. On the other hand, the existing literature does not consider this poverty issue much in developing countries, even though this does not mean that in-work poverty in developed countries is only a “side effect.” Hence, an international comparative setting with the gender dimension is needed, and more research is required to explore this construct within the context of the developing world.


Complexity ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Chaopeng Guo ◽  
Peimeng Zhu ◽  
Feng Li ◽  
Jie Song

As an extension of cloud computing, edge computing makes up for the deficiency of cloud computing to a certain extent. Edge computing reduces unnecessary data transmission and makes a significant contribution to the real-time and security of the system due to its characteristics that are closer to the terminal equipment. In this paper, we study the problem of attention detection. Attentional concentration during some specific tasks plays a vital role, which indicates the effectiveness and performance of human beings. Evaluation of attentional concentration status is essential in many fields. However, it is hard to define the behavior features related to the variety of tasks and behaviors. To solve this problem, we propose an intelligent edge system for attention concentration analysis, eaCamera, to recognize attentional concentration behaviors of students at the edge. To make objective measurements and save the label cost, eaCamera utilizes AI approaches to find the concentration behaviors based on a behavior analysis model with two perspectives, namely, individual perspective and group perspective. Individual perspective indicates personal behavior changes in time dimension while group perspective indicates the changes of the behavior within a group behavior manner. To evaluate the proposed system, a case study is done within a primary school to evaluate student’s performance in the classroom and offer teaching advice for teachers.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary Bucholtz ◽  
Deandre Miles-hercules

As a collaboration between the two authors, this essay first addresses each author’s individual perspective on language and gender studies, particularly as it has taken shape in the US context, and then offers a jointly developed argument regarding the field’s history and trajectory. We write from the respective standpoints of our lived experiences within and beyond the academy. Mary is a white cis female-identified linguistics professor who was deeply involved in the Berkeley Women and Language Group in the 1990s and has conducted research on language and gender throughout her career, especially with respect to its intersection with race. deandre’s Black and gender-creative subjectivity substantially colours the lens through which they experience and interpret the social life of language.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rosa Luz Durán

AbstractUsing quarterly data from the 2020 Peruvian National Household Survey (ENAHO), this paper estimates the differentiated impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on a set of labor market indicators, such as labor participation, occupational categories, informality, and number of hours worked. The impacts are calculated from an individual perspective (effects on the activities of the heads of household and their spouses, distinguishing them according to sex) and also from a joint strategy perspective among the partners. The results indicate that the intersectionalities of vulnerability considered (rural/urban area, and those contained in the type of households and in the situation of single-parenting or two-parenting of household heads and their spouses) determine that women, who live in rural areas, have children and do not have a partner were the most affected by the global health crisis.


2021 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 95-122
Author(s):  
Kamil Idzikowski

The article examines selected phenomena of the so-called krautrock, i.e. West German rock music of the late 1960s and the 1970s. The analysis is based on Mark Fisher's concept of acid communism and the related issue of collective subjectivity. The author distinguishes two opposing tendencies in the music discussed, the first one being the fascination with the collective that goes back to the student protests of 1967–1968, and the second one being the (re)appreciation of individual perspective, which manifested itself e.g. in an increased interest in spirituality and a certain kind of social criticism performed from a distanced position. Focusing on the relationship between the individual and the group, the article analyzes a number of songs and albums that have received little or no attention from researchers up to now.


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