Documents found
-
801.More information
Affinity tourism seems to have aroused the interest of social science researchers in recent years in connection with the rise of international migration in the context of globalization. This type of tourism questions the personal and social relationship to places established in the context of a return journey to the land of “origins.” In an attempt to understand the driving forces behind this affinity tourism, the aim of this article is to identify the images and representations of the destination “Algeria” among the children of immigrants. This type of mobility, beyond the search for a simple change of scenery, questions the nature of tourist travel and its motivations. To conduct this study, we favoured an exploratory qualitative method based on focus groups. It is a first milestone in a wider survey envisaged in order to examine in depth the motivations and mental constructions linked to this travel experience in Algeria.
Keywords: image, représentations, tourisme, expérience, tourisme affinitaire, tourisme des racines, groupe de discussion (focus group), image, representations, tourism, experience, affinity tourism, roots tourism, focus group
-
802.More information
This paper investigates the strategic narratives (SN) used by post-Soviet countries in the Security Council Open Debates on Women, Peace and Security (WPS). Drawing on the analysis of 117 diplomatic statements read in these multilateral spaces, I examine how these countries manifest their identities and national interests while actively contributing to the global WPS framework. I argue that while system and issue SN are similar among these countries, the national SN show their specificities. This is highly visible when the different dimensions of the agenda are linked to the national contexts, knowing that many of the post-Soviet countries have protracted conflicts on their territory. Overall, the paper contributes to the WPS literature and opens news ways of research by showing the theoretical and empirical relevance to pay more attention to these countries as they are significant actors in the global WPS normative architecture.
Keywords: narratifs stratégiques, Conseil de sécurité, Femmes, Paix et Sécurité, espace postsoviétique, diplomatie, Strategic narratives, Security Council, Women, Peace and Security, Post-Soviet space, Diplomacy
-
803.More information
Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a public health issue affecting a large portion of the adolescent population. As such, various prevention programs have been developed to raise awareness among young people. The SPARX program, offered in Quebec schools, uses classroom workshops to promote positive intimate relationships and prevent violence among youths. This qualitative study sought to document how young people judged the SPARX workshops and to collect their recommendations. Thirty youths (M = 15.6 years old, SD = 0.85) who had participated in these workshops reported that they appreciated the activities' energy and their potential to create important educational experiences while still sufficiently representing their real lives. These findings establish the program as a suitable pedagogical resource for sexuality education for adolescents, and help paint a picture of which concepts students consider essential for inclusion in teaching.
Keywords: éducation à la sexualité, violence dans les relations amoureuses, violence entre partenaires intimes, adolescence, prévention, évaluation de programme, sexuality education, violence in romantic relationships, intimate partner violence, adolescence, prevention, program evaluation, educación sexual, violencia en las relaciones afectivas, violencia entre parejas íntimas, adolescencia, prevención, evaluación de programas
-
804.More information
This article examines the claims of political and activist organizations in France in the late 2010s to accessibility and equal participation in the digital age. It will look at the tension between the desire to propose 'inclusive' activism, particularly through communication tools, and the actual participation of its members in a feminist collective, #NousToutes. Organized into three parts, this study will first look at the communicational organization of #NousToutes, and present the mixed qualitative approach on which the study is based. The results will be discussed in the second and third parts. The aim here is to examine how the collective can promote activism that is accessible to as many people as possible thanks to digital tools, based on the effective participation and use of its members.
Keywords: mobilisation numérique, participation, mouvement féministe, ethnographie en ligne, désengagement, WhatsApp, activisme, digital mobilisation, participation, feminist movement, online ethnography, disengagement, WhatsApp, activism
-
806.More information
AbstractReligion in the French-Indian AllianceThe religious question played an important role in the meeting between the two worlds. In Northeastern America in the 17th and 18th centuries, missionaries, shamans. and believers were confronted and mutually influenced by the conquest. organized alliances and devasting épidémies. In recreating the total social context. we avoid a history that for too long focused uniquely on missionaries and. therewith, reveal the full character of ail the actors in this historical drama.
-
809.More information
In July 1787, Paruanarimuco, the main leader of the Hupe Comanches, requested the help of Juan Bautista de Anza, the Spanish governor of New Mexico, to build a village for his followers. Such an unusual petition was readily accepted by the authorities of northern New Spain, who looked forward to setting a precedent among the heathen nomads of the frontier by turning the Hupes into a sedentary, Hispanicized people. Thus, construction of the village of San Carlos de los Jupes began on the banks of the Arkansas River, in present-day Colorado, in the summer of 1787, using Spanish funds and labor. By January of 1788, however, the Hupes abandoned the village never to return. This essay explores the founding and demise of San Carlos from an ethnohistorical perspective. I argue that the short-lived Comanche settlement was doomed to failure for diverse ecological, cultural, and geostrategic reasons.
-
810.More information
The fur trade brought together partners from two civilizations. In this context of mutual dependence, adaptations and inventions were numerous: logic of exchange and gift and counter gift, a market economy logic, a transformation of debt mechanisms, a gradual and reciprocal learning of the Other's rules, biological and cultural mixing, cultural reinterpretations, the emergence of a new people, the Métis. Nonetheless, slowly and gradually, a market economy grew and colonial political power took hold. “The Beaver does all”, even builds colonial empires. Gradually, the relationship with nature changed, over hunting chased away the animals and in symbolic fashion the beaver came close to disappearing from the continent around 1930.