Documents found
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1692.More information
Keywords: immigration, régionalisation, Québec, hospitalité, territoire
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1693.More information
Keywords: immigration française, Montréal, entreprenariat, commerces
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1694.More information
Keywords: infrastructure migratoire, intermédiaires privés, migration de travail temporaire, Québec
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1698.More information
Old slang of robbers and the lawless, verlan has become a very distinctive trait of the language spoken today by French youth. As mentioned in a previous article (« Le verlan, phénomène langagier et social: récapitulatif. » in The French Review, Vol. 82, 2: 308-324, 2008) this so called language seems to be prevalent in the Parisian suburbs, better known as the cités. This article will examine how members of ethnic minorities use it in order to rebel against their cultural isolation and to affirm their own identity. We will try to show the relationship between the encoding and the use of this language as an expression of a distinct culture in relation to traditional French culture.
Keywords: Verlan, Verlan, identity, identité, Parisian suburbs, banlieues, distinct culture and social tagging, culture distincte, assignation sociale
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1699.More information
Keywords: anthology, anthologie, anthology, literature, literature, littérature, history of literature, histoire de la littéraire, history of literature, francophonie, francophonie, francophonie
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1700.More information
AbstractDrug trafficking is a poorly identified sociological object, even though its development feeds debates about crime, in France as in the majority of Western countries. This ambiguity, resulting from ideological and institutional as well as methodological factors, also translates the complexity of the social forms of trafficking, which are too often reduced to their most simple expression. Two sources of heterogeneity can be described: the heterogeneity of the trafficking on one side, and the heterogeneity of its treatment by the legal system on the other. This article discusses large scale trafficking, that is to say, the hybrid forms little explored between multinational drug trafficking and trade on the street. The author attempts to show the difference between the practices considered in their individual, organisational and social complexity, and their construction by the practices of the police officers and magistrates, including their more total interpretation in legal language, themselves determined by the evolution of the new procedures and policies.