Overview and Summary: The Year of the Nurse in 2020: Nurse Led Initiatives in Policy, Practice, and Education
In: Selected Rand abstracts: a guide to RAND publications, Band 25, Heft 1
ISSN: 1091-3734
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In: Selected Rand abstracts: a guide to RAND publications, Band 25, Heft 1
ISSN: 1091-3734
In: Middle East report: MER ; Middle East research and information project, MERIP, Band 24, S. 30-31
ISSN: 0888-0328, 0899-2851
In: Middle East report: MER ; Middle East research and information project, MERIP, Band 24, S. 30-31
ISSN: 0888-0328, 0899-2851
In: The journal of North African studies, Band 28, Heft 5, S. 1289-1292
ISSN: 1743-9345
In: Review of Middle East studies, Band 56, Heft 1, S. 150-152
ISSN: 2329-3225
In: Journal of women's history, Band 27, Heft 2, S. 182-193
ISSN: 1527-2036
In: International journal of Middle East studies: IJMES, Band 46, Heft 1, S. 172-174
ISSN: 1471-6380
Studies of public space focus disproportionately on cities. Complex and densely populated urban built environments—with their streets, plazas, institutional buildings, housing projects, markets—make concrete and visible attempts to manage difference. They also structure the ways that less powerful residents challenge and sometimes remake elites' spatial visions of the social order. The robust literature in Middle East studies on Islamic cities, colonial cities, dual cities, quarters and ethnicities, port cities, and so forth is no exception to this urban focus.
In: Journal of world history: official journal of the World History Association, Band 24, Heft 2, S. 488-491
ISSN: 1527-8050
In: International journal of Middle East studies: IJMES, Band 44, Heft 4, S. 835-836
ISSN: 1471-6380
In: Journal of women's history, Band 23, Heft 3, S. 63-88
ISSN: 1527-2036
This article investigates change and continuity in anxieties about shopping during the first half of the twentieth century in Egypt to argue that department stores and their salesclerks became critical sites for enacting and challenging new notions of sexuality and citizenship. Retail innovations, such as commission pay, display, free entry, and large commercial staffs, became understood as sexual and moral problems because department stores blurred the boundaries between classes and were public spaces where unrelated men and women could mix. These concerns about sexuality in the 1920s were recycled and amplified in the late 1940s and early 1950s when salesclerks again came under scrutiny during debates over citizenship and ethnicity. I argue that the particular way this latter debate was barnacled by the concerns of the 1920s helped to delineate the broader society's reaction to the challenges of defining Egyptian nationality.
In: International journal of Middle East studies: IJMES, Band 43, Heft 1, S. 49-74
ISSN: 1471-6380
AbstractThe specific ways that cloth—"foreign silks," "durable Egyptian cottons," and "artificial silks"—emerged as a potent and visible symbol through which to contest the relations of colonialism and establish national community in Egypt varied with the changing realities of Egypt's political economy. The country's early importation of textiles despite its cultivation of raw cotton, the growth of its state-protected local mechanized industry working long- and medium-staple cotton for a largely lower-class market, and that industry's diversification into artificial silk technologies all helped structure a shift from "foreign silks" to "the nylon woman" as tropes in popular and political discourse defining the limits of the national community and the behaviors suitable for it. Although artificial fibers considerably lowered the cost of hosiery and other goods, thereby expanding consumption, the use of synthetics like nylon rather than cotton subverted the goal of national economic unity between agriculture and industry.
In: Compensation review, Band 9, Heft 1, S. 65-80
In: Compensation review, Band 8, Heft 4, S. 64-77
In: The international journal of sociology and social policy, Band 16, Heft 9/10, S. 97-122
ISSN: 1758-6720
In this paper, a theoretical and applied understanding is brought to the study of acute myocardial infarction [AMI] care‐seeking behavior. The time between the onset of an AMI and the initiation of definitive medical care is presently the single most important factor impeding reduced mortality and improved morbidity from thrombolytic therapy. It is suggested that the acknowledged, yet relatively neglected, area of emotional response is a key element in understanding why individuals may delay seeking definitive health care services following the onset of AMI symptoms. Emotionally significant dimensions of the care‐seeking process and a model for intervention to reduce morbidity and mortality are presented.
In: Journal of broadcasting & electronic media: an official publication of the Broadcast Education Association, Band 35, Heft 3, S. 375-383
ISSN: 1550-6878