Suchergebnisse
Filter
780 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
Toxicity of industrial organic solvents
In: Industrial Health Research Board
In: Report 80
Women's employment in aircraft-assembly plants in 1942
In: Bulletin of the Women's Bureau 192,1
Employment of women in Tennessee industries
In: (U.S. Dep. of Labor. Bulletin of the Women's Bureau 149)
Employment Conditions in beauty shops: A study of 4 cities
In: (U.S. Dep. of Labor. Bulletin of the Women's Bureau 133)
The Employment of women in offices
In: (U.S. Dep. of Labor. Bulletin of the Women's Bureau 120)
The "Ideal" Female Migrant as Grateful and Uncomplaining: Gendered Colonial Ideologies, Pre-Departure Orientation Sessions, and the #ungrateful Filipina
In: Alon: journal for Filipinx American and diasporic studies, Band 1, Heft 1
ISSN: 2767-4568
Settlement, separation and forming new families: A multi-scalar intersectional analysis of Filipino family immigration in Saskatchewan, Canada
In: Women's studies international forum, Band 83, S. 102403
Online sexual deviance, pornography and child sexual exploitation material; Sexuelle Devianz im Internet, Pornographie und Material zum sexuellen Kindesmissbrauch
In: Forensische Psychiatrie, Psychologie, Kriminologie, Band 14, Heft 3, S. 251-258
ISSN: 1862-7080
AbstractDefinitions of sexual deviance have changed over time and the more recent use of paraphilia and paraphilic disorder in the development of DSM‑5 has been met with criticism. The larger context of this discussion lies in the use of sexually explicit media (SEM), whether this can be seen as normative rather than deviant, and its relationship with sexual violence. The use of sexual media depicting children (CSEM) has been seen as a good diagnostic indicator of paedophilia, but clearly not all people who possess CSEM can be classified as paedophiles. However, possession and trading of CSEM may provide evidence of specific sexual interests and there is some evidence to suggest that there may be a potential homology between CSEM possession, victim selection and offending behaviour. The article explores how sexual interest in children is evidenced and the challenges in understanding the prevalence of these activities both in the community as well as forensic and clinical samples.
Reflections on the use of socially engaged research in the social sciences
In: Politics, Groups, and Identities, Band 8, Heft 1, S. 172-180
ISSN: 2156-5511