Jill Reynolds: The Single woman: an discursive investigation
In: Ars & Humanitas: revija za umetnost in humanistiko = Journal of arts and humanities, Band 3, Heft 1-2, S. 354-357
ISSN: 2350-4218
6 Ergebnisse
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In: Ars & Humanitas: revija za umetnost in humanistiko = Journal of arts and humanities, Band 3, Heft 1-2, S. 354-357
ISSN: 2350-4218
In: Družboslovne razprave, S. 13-40
ISSN: 1581-968X
Članek povzema glavne ugotovitve sistematičnega pregleda literature o
seksualnem delu v Sloveniji, objavljene med letoma 1990 in 2020. Glavni namen
je bil zagotoviti sistematičen pregled ugotovitev predhodnih študij o poklicnih
tveganjih v seksualnem delu ter strategijah in politikah za njihovo zmanjševanje.
Rezultati kažejo, da se seksualne_i delavke_ci srečujejo s specifičnimi poklicnimi
tveganji, povezanimi s stigmo, varnostjo, politikami, zdravjem, poslom, dostopom
do storitev in zasebnim življenjem. Za njihovo zmanjševanje uporabljajo številne
strategije, zlasti je pomembno postavljanje mej strankam. Študije za izboljšanje
delovnih razmer priporočajo spremembo regulacije, informiranje različnih ciljnih
skupin ter vzpostavitev dostopnih in nestigmatizirajočih podpornih in zagovorniških programov za seksualne delavke_ce. Naš pregled poleg tega izpostavlja
potrebo po omogočanju in spodbujanju profesionalizacije seksualnega dela.
In: Journal of language and politics, Band 23, Heft 2, S. 176-196
ISSN: 1569-9862
Abstract
Studies have highlighted differences between right-wing populism in Western and Central Eastern Europe but
suggested that discourses have been converging since the so-called "refugee crisis" in 2015. This article examines this claim by
focusing on right-wing populist frames and affective communication on migration in Austria and Slovenia. Taking a
communication-centred approach, the study is based on a critical frame analysis of 70 speeches from far-right to centre-right
parties in parliamentary debates on migration between 2015 and 2019. The results show that right-wing populist discourses in the
two adjacent countries have aligned in appealing to affects, particularly to fear and in framing migration as a threat to security
and culture. Despite differences in mobilizing affects, the findings indicate a mutual alignment of right-wing populism beyond
borders, signalling a potential risk of a broader right-wing populist bloc unified by fear of migration.
In: Gender, place and culture: a journal of feminist geography, Band 23, Heft 3, S. 345-364
ISSN: 1360-0524