As much of the intense political and social changes in Madagascar revolve around urban youth, who view themselves as avatars of modernity, this book argues that traditional social science offers inadequate theorizations of generational change and its contribution to broader cultural historical processes
In: Anthropos: internationale Zeitschrift für Völker- und Sprachenkunde : international review of anthropology and linguistics : revue internationale d'ethnologie et de linguistique, Band 103, Heft 1, S. 267-268
Introduction to planetary health / Jennifer Cole -- Key concepts in planetary health / Jennifer Cole -- The evolutionary biology approach : a natural baseline for human health / Jennifer Cole -- The natural capital approach : opportunities and challenges / Andrew Farlow -- The one earth approach : planetary health in an era of limits / Stephen Quilley and Katharine Zywert -- The transhuman approach : technoscience and nature / Alex Foster -- Trends in human health / Jennifer Cole -- The demographic transition / Jennifer Cole -- The epidemiological transition / Jennifer Cole -- The ecological transition / Jennifer Cole -- Agriculture : land use, food systems and biodiversity / Jennifer Cole -- Urbanization, living standards and sustainability / Jennifer Cole -- Energy use, greenhouse gas emissions and global warming / Jennifer Cole -- Environment protection : a key tool for planetary health / Jennifer Cole -- Conclusions : equity, distribution and planetary health / Jennifer Cole -- Climate change, land use and waterborne infectious disease / Janey Messina -- Sanitation, clean energy, and fertilizer / Jennifer Cole -- Trees, wellbeing, and urban greening / Alice Milner and Tim Harris -- Livestock, antibiotics, and GHG emissions / Harriet Bartlett.
Translations in kinscripts: child circulation among Ghanaians abroad / Cati Coe -- Forging belonging through children in the Berlin-Cameroonian diaspora / Pamela Feldman-Savelsberg -- Photography and technologies of care: migrants in Britain and their children in the Gambia / Pamela Kea -- Transnational health-care circuits: managing therapy among immigrants in France and kinship networks in West Africa / Carolyn Sargent and Stéphanie Larchanché -- "Assistance but not support": Pentacostalism and the reconfiguring of relatedness between Kenya and the United Kingdom / Lesli Fesenmyer -- The paradox of parallel lives: immigration policy and transnational polygyny between Senegal and France / Hélenè Neveu Kringelbach -- Men come and go, mothers stay: personhood and resisting marriage among Mozambican women migrationg to Europe / Christian Groes -- Giving life: regulation affective circuits among Malagasy marriage migrants in France / Jennifer Cole -- Life's trampoline: on nullifcation and cocaine migration on Bissau / Henrik Vigh -- From little brother to big somebody: coming of age at the Gare du Nord / Julie Kleinman -- Circuitously Parisian: Sapeur parakinship and the affective circuitry of Congolese style / Sasha Newell.
Exposure to potentially traumatic events (PTE), higher rates of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and higher distress intolerance have been associated separately with opioid misuse in clinical samples. Adult women who reported past year misuse of a prescription drug were recruited on Prolific Academic (ProA) to participate in an online survey ( n = 154). Measures included the Trauma History Questionnaire (THQ) for lifetime trauma histories, PTSD Checklist for DSM-5 (PCL-5), Distress Intolerance (DI), NIDA-Modified ASSIST, and the Drug Abuse Screening Test (DAST-10). In a multinomial logistic regression model, experiencing a potentially traumatic event involving interpersonal victimization, having higher distress intolerance, and having greater PTSD symptoms, were significantly associated with drug use class. In particular, higher distress intolerance was associated with problem opioid use relative to problem use of other drugs. Distress intolerance is a potentially salient and modifiable target for mental health and substance use interventions.
This study examined mental health and recovery needs at substance use disorder (SUD) program entry and at follow-up ( n = 2064) among: (1) women with no stalking victimization; (2) women with lifetime stalking victimization experiences; and (3) women with recent stalking victimization experiences (within 12 months of program entry). Stalking can be defined as a repeated pattern of behavior that creates fear or concern for safety or extreme emotional distress in the target. Women who experienced any stalking victimization, and particularly recent stalking victimization at program entry, had more recovery needs and increased mental health symptoms. At follow-up, women with any stalking victimization experiences continued to have more recovery needs with few differences between the lifetime and recent stalking victimization groups. Stalking victimization experiences were significantly associated with depression and anxiety symptoms in the multivariate analysis. Addressing stalking victimization during SUD treatment may be important to facilitate recovery.