Autoeroticism
In: American anthropologist: AA, Band 96, Heft 3, S. 668-673
ISSN: 1548-1433
Wild Wheels. 1992. 64 minutes, color. A film by Harrod Blank
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In: American anthropologist: AA, Band 96, Heft 3, S. 668-673
ISSN: 1548-1433
Wild Wheels. 1992. 64 minutes, color. A film by Harrod Blank
In: Current legal issues 12
Riding or killing the centaur : reflections on the identities of legal anthropology / Franz von Benda-Beckmann -- Law and anthropology : old relations, new relativities / Carol Greenhouse -- Law and anthropology in a "glocal" world : the challenge of dialogue / Christoph Eberhard -- Cultural conflicts / Annelise Riles -- Ethnography in ordinary case law / Rebecca R. French -- From tribal Tibet : the significance of the legal form / Fernanda Pirie -- Anthropological perspectives on legal pluralism and governance in a transnational world / Anne Griffiths -- Anthropologists in the Canadian courts / Elizabeth Cassell -- Legal foundations for the recognition of customary law in the post-colonial South Pacific / Erika J. Techera -- Indigeneity and the expert : negotiating identity in the case of the Central Kalahari Game Reserve / Maria Sapignoli -- The lie of the land : suturing the jural and the ritual in Fiji, Western Pacific / Allen Abramson -- The role of social representations in the production and application of the law : a case study of property law in Senegal / Caroline Plançon -- Categories of intellectual property and biodiversity in western inspired legal cultures / Claudia Ituarte-Lima -- Indigenous peoples and the right of political autonomy in an age of global legal pluralism / Steven Wheatley -- Relating to the subjects of human rights : the culture of agency in human rights discourse / Sally Engle Merry -- Multicultural interlegality? : negotiating family law in the context of Muslim legal pluralism in the UK / Samia Bano -- Professional integrity / Richard Abel -- Discipline exchange on swaps / Marie-Andrée Jacob -- Bestia sacer and Agamben's anthropological machine : biomedical/legal taxonomies as somatechnologies of human and nonhuman animals : ethico-political relations / Robin Mackenzie -- Framing the family in late imperial China : an anthropological glance at some family cases in the conspectus of penal cases (Xingan huilan) / Françoise Lauwaert -- The rules of Buddhist monks : issues of property and pollution / Malcolm Voyce
In: Osborne , J , Paget , J , Giles-Vernick , T , Kutalek , R , Napier , D , Baliatsas , C & Dückers , M 2021 , ' Community engagement and vulnerability in infectious diseases : A systematic review and qualitative analysis of the literature ' , Social Science & Medicine , vol. 284 , pp. 114246 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.114246 ; ISSN:0277-9536
The global response to infectious diseases has seen a renewed interest in the use of community engagement to support research and relief efforts. From a perspective rooted in the social sciences, the concept of vulnerability offers an especially useful analytical frame for pursuing community engagement in a variety of contexts. However, few have closely examined the concept of vulnerability in community engagement efforts, leading to a need to better understand the various theories that underline the connections between the two. This literature review searched four databases (covering a total of 537 papers), resulting in 15 studies that analyze community engagement using a framing of vulnerability, broadly defined, in the context of an infectious disease, prioritizing historical and structural context and the many ways of constituting communities. The review identified historical and structural factors such as trust in the health system, history of political marginalization, various forms of racism and discrimination, and other aspects of vulnerability that are part and parcel of the main challenges faced by communities. The review found that studies using vulnerability within community engagement share some important characteristics (e.g., focus on local history and structural factors) and identified a few theoretical avenues from the social sciences which integrate a vulnerability-informed approach in community engagement. Finally, the review proposes an approach that brings together the concepts of vulnerability and community engagement, prioritizing participation, empowerment, and intersectoral collaboration.
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