Academic literature on the topic 'Mexicans – California – Social conditions'

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Journal articles on the topic "Mexicans – California – Social conditions"

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Vázquez Valenzuela, David Adán. "Trespassing Limits." Pacific Historical Review 93, no. 2 (2024): 235–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/phr.2024.93.2.235.

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This article examines the links between a political rebellion that occurred in Coahuila in 1893 and the activism that was carried out by some members of the Partido Liberal Mexicano (PLM) in the early 1900s in Southern California. It builds upon connected and transnational history to study continuities between the conflicts in the early 1890s in the Mexican countryside and the growth of discontent against the government of Porfirio Díaz. It argues that the support gained by the PLM in parts of the U.S. Southwest cannot be separated from the political experience that many of its sympathizers ha
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Voronchenko, T., E. Fedorova, and E. Gladkikh,. "Ethnocultural transformations in the annexed (1848) territories of Northern Mexico and the hypothetical future as imagined by Californian writers of the 19th and 20th centuries (Maria Amparo Ruiz de Burton, Helen Maria Hunt Jackson, Alejandro Morales)." TRANSBAIKAL STATE UNIVERSITY JOURNAL 28, no. 10 (2022): 64–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.21209/2227-9245-2022-28-10-64-72.

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The article focuses on defining the ways the 19th and 20th centuries authors presented ethnocultural transformations driven by ethnopolitical processes in the Mexican territories of Alta California annexed by the United States in 1848. The research includes the novels of the 19th-century American authors: The Squatter and the Don (1885) by Maria Amparo Ruiz de Burton, Ramona (1884) by Helen Maria Hunt Jackson; and The Rag Doll Plagues (1992) by the author of late 20th century Alejandro Morales. The object of the research is the historical reality as presented in the literature of California in
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de la Luz Ibarra, María. "The Tender Trap." Aztlán: A Journal of Chicano Studies 28, no. 2 (2003): 87–114. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/azt.2003.28.2.87.

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In this article, I analyze elder care in Southern California through the ethnographic case of Sunta Barbara. Specifically, I investigate the power-laden work relationships that exist in private homes through Mexican immigrant women’s narratives of paid care. In these narratives women say that they contest structural conditions of work, but also the care ethics imposed by employers. In so doing workers create a “tender trap” for themselves and contribute to “stratified reproduction. ” These experiences illustrate that even in dissent, human care workers of necessity may participate in the maint
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Ojeda de la Peña, Norma, and Gudelia Rangel. "Maternal health among working women: A case study in the Mexican-U.S. border." Estudios Fronterizos, no. 37-38 (January 1, 1996): 33–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.21670/ref.1996.37-38.a02.

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This work is a description of the differences in maternal health among women of the wage-earning class along the Mexican/United States border in Tijuana, Baja California. The study analyzes the specific case of women using the services of the Mexican Institute of Social Security (IMSS), breaking up the sample according to their employment and level of physical labor on the job in industrial, business, and service sectors. The study is based on information from a survey titled, "Social Conditions of Women and Reproductive Health in Tijuana".This was a post-partum survey administered to a total
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Del Hoyo, I., L. Crespo, C. García-Moro, M. Hernández, and M. Esparza. "FERTILITY PATTERN AND FITNESS OF THE SPANISH-MEXICAN COLONISTS OF CALIFORNIA (1742–1876)." Journal of Biosocial Science 48, no. 2 (2015): 192–205. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021932015000140.

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SummaryThe analysis of fertility in colonizing populations is of great interest, since its individuals experience a major environmental change, and fertility rates can reflect the level of adaptation of the population to its new conditions. Using Northrop’s genealogical compilations, this paper examines the fertility pattern of California’s early Spanish-Mexican colonists between 1742 and 1876, their fitness levels and their trend across time throughout the colonizing period. A total of 197 women from 599 compiled families who had completed their reproductive period and had at least one child
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Herrera, Juan C. "UNSETTLING THE GEOGRAPHY OF OAKLAND'S WAR ON POVERTY." Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race 9, no. 2 (2012): 375–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1742058x12000197.

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AbstractHistorical studies of the War on Poverty have overwhelmingly focused on its consequences in African American communities. Many studies have grappled with how War on Poverty innovations co-opted a thriving African American social movement. This paper explores the impact of War on Poverty programs on the development of a political cadre of Mexican American grassroots leaders in Oakland, California. It investigates how coordinated 1960s protests by Mexican American organizations reveal Oakland's changing racial/ethnic conditions and shifting trends in the state's relationship to the urban
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Hama, Mark. "Challenging Stereotypes: Prosocial Racial Humor in Luís Valdez’s Actos." Studies in American Humor 9, no. 2 (2023): 227–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.5325/studamerhumor.9.2.0227.

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ABSTRACT This article examines how Luís Valdez uses prosocial racial humor in his collection of short plays to challenge the anti-Mexican racism directed against the strikers during the 1965–1970 Delano, California, grape strike as well as to address many of the other social issues faced by the Chicano community during this period. Drawing on social psychology research on the dynamics of racial group identification and focusing on the acto entitled Los Vendidos, the article analyzes how Valdez and his Teatro Campesino created the set of conditions that allowed audience members to confront and
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Méndez Sánchez, Federico, Yuliana Bedolla Guzmán, Evaristo Rojas Mayoral, et al. "Population trends of seabirds in Mexican Islands at the California Current System." PLOS ONE 17, no. 10 (2022): e0258632. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0258632.

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The Baja California Pacific Islands (BCPI) is a seabird hotspot in the southern California Current System supporting 129 seabird breeding populations of 23 species and over one million birds annually. These islands had a history of environmental degradation because of invasive alien species, human disturbance, and contaminants that caused the extirpation of 27 seabird populations. Most of the invasive mammals have been eradicated and colonies have been restored with social attraction techniques. We have recorded the number of breeding pairs annually for most of the colonies since 2008. To asse
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Velasco Ortiz, Laura. "Escuela y reproducción social de familias migrantes: hijos e hijas de jornaleros indígenas en el noroeste mexicano / School and Social Reproduction of Migrant Families: Children of Day Laborers in Northwest Mexico." Estudios Demográficos y Urbanos 28, no. 1 (2013): 189. http://dx.doi.org/10.24201/edu.v28i1.1443.

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El presente artículo tiene como objetivo analizar la movilidad geográfica como fuente de diferenciación social. Específicamente se examinan las estrategias que siguen las familias indígenas dedicadas al trabajo agrícola temporal en el Valle de San Quintín, Baja California, para que sus hijos e hijas puedan asistir a la escuela. Las familias analizadas tienen condiciones residenciales diferenciadas, diversos grados de movilidad geográfica y están asentadas en distintos lugares de la región; pero todas desarrollan complejas estrategias que develan el entrecruzamiento de recursos familiares e ins
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Ritchie, Dr Patricio Henríquez, and Dra Miriam Álvarez. "Study habits and academic performance of Law and Education students from a State Mexican University." International Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities Invention 9, no. 08 (2022): 7148–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.18535/ijsshi/v9i08.05.

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The main objective of this research was to identify and characterize the differences in study habits based on personal and academic variables in students of two bachelor's degree (Law and Education Sciences) of Faculty of Administrative and Social Sciences (FCAYS), Autonomous University of Baja California (UABC), Mexico. The sample of this study was 347 students from both programs. The main source of data was the instrument Study Habits Inventory (SHI) which has the following dimensions: environmental conditions, study planning, use of materials, and content assimilation. Descriptive, comparat
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Mexicans – California – Social conditions"

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Apodaca, Linda M. "Mexican American Women and Social Change: The Founding of the Community Service Organization in Los Angeles, An Oral History." University of Arizona, Mexican American Studies and Research Center, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/219194.

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The Community Service Organization, a grassroots social service agency that originated in Los Angeles in the late 1940s, is generally identified by its male leadership. Research conducted for the present oral history, however, indicates that Mexican American women were essential to the founding of the organization, as well as to its success during the forty-six years it was in operation. This paper is a history of the founding of the CSO based on interviews with eleven Mexican American women and one Mexican American man, all of whom were founding members.
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Pulido, Monica Victoria. "Exploring the values, the attitudes, and the experiences of Mexican-Americans toward education." CSUSB ScholarWorks, 2003. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/etd-project/2279.

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Hale, Barbara Jean. "Ethnic identity formation and self esteem in adolescents of Mexican descent." CSUSB ScholarWorks, 2001. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/etd-project/1915.

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A survey of four classes of ELD (English language deficient) students of Mexican descent was performed at Rancho Verde High School, Moreno Valley, CA in March, 2001 in an attempt to determine whether adolescents of Mexican descent who develop an identity close to their Mexican roots have higher levels of self-esteem than those who develop an identity close to their American experience.
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Le, Texier Emmanuelle. "Immigration, exclusion et participation des Mexicains aux Etats-Unis : le barrio mexicain de San Diego (barrio Logan), Californie." Paris, Institut d'études politiques, 2004. http://www.theses.fr/2004IEPP0038.

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La recherche questionne les modèles dominants de non-participation appliqués aux exclus, en particulier aux résidents d'origine mexicaine des barrios des villes américaines. Partant d'une interrogation sur les "frontières du politique" et d'une révision des théories classiques de la participation et des concepts appliqués aux barrios latinos, nous montrons que ces approches construisent un rapport implicite entre désorganisation sociale et apathie politique. Nous déconstruisons ce lien à partir d'une réflexion théorique sur le "pré-politique" et d'une étude qualitative du barrio Logan de San D
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Lopez-Damian, Judith, and University of Lethbridge Faculty of Education. "Narratives of Latino-American immigrant women's experiences." Thesis, Lethbridge, Alta. : University of Lethbridge, Faculty of Education, 2008, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10133/732.

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This thesis explores the immigration experiences of five Latino-American women who reside in Lethbridge, Alberta. Rather than using interviews as a research protocol, the author used conversation as a tool to explore the narratives of these women’s experiences. Four of the five told their story in Spanish, and after transcribing the conversations, the author used critical inquiry to find common ground between the women’s narratives and her own immigration experiences. This thesis explores topics such as belonging and connections to different communities and how these women use stories of chang
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Celaya-Alston, Rosemary Carmela. "Hombres en Accion (Men in Action): A Community Defined Domestic Violence Intervention with Mexican, Immigrant, Men." PDXScholar, 2010. http://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/52.

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Studies suggest that knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs about domestic violence influence the behaviors of Mexican men. However, few interventions have targeted men in efforts to provide domestic violence awareness and health education to a relevant at-risk community that is also challenged by low literacy. Mexican immigrant men, particularly those less acculturated to the dominant U.S. culture, are significantly less likely to access services and more likely to remain isolated and removed from their communities and, more importantly, from their families. The purpose of this study was to explor
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Millet, Katrina Renea, and Lisa Renee Otero. "The North Shore public transportation dilemma: How local sociopolitical ideologies, ethnic discrimination and class oppression create marginalization, and a community's quest for social justice." CSUSB ScholarWorks, 2011. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/etd-project/3330.

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This research attempted to uncover the sociopolitical ideologies, ethnic discrimination, and class oppression that create sustained social dominance through resource control in the unicorporated community of the Salton Sea located in Eastern Riverside County, California in regard to public transportation issues.
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Posiviata, Susan Renee. "California women's history: A teacher resource book for the elementary social studies classroom." CSUSB ScholarWorks, 1999. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/etd-project/1636.

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Alvarez, Luis Alberto. "The power of the zoot : race, community, and resistance in American youth culture, 1940-1945 /." Thesis, Full text (PDF) from UMI/Dissertation Abstracts International, 2001. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/utexas/fullcit?p3008265.

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Powell, Kristin Elizabeth, and Eric Scott Dangermond. "Social support and its effect on the coping abilities of individuals with non-congenital physical disabilities." CSUSB ScholarWorks, 1994. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/etd-project/966.

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Books on the topic "Mexicans – California – Social conditions"

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Marisol, Montaño, ed. Otras voces: Nuevas indentidades en la frontera sur de California (testimonios). Editorial A Contracorriente, 2011.

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Vollmann, William T. Imperial. Penguin USA, Inc., 2009.

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Allensworth, Elaine Marie. The Mexicanization of rural California: A socio-demographic analysis, 1980-1997. Julian Samora Research Institute, Michigan State University, 1999.

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Vadi, José. Inter state: Essays from California. Soft Skull Press, 2021.

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Kropp, Phoebe S. California vieja: Culture and memory in a modern American place. University of California Press, 2006.

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Valdez, Robert Otto Burciaga. A framework for policy development for the Latino population: Testimony before the California Hispanic Legislative Conference. Rand, 1986.

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Valdez, Robert Otto Burciaga. A framework for policy development for the Latino population: Testimony before the California Hispanic Legislative Conference, Febr. 11, 1986. Rand Corporation, 1986.

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Vigil, James Diego. Barrio gangs: Street life and identity in Southern California. University of Texas Press, 1988.

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Andrews, V. C. Delia's geluk. De Kern, 2009.

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Andrews, V. C. Delia's heart. Thorndike Press, 2009.

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Book chapters on the topic "Mexicans – California – Social conditions"

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Arya, Diana J., Estefanía Pihen González, Devon M. Christman, et al. "Rising with the Tides of Change Through Community Based Literacies." In University-Community Partnerships for Transformative Education. Springer Nature Switzerland, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-60583-3_10.

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AbstractCommunity Based Literacies (CBL) connects faculty, undergraduates, and graduate students from the University of California, Santa Barbara, with school-age children from the central coast of California. This chapter presents an account of how our intergenerational university-community team pulled together during intersecting challenges of COVID, sociopolitical upheaval, and extreme environmental conditions to connect with and engage in meaningful experiences with our local community of youth and families. Our efforts involved major shifts from in-person to virtual explorations and colla
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Mccarty, Heather. "Blood In, Blood Out." In Caging Borders and Carceral States. University of North Carolina Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469651231.003.0009.

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The chapter offers a study of changing social relations within the prison system during the transition from 60s-era activism to gang formation in the beginning decades of mass incarceration. Between the decades of the 1960s and 1990s, California experienced a societal shift within prisons from interracial and Black Power campaigns for prisoners’ rights to the racialized balkanization and violence stemming from the rise of prison gangs and the worsening of prison conditions due to overcrowding. Within prisons, mass incarceration’s effect reshaped prison societies because the rapid growth of pri
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García, David G. "The White Architects of Mexican American Education." In Strategies of Segregation. University of California Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520296862.003.0002.

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This chapter identifies the strategies of segregation employed by White architects early in Oxnard's history, focusing on the city's first mayor and school superintendent, Richard B. Haydock. It considers Haydock's public remarks about race and Mexicans alongside his foundational contributions in designing substandard living conditions for Mexican laborers and a segregated school system for their children. Haydock, along with the other city trustees, actually contributed to the very conditions of “filth” they claimed occurred because of Mexican “ignorance.” In doing so, this chapter argues tha
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Barba, Lloyd. "Capturing the Church Familia." In Critical Dialogues in Latinx Studies. NYU Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9781479805198.003.0035.

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This chapter is set in the context of California’s agricultural empire (1920s–1950s), a time and place noted for the growth and exploitation of its migratory Mexican workforce. In places of extreme unbelonging, such as the socially disintegrating and physically trying conditions of life and labor on the agricultural labor circuit, Mexican Pentecostal farmworkers forged a sense of belonging as evidenced by the scriptural documents and photographs they produced. “Scriptures” in this chapter are taken to mean texts that forge a sense of belonging and orient one towards a larger imagined religious
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Borgonovi, Francesca, Mario Piacentini, and Andreas Schleicher. "Improving the Education and Social Integration of Immigrant Students." In Humanitarianism and Mass Migration. University of California Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520297128.003.0017.

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Migration is a shared condition of all humanity. We have all been strangers in a strange land. All humanity lives today as a result of migration, by themselves or their ancestors. Migration is a matter sometimes of choice, often of need, and always an inalienable right. All helpless people deserve to be helped. Offering such help is a commandment and a blessing shared among all religions. Accordingly, as Pope Francis reminds us, our duties to migrants include ‘to welcome’, ‘to protect’, ‘to promote’, and ‘to integrate.’ National borders are not a result of primary natural law, as aren't privat
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Sufrin, Carolyn. "Custody as Forced and Enforced Intimacy." In Jailcare. University of California Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520288669.003.0008.

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This chapter explores the phenomenon of “pastoral custody,” where safety could be achieved through a knotty entanglement of control and benevolence. It discusses Foucault's description of pastoral power, which creates the simultaneous intimacy of custody and care in jail. This form of custody acknowledges the many contradictory tasks and affects of facilitating the minutiae of inmates' daily existence. The collective space of the jail and the deputies' job description result in close and constant spatial proximity, as well as intimacy around personal bodily processes and social interactions. T
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Luhrmann, T. M. "Introduction." In Our Most Troubling Madness. University of California Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520291089.003.0001.

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The introduction lays out what we know about the social context of schizophrenia from the epidemiological literature: that risk of schizophrenia is particularly high for immigrants from predominantly dark-skinned countries to Europe; that risk increases with lower socioeconomic status at birth and even at parent’s birth; that risk increases with urban dwelling and seems to increase the longer time is spent in cities; that risk increases as ethnic density in the neighborhood declines. The chapter presents a history of the way schizophrenia has been understood in the United States, and the diagn
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Robertson, Jennifer. "Robot Visions." In Robo sapiens japanicus. University of California Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520283190.003.0001.

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A discussion of fictional and actual robots sets the stage for a working definition of robot and a description of three different types of robots: industrial, humanoid, and android. Following a synopsis of the 1920 Czech play R.U.R. (Rossum’s Universal Robots)—for which the word robot was coined—an overview of the demographic and social conditions occasioning the development of the robotics industry in Japan is provided. (R.U.R. was performed in Tokyo in 1924, sparking a robot boom.) Also previewed are religious and philosophical approaches to human-robot coexistence. Japanese and American rob
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Greenhalgh, Charlotte. "Into the Institution." In Aging in Twentieth-Century Britain. University of California Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520298781.003.0004.

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In 1958–1959 Peter Townsend interviewed almost 500 residents of old age homes for his project The Last Refuge. Townsend investigated what had changed since the Labour Government introduced new legislation for residential care in 1948. Old age homes had become symbolic of continuous state support from cradle to grave. Yet the delivery of residential care was uneven, and it divided the aged by social class and health. Meanwhile researchers, workers, and elderly people often disagreed about the ethics of aged care. Townsend drove change within these institutions. During interviews, for example, r
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Luk, Sharon. "Uses of the Profane." In Life of Paper. University of California Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520296237.003.0007.

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Chapter Six explores letter correspondence across prison walls as under-recognized mode of communal preservation in the face of publicly administered torture and genocide. This chapter shifts our perspectives on social movements by paying critical attention to ruptures in racial epistemology realized by twentieth-century liberation struggles and to interventions of the epistolary form in this context. Ultimately, this chapter argues that the life of paper constitutes a contradictory kind of creative shelter—a sacred place to foster social being, provide for its study, and generate a mode of it
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Conference papers on the topic "Mexicans – California – Social conditions"

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Kim, Tae Wook, Sean Yaw, and Anthony R. Kovscek. "Evaluation of Geological Carbon Storage Opportunities in California and a Deep Look in the Vicinity of Kern County." In SPE Western Regional Meeting. SPE, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/209340-ms.

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Abstract Geological carbon storage has a critical role to play for the US to accomplish carbon neutrality by 2050. In this work, previous studies of geological carbon storage are reviewed, redefined, and evaluated to focus on providing proper candidate storage sites in the Southern San Joaquin Basin. This study clarifies not only the CO2 capture and storage opportunity but also the potential economic benefit. A three-stage selection method is applied to a catalog of saline formations and hydrocarbon fields to qualify sites for additional in-depth study. The three stages consist of screening us
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Deng, Cynthia, and Elif Erez-Henderson. "Three ‘local repair ecologies’ : the case for place-based repair infrastructures." In 113th Annual Meeting Paper Proceedings. ACSA Press, 2025. https://doi.org/10.35483/acsa.am.113.83.

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If every region and neighborhood has a distinctive ‘repair ecology’ (as coined by scholar Steven Jackson) or local system of repair, improvisation, and material recirculation, we posit that these repair ecologies are crucial forms of infrastructure for a non-extractive future. Repair is multiscalar: it includes the repair of physical objects and structural repair, but also goes beyond the physical to include reparations, abolition, rematriation of land, repair of relationships and historical narratives, disciplinary and ecological repair. ‘Repair’ does not seek to restore past conditions, but
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Reports on the topic "Mexicans – California – Social conditions"

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Raettig, Terry L., Dawn M. Elmer, and Harriet H. Christensen. Atlas of social and economic conditions and change in southern California. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.2737/pnw-gtr-516.

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