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Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness and the Politics of Empowerment
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This article is published in Teaching Philosophy.The article was published on 1993-11-01. It has received 5787 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Feminist philosophy & Social consciousness.read more
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Intersectionality Research for Transgender Health Justice: A Theory-Driven Conceptual Framework for Structural Analysis of Transgender Health Inequities.
TL;DR: The authors show how IRTHJ provides tools for researchers to transform the design, implementation, and interpretation of transgender health research, and they discuss implications for programs, policy, and action for transgender health justice.
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A Reflexive Lens : Exploring Dilemmas of Qualitative Methodology Through the Concept of Reflexivity / Suzanne Day.
TL;DR: Reflexivity has emerged as a central and critical concept in the methodology of qualitative social research as discussed by the authors, and exploring the concept of reflexivity in its various forms provides an entry point for understanding key dilemmas in the epistemology of qualitative methodology, qualitative research relationships, and the evaluation of qualitative research.
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Early Adolescents' Career Aspirations: A Qualitative Study of Perceived Barriers and Family Support among Low-Income, Ethnically Diverse Adolescents
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined career aspirations, perceived barriers, and family support among low-income, African American, Euro-American, Mexican American, and Mexican Immigrant early adolescents.
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Occupation-Centered Analysis of Social Difference: Contributions to a Socially Responsive Occupational Science
TL;DR: It will be shown how an occupation-centered analysis of social difference reveals the ways that occupation can be a site of both resistance to and reproduction of the social order.
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Sacrosanct or Flawed: Risk, Accountability and Gender- Responsive Penal Politics
TL;DR: This article argued that Canadian and many international discussions of gender responsive penality have substituted male normative criteria with a 'female norm' without much critical reflection on the implications of this development and its impact on women prisoners.