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    Bulgarian sport policy 1945-1989: A strategic relation perspective

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    The 2008 Beijing Olympic Games have stimulated discussions about the success of different sport systems and the Chinese model in particular. Revisiting explanations of sport in the former communist countries of Eastern Europe during the Cold War seems timely, as the current Chinese model of sport was largely designed after the Soviet example established in this period. This paper examines Bulgarian sport policy between 1945 and 1989. It employs a Strategic Relation approach (Jessop, 1990) to analyse sport policy making as a strategic relation closely linked to the dominant state project of building a new stateness. It goes beyond ideological interpretations and argues that the state represents a strategic terrain where these relations have to be established in struggles, the outcomes of which are always uncertain. Furthermore, past and present struggles and their outcomes create various socio-political environments that presuppose the forms of state selectivity and intervention in sport. The process of constructing sport policy was influenced by two main categories of strategic relations: intra-state, including political, organisational and personal relations between the Party, state apparatus and various sport and non-sport organisations and their managers, and transnational, concerning ideological, political, economic and organisational relations with both communist and western countries and international sport organisations

    Physical Culture

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    Johnston and Klandermans (p. 3) reflect that “culture is a broad and often imprecise term but, as others have noted, at the same time intuitively apparent”. This combination of conceptual imprecision and lived intuitiveness is partly what gives rise to ambiguity around the very notion of culture—we all know it is there and somehow important, but we also often struggle to articulate precisely what the term means. Such ambiguity is also at least as prevalent when dealing with the idea of physical culture, which is an often-used term to describe a phenomenon of sociological, anthropological, historical, and philosophical interest. Across these diverse bodies of literature, ambiguity is sustained in part because of dual usage of the term physical culture in both academic and popular literature. While both are relevant, they carry important nuances in meaning and indicate a different aspect of focus, depending on the reading of the word culture. In what follows, I expand a little on these nuances

    Physical culture

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    Thesis (M.A.)--Boston Universit

    Bourdieu, feminism and female physical culture: Gender reflexivity and the habitus-field complex

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    Feminist theorizing in the sociology of sport and physical culture has progressed through ongoing and intense dialogue with an array of critical positions and voices in the social sciences (e.g., Judith Butler, R.W. Connell, Michel Foucault). Yet, somewhat surprisingly, the work of French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu—arguably one of modern sociology’s “most important voices of social critique and theoretical innovation” (Krais, 2006, p. 120)—has gone largely unheard among critical sports scholars interested in gender (notable exceptions include Atencio, Beal & Wilson, 2009; Brown, 2006; Kay & Laberge, 2004; Laberge, 1995). In this paper I introduce recent feminist engagements with Bourdieu’s original work to a critical sports sociology readership via a case study of snowboarding culture and female snowboarders. I begin by briefly examining the efficacy of three of Bourdieu’s key concepts—capital, field and habitus—for explaining gender and embodiment in snowboarding culture. I then consider how the habitus-field complex can illustrate the “synchronous nature of constraint and freedom” (McNay, 2000, p. 61) for women in contemporary physical culture

    Libre culture: meditations on free culture

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    Libre Culture is the essential expression of the free culture/copyleft movement. This anthology, brought together here for the first time, represents the early groundwork of Libre Society thought. Referring to the development of creativity and ideas, capital works to hoard and privatize the knowledge and meaning of what is created. Expression becomes monopolized, secured within an artificial market-scarcity enclave and finally presented as a novelty on the culture industry in order to benefit cloistered profit motives. In the way that physical resources such as forests or public services are free, Libre Culture argues for the freeing up of human ideas and expression from copyright bulwarks in all forms

    Community and physical culture

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    Addressing the Quality and Safety Gap Part III: The Impact of the Built Environment on Patient Outcomes and the Role of Nurses in Designing Health Care Facilities

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    Discusses the evidence-based design of facilities' physical elements to align architecture, information technology, clinical processes, and workplace culture as it relates to nursing practice, administration, and education. Includes case summaries

    Garden of Truth: The Prostitution and Trafficking of Native Women in Minnesota

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    Explores mental health needs of Native women working as prostitutes; their experience of sexual or physical violence and homelessness; use of shelters, rape crisis centers, and substance abuse treatment; and role of culture. Makes policy recommendations

    Physical Culture, Sports and children

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    The physical development of children – one of the most important aspects in lives of parents. Sport helps to develop the most important qualities: endurance, strength, agility, stamina and ability to discipline oneself. Nowadays a large amount of attention is paid to children's sports: school gyms, gaming sections, classes of gymnasticsФизическое развитие у детей – один из самых важных аспектов в жизни родителей. Спорт помогает развить самые важные качества: выносливость, силу, ловкость, стойкость и умение дисциплинировать себя. В наше время большое количество внимания уделяется именно детскому спорту: школьные тренажерные залы, игровые секции, занятия по гимнастик

    Physical culture in modern society

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    Physical education is the primary means of forming and maintaining the health of the population, that it is the main problem in modern society. State plays in the development of a healthy lifestyle among the population and a huge role has an active policy in this areaФизическая культура является основным средством поддержания и формирования здоровья у населения, что в современном обществе является основной проблемой. Государство играет в развитии здорового образа жизни у населения огромную роль и ведет активную политику в этой сфер
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