5,484 research outputs found
Black ethnographic activists: Exploring Robert Park, scientific racism, The Chicago School, and FBI files through the Black sociological experience of Charles S. Johnson and E. Franklin Frazier
Charles S. Johnson and E. Franklin Frazier were successful Black sociologists from the 1920s to 1960s, working in an age of scientific racism and eugenics, who battled racial oppression, racist discrimination, and surveillance under the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Both struggled within and against the assimilationist paradigm, yet their ethnographic and critical insights speak out today with continuing relevance in the fight against practical and institutional racial injustice. This study selectively examines Johnson and Frazier's academic careers as forgotten ethnographer activists who have been largely excluded from the dominant narrative of the Chicago School of Sociology. This article argues Robert Park offered opportunities to these Black scholars although the white university system exclusively directed their work towards race studies. Furthermore, the white discipline of sociology failed to recognize Johnson and Frazier's critical ethnographic studies as part of interactionism
Subculture theory: an historical and contemporary assessment of the concept for understanding deviance
Subcultures attract attention in culture, society, and the media because they have been theorized as not merely distinct from, but aSubcultures attract attention in culture, society, and the media because they have been theorized as not merely distinct from, but also in opposition to, the dominant culture. In the United States and the United Kingdom the concept of subculture has been a major explanatory tool for sociology and criminology to understand deviant behavior. For nearly a hundred years the concept has been at the center of academic struggle for superiority between rival paradigmatic approaches, which have employed different theoretical explanations. In this article I critically assess the origins and politics of the way the concept of subculture has been applied primarily to youth cultures in terms of the relationship between agency and constraint
The formation of high-field magnetic white dwarfs from common envelopes
The origin of highly-magnetized white dwarfs has remained a mystery since
their initial discovery. Recent observations indicate that the formation of
high-field magnetic white dwarfs is intimately related to strong binary
interactions during post-main-sequence phases of stellar evolution. If a
low-mass companion, such as a planet, brown dwarf, or low-mass star is engulfed
by a post-main-sequence giant, the hydrodynamic drag in the envelope of the
giant leads to a reduction of the companion's orbit. Sufficiently low-mass
companions in-spiral until they are shredded by the strong gravitational tides
near the white dwarf core. Subsequent formation of a super-Eddington accretion
disk from the disrupted companion inside a common envelope can dramatically
amplify magnetic fields via a dynamo. Here, we show that these disk-generated
fields are sufficiently strong to explain the observed range of magnetic field
strengths for isolated, high-field magnetic white dwarfs. A higher-mass binary
analogue may also contribute to the origin of magnetar fields.Comment: Accepted to Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Under
PNAS embargo until time of publicatio
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Real-time new product development in financial services: Some managerial implications
A review of the various models of New Product Development (NPD) process shows that although different approaches have been proposed, they are in fact all variants on a linear theme: some may include feedback loops, but they all essentially advocate that certain steps precede, or are preceded by, others. An inevitable consequence on the Internet/World Wide Web (WWW or Web) is that such models are no longer applicable. Based on the lessons learned from the development of a new financial service offered via the Internet, we show how such assumptions of linearity need no longer be a constraint. In addition, innovativeness is not related to firm size. But the fact that the Web allows for the real-time development of new financial services based on on-going feedback from potential and current customers raises a new set of managerial issue that have to be tackled. The objective of this paper is to use the context of the recent launch of an innovative financial services product via the Web to explore the managerial changes that are starting to affect the banking industr
Three Dimensional Evolution of a Relativistic Current Sheet : Triggering of Magnetic Reconnection by the Guide Field
The linear and non-linear evolution of a relativistic current sheet of pair
() plasmas is investigated by three-dimensional particle-in-cell
simulations. In a Harris configuration, it is obtained that the magnetic energy
is fast dissipated by the relativistic drift kink instability (RDKI). However,
when a current-aligned magnetic field (the so-called "guide field") is
introduced, the RDKI is stabilized by the magnetic tension force and it
separates into two obliquely-propagating modes, which we call the relativistic
drift-kink-tearing instability (RDKTI). These two waves deform the current
sheet so that they trigger relativistic magnetic reconnection at a crossover
thinning point. Since relativistic reconnection produces a lot of non-thermal
particles, the guide field is of critical importance to study the energetics of
a relativistic current sheet.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures; fixed typos and added a footnote [24
Distinguishing Solar Flare Types by Differences in Reconnection Regions
Observations show that magnetic reconnection and its slow shocks occur in
solar flares. The basic magnetic structures are similar for long duration event
(LDE) flares and faster compact impulsive (CI) flares, but the former require
less non-thermal electrons than the latter. Slow shocks can produce the
required non-thermal electron spectrum for CI flares by Fermi acceleration if
electrons are injected with large enough energies to resonate with scattering
waves. The dissipation region may provide the injection electrons, so the
overall number of non-thermal electrons reaching the footpoints would depend on
the size of the dissipation region and its distance from the chromosphere. In
this picture, the LDE flares have converging inflows toward a dissipation
region that spans a smaller overall length fraction than for CI flares. Bright
loop-top X-ray spots in some CI flares can be attributed to particle trapping
at fast shocks in the downstream flow, the presence of which is determined by
the angle of the inflow field and velocity to the slow shocks.Comment: 15 pages TeX and 2 .eps figures, accepted to Ap.J.Let
Blowing Up Safety Culture: The Lure and Trap of Accident Investigation and Continuous Improvement
Safety culture is clearly recognized as an important element of any organization. This is of particular importance for high-risk industries where complex sociotechnical systems exist. In many industries a great deal of energy, time and money continues to be expended in trying to get the culture right. Active safety programs such as the Voluntary Protection Program, peer observation programs such as behavior-based safety, planned audits and inspections from a variety of bodies both internal and external to the organization, as well as audits by regulatory bodies are regularly employed. And when something bad happens there are standard protocols for investigating accidents leading to corrective actions that seek to prevent another occurrence. This coupled with the fact that for decades there have been countless programs directed at quality and continuous improvement has led to situations where we can become captured by quality and we are led away from understanding the greater situational context. In addition, a specific intervention and step-by-step approach is described that was applied to “blow up” and then reset the safety culture of an operational facility
Storying Silence: A Visual Essay
In this visual essay, I explore the concept of silence as an interpretative phenomenon. In preparation for an inquiry into instructors’ and students’ experiences of silence in class discussions, I readied myself for the study by conducting a self-study of what silence meant to me. My rationale was two-fold: a researcher acknowledges and includes biases as part of the research in interpretive inquiry, and I was at odds with how to describe the disconnect between my personal appreciation for silences and my discomfort with silence in the classroom. The obvious response is that different spaces make different demands of my thinking. However, as I allowed the dissonance of the research topic to infiltrate my quiet walking times, where normally, I cherish the opportunity to be silent, I looked at the imagery of the landscape to listen to what silence might say. Using a synesthetic process, when the words seemed elusive, I listened with my other senses to allow passageways for the language to describe the ineffable. More questions arose, naturally. Is it silence that is the ineffable or silence tells of the ineffable and that there is something interior to be heeded? Silence may yield responses if one cultivates the patience for letting it linger
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