145 research outputs found

    MARTINE SEGALEN — Love and Power in the Peasant Family. Trans. by Sarah Matthews.

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    A case study of argumentation at undergraduate level in history

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    This article examines two essays by undergraduate students in the first year of study in History at a university in the UK. It also draws on documentary evidence from the department in question and interviews with the students themselves to paint a picture of the way argumentation operates at this level. While no firm conclusions can be drawn, the evidence suggests a department with a high degree of awareness of the importance of argument and argumentation in studying History; and students who are aware and articulate about the problem facing them in constructing essays in the discipline. Suggestions are made about induction into the epistemological and argumentative demands of undergraduate study

    Femmes, genre et mouvement ouvrier en France aux XIXe et XXe siècles : bilan et perspectives de recherche

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    Où en sommes-nous dans l'étude des rapports entre femmes et mouvement ouvrier en France ? A faire le bilan on remarque d'abord que ce travail a surtout porté sur la période de l'avant Première Guerre mondiale, et ce pour de bonnes raisons. Le XIXe siècle est bel et bien la période de l'essor du capitalisme industriel en France et aussi de la prolétarisation pour de nombreux ouvriers et ouvrières. C'est aussi l'âge héroïque du commencement de la revendication ouvrière, du socialisme et ..

    Fanny Gallot, En découdre. Comment les ouvrières ont révolutionné le travail et la société

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    Depuis longtemps, les historien.ne.s et sociologues ont porté leur attention sur les inégalités de genre dans les conditions de travail, les salaires, les formes diverses de résistance à l’inégalité et la participation des femmes aux grèves. Quelques-uns ont mis l’accent sur la capacité des institutions transnationales comme l’Union européenne à faire pression sur des pratiques inégalitaires au niveau national. Mais ce qui frappe dans toute cette recherche, c’est la persistance de ces inégali..

    A charitable access program for patients with lysosomal storage disorders in underserved communities worldwide

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    Background: Lysosomal storage disorders (LSDs) are rare genetic disorders, with heterogeneous clinical manifesta‑ tions and severity. Treatment options, such as enzyme replacement therapy (ERT), substrate replacement therapy, and pharmacological chaperone therapy, are available for several LSDs, including Gaucher disease (GD), Fabry disease (FD), and Hunter syndrome (mucopolysaccharidosis type II [MPS II]). However, patients in some countries face challenges accessing treatments owing to limited availability of locally licensed, approved drugs. Methods: The Takeda LSD Charitable access program aims to meet the needs of individuals with GD, FD or MPS II with the greatest overall likelihood of beneft, in selected countries, through donation of ERT to nonproft organiza‑ tions, and support for medical capacity-building as well as family support via independent grants. Long-term aims of the program are to establish sustainable healthcare services delivered by local healthcare providers for patients with rare metabolic diseases. Patients receiving treatment through the program are monitored regularly, and their clinical data and progress are reviewed annually by an independent medical expert committee (MEC). The MEC also selects patients for enrollment completely independent from the sponsoring company. Results: As of 31 August, 2019, 199 patients from 13 countries were enrolled in the program; 142 with GD, 41 with MPS II, and 16 with FD. Physicians reported improvements in clinical condition for 147 (95%) of 155 patients with follow-up data at 1 year. Conclusions: The response rate for follow-up data at 1 year was high, with data collected for>90% of patients who received ERT through the program showing clinical improvements in the majority of patients. These fndings suggest that the program can beneft selected patients previously unable to access disease-specifc treatments. Further inno‑ vative solutions and eforts are needed to address the challenges and unmet needs of patients with LSDs and other rare diseases around the world

    Illuminating Vestige: Amateur Archaeology and the Emergence of Historical Consciousness in Rural France

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    This article provides a historical ethnography of an abrupt and transient awakening of interest in Roman vestige during the 1970s in rural France, and explores its implications for comparative understanding of historical consciousness in Western Europe. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in Languedoc, and particularly the commune of Monadières, it details a vogue for collecting pottery shards scattered in a nearby lagoon that developed among local inhabitants. The article frames this as a ritualized “expressive historicity” emergent from political economic restructuring, cultural transformation, and time-space compression. It analyses the catalyzing role of a historian who introduced discursive forms into the commune for symbolizing the shards, drawn from regionalist and socialist historiography, which local people adapted to rearticulate the historicity of lived experience as a novel, hybrid genre of “historical consciousness.” These activities are conceptualized as a “reverse historiography.” Elements of historiographical and archaeological discourses—for example, chronological depth, collation and evaluation of material relics—are reinvented to alternate ends, partly as a subversive “response” to contact with such discourses. The practice emerges as a mediation of distinct ways of apprehending the world at a significant historical juncture. Analysis explores the utility of new anthropological theories of “historicity”—an alternative to the established “historical idiom” for analyzing our relations with the past—which place historiography within the analytical frame, and enable consideration of the temporality of historical experience. Findings suggest that the alterity of popular Western cultural practices for invoking the past would reward further study

    Disorders of Sex Development

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    The birth of a new baby is one of the most dramatic events in a family, and the first question is usually "is it a boy or a girl?" The newborn infant with ambiguous external genitalia often comes as a surprise for the doctors as well as the parents and is sometimes described as an endocrine emergency situation presenting a problem of sex assignment. The nomenclature such as 'intersex', 'hermaphrodite', and 'pseudohermaphrodite' is out of date as well as confusing, and many urologists are concerned that these confusing terms could be perceived to be pejorative by some affected families. In response to concerns regarding outdated and controversial terms, the Chicago Consensus held in 2005 recommended new terminology based on the umbrella term disorders of sex differentiation (DSDs). The term DSD has a comprehensive definition including any problem noted at birth in which the genitalia are atypical in relation to the chromosomes or gonads. The karyotype is used as a prefix defining the classification of DSD. DSDs are rare and complex. The optimal management of patients with DSD must be individualized and multidisciplinary, considering all aspects, including psychological care and full disclosure of alternatives relating to surgery type and timing. Although further studies are necessary to confirm guidelines and recommendations fitting for the individual patients with DSD, this article is an attempt to provide a balanced perspective for new taxonomy, clinical evaluation, and medical, surgical, and psychological management of DSD
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