169 research outputs found

    Racial Americanization

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    Goldberg argues that the popular contemporary recourse to the notion of “racialization,” in academic writing on race and racism, both lacks specificity and often fails to distinguish between descriptive, analytic, and normative uses. Focusing on the U.S., he contrasts racialization with racial regionalisms. As he shows the latter's application in elaborating what he calls “racial americanization,” he suggests new forms of americanized segregation, outlines the circle of presuppositions on which “racial americanization” rests, and maps global applications of the concept. Goldberg argumenta que el recurso popular contemporáneo a la noción de “racialización,” en la escritura académica sobre raza y racismo, tiene precisión de carencia y a menudo deja de distinguirse entre usos descriptivos, analíticos, y normativos. Concentrándose en los EEUU, contrasta racialización con regionalismos raciales. Cuando muestra la aplicación de éste en la elaboración de lo que llama “americanización racial,” sugiere nuevas formas de la segregación americanizada, perfila el círculo de presuposiciones que es el fondo de “la americanización racial,” y traza algunas aplicaciones globales del concepto. Goldberg argumenta que o recurso contemporâneo popular da noção de “racialização,” nos escritos académicos sobre a raça e racismo, falta indicação e frequentemente não consegue distinguir entre usos descritivos, analíticos e normativos. Ao enfocar nos Estados Unidos, ele contrasta racismo com regionalismos raciais. Mesmo quando demostra a aplicação dos regionalismos em elaborar o que chama “americanização racial,” ele sugere novas formas de segregação americanizadas, esboça o círculo de implicações sobre os quais “americanização racial” está estabelecida e traça aplicações globais do conceito. Goldberg affirme que la tendance actuelle à recourir à la notion de «racialisation», dans les écrits académiques sur les races et le racisme, n’est pas assez spécifique et bien souvent ne parvient pas à faire la distinction entre l’usage descriptif, analytique, et normatif. S’attachant particulièrement à l’étude des Etats-Unis, il établit un contraste entre la racialisation et les régionalismes raciaux. En démontrant la portée de ces derniers dans l’élaboration de ce qu’il appelle «l’américanisation raciale», il suggère l’existence de nouvelles formes de ségrégation américanisée, il expose les grandes lignes des présuppositions sur lesquelles se base «l’américanisation raciale», et dresse la carte de la mise en pratique de ce concept à travers le monde

    The Future of Thinking

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    How traditional learning institutions can become as innovative, flexible, robust, and collaborative as the best social networking sites. Over the past two decades, the way we learn has changed dramatically. We have new sources of information and new ways to exchange and to interact with information. But our schools and the way we teach have remained largely the same for years, even centuries. What happens to traditional educational institutions when learning also takes place on a vast range of Internet sites, from Pokemon Web pages to Wikipedia? This report investigates how traditional learning institutions can become as innovative, flexible, robust, and collaborative as the best social networking sites. The authors propose an alternative definition of “institution” as a “mobilizing network”—emphasizing its flexibility, the permeability of its boundaries, its interactive productivity, and its potential as a catalyst for change—and explore the implications for higher education. The Future of Thinking reports on innovative, virtual institutions. It also uses the idea of a virtual institution both as part of its subject matter and as part of its process: the first draft of the book was hosted on a Web site for collaborative feedback and writing. The authors use this experiment in participatory writing as a test case for virtual institutions, learning institutions, and a new form of collaborative authorship. The finished version is still posted and open for comment. This book is the full-length report of the project, which was summarized in an earlier MacArthur volume, The Future of Learning Institutions in a Digital Age

    The Future of Learning Institutions in a Digital Age

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    In this report, Cathy Davidson and David Theo Goldberg focus on the potential for shared and interactive learning made possible by the Internet. They argue that the single most important characteristic of the Internet is its capacity for world-wide community and the limitless exchange of ideas. The Internet brings about a way of learning that is not new or revolutionary but is now the norm for today's graduating high school and college classes. It is for this reason that Davidson and Goldberg call on us to examine potential new models of digital learning and rethink our virtually enabled and enhanced learning institutions. This report is available in a free digital edition on the MIT Press website at http://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262513593. John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Reports on Digital Media and Learnin

    Seeing red over black and white: popular and media representations of inter-racial relationships as precursors to racial violence

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    The recent murder in the UK of Anthony Walker attests to the lingering antipathy, indeed hostility, toward intimate inter-racial relationships, especially those involving black men and white women. Seventeen year-old Walker was brutally beaten then fatally assaulted with an axe to his head - the 'provocation' for the attack was this young black man’s relationship with his white girl friend. This paper assesses the historical and contemporary images and mythologies that continue to stigmatize inter-racial relationships. Specifically, we look at the representations disseminated through varied popular media forms. The paper suggests that these mediated constructs condition an environment that facilitates, if not encourages, violence against those in inter-racial relationships

    Detecting Heart Failure Decompensation by Measuring Transthoracic Bioimpedance in the Outpatient Setting: Rationale and Design of the SENTINEL-HF Study

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    BACKGROUND: Recurrent hospital admissions are common among patients admitted for acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF), but identification of patients at risk for rehospitalization remains challenging. Contemporary heart failure (HF) management programs have shown modest ability to reduce readmissions, partly because they monitor signs or symptoms of HF worsening that appear late during decompensation. Detecting early stages of HF decompensation might allow for immediate application of effective HF therapies, thereby potentially reducing HF readmissions. One of the earliest indicators of HF decompensation is intrathoracic fluid accumulation, which can be assessed using transthoracic bioimpedance. OBJECTIVE: The SENTINEL-HF study is a prospective observational study designed to test a novel, wearable HF monitoring system as a predictor of HF decompensation among patients discharged after hospitalization for ADHF. METHODS: SENTINEL-HF tests the hypothesis that a decline in transthoracic bioimpedance, as assessed daily with the Philips fluid accumulation vest (FAV) and transmitted using a mobile phone, is associated with HF worsening and rehospitalization. According to pre-specified power calculations, 180 patients admitted with ADHF are enrolled. Participants transmit daily self-assessments using the FAV-mobile phone dyad for 45 days post-discharge. The primary predictor is the deviation of transthoracic bioimpedance for 3 consecutive days from a patient-specific normal variability range. The ADHF detection algorithm is evaluated in relation with a composite outcome of HF readmission, diuretic up-titration, and self-reported HF worsening (Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire) during a 90-day follow-up period. Here, we provide the details and rationale of SENTINEL-HF. RESULTS: Enrollment in the SENTINEL-HF study is complete and the 90-days follow-up is currently under way. Once data collection is complete, the study dataset will be used to evaluate our ADHF detection algorithm and the results submitted for publication. CONCLUSION: SENTINEL-HF emerged from our long-term vision that advanced home monitoring technology can improve the management of chronic HF by extending clinical care into patients\u27 homes. Monitoring transthoracic bioimpedance with the FAV may identify patients at risk of recurrent HF decompensation and enable timely preventive measures. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT01877369: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01877369 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/6bDYl0dGy)

    Transthoracic Bioimpedance Monitoring Predicts Heart Failure Decompensation and Early Readmission after Heart Failure Hospitalization: Preliminary Data from SENTINEL-HF

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    Background: Patients, providers, and health systems are focused on reducing readmissions for patients with acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF). Readmission after hospitalization is common and often secondary to HF decompensation, but it remains challenging to identify patients at-risk. Bioimpedance is a validated marker of thoracic fluid accumulation. We examined whether transthoracic bioimpedance, measured using a Fluid Accumulation Vest (FAV), predicted HF decompensation in advance of a clinical event in patients discharged after ADHF. Methods: Participants included 42 patients hospitalized for ADHF. Participants were trained on the use of a FAV-smartphone dyad to obtain and transmit a 5-minute bioimpedance measurement once daily for 45-days after discharge. Readmission and diuretic dosing adjustments were identified using participant report and causes adjudicated using medical records. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves and C-statistics were calculated to describe the characteristics of a bioimpedance based algorithm as a predictor of HF decompensation 3 or 7-days in advance of the clinical event. Results: Participants (mean age 69 ± 12 years, 43% female, 88% white, 11% cognitively impaired, 12% depressed) had a mean ejection fraction of 50 ± 18%. HF-related rehospitalization occurred in 10% (n=4) and 10% (n=4) reported diuretic up-titration during the 45-day follow-up. An algorithm analyzing bioimpedance up to 3 or 7 days prior to an event was related to HF readmission (C statistics for 3 and 7 days = 0.83, 0.94, respectively) and the combined outcome of HF hospitalization or diuretic up-titration (C statistics for 3 and 7 days = 0.76, 0.80, respectively). Conclusions: Early readmission after hospitalization for ADHF was common and predicted up to 7 days in advance by an algorithm analyzing transthoracic bioimpedance. Despite their advanced age and high burden of comorbid diseases, study participants with ADHF were able to make daily bioimpedance measurements using a FAV and transmit them using a smartphone. Transthoracic bioimpedance monitoring may offer possibilities for reducing HF readmissions by enabling identification and treatment of outpatients with early HF decompensation

    Colonial refractions: the 'Gypsy camp' as a spatio-racial political technology

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    Camps for civilians first appeared in the colonies. Largely drawing on the literature on colonialism and race, this article conceptualizes the 'Gypsy camp' in Western European cities as a spatio-racial political technology. We first discuss the shift, starting with decolonization, from colonial to metropolitan technologies of the governance of social heterogeneity. We then relate this broad historical framing to the ideas and ideologies that since the 1960s have been underpinning the planning and governance of the ‘Gypsy camp' in both the UK and Italy. We document the 1970s emergence of a new and distinctive type of camp that was predicated upon a racially connoted tension between policies criminalizing sedentarization and ideologies of cultural protection. Given that the imposition of the ‘Gypsy camp' was essentially uncontested, we argue that the conditions of possibility for it to emerge and become institutionalized were both a spatio-racial similarity with typically colonial technologies of governance, and the fact that it was largely perceived as a self-evident necessity for the governance and control of one specific population. We conclude by calling for more analyses on this and other forms of urban confinement in both the Global North and South, in order to account for the increasingly disquieting mushrooming of confining and controlling governance devices, practices and ideologies

    Theorizing black (African) transnational masculinities

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    Just as masculinity is crucial in the construction of nationhood, masculinity is also significant in the making and unmaking of transnational communities. This article focuses on how black African men negotiate and perform respectable masculinity in transnational settings such as the workplace, community and family. Moving away from conceptualizations of black transnational forms of masculinities as in perpetual crisis and drawing on qualitative data collected from members of the new African diaspora in London, the article explores the diverse ways notions of masculinity and gender identities are being challenged, re-affirmed and reconfigured. The article argues that men experience a loss of status as breadwinners and a rupture of their sense of masculine identity in the reconstruction of life in the diaspora. Conditions in the hostland, in particular, women's breadwinner status and the changing gender relations, threaten men’s ‘hegemonic masculinity’ and consequently force men to negotiate respectable forms of masculinity

    ‘Wandering and settled tribes’: biopolitics, citizenship, and the racialized migrant

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    This paper argues that purportedly outdated racial categories continue to resonate in contemporary forms of racialization. I examine the use of metaphors of rootedness and shadows by a contemporary UK migrant advocacy organization and its allies to justify migrant regularization and manage illicit circulation. I argue that the distinction between rooted and rootless peoples draws on the colonial and racial distinctions between wandering and settled peoples. Contemporary notions of citizenship continue to draw upon and activate racial forms of differentiation. Citizenship is thus part of a form of racial governance that operates not only along biological but also social and cultural lines, infusing race into the structures, practices, and techniques of governance
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