19 research outputs found
Can stigma become a resource? The mobilisation of aesthetic–corporal capital by female immigrant entrepreneurs from Brazil
The proportion and visibility of Brazilian women and particularly the specific
images of Brazil and Brazilians in the Portuguese imaginary have contributed
to the construction of new versions of stigma and stereotypes surrounding
them. Mainstream images of Brazilian women have incorporated prejudices
about the sensuality of Creole women who are reminiscent of the Portuguese
colonial imaginary. Starting from this stigmatised image, we show how
Brazilian women entrepreneurs in the ‘beauty’ business filière reinterpret
and mobilise this perceived negative image, transforming it into an added
value associated with an ‘aesthetic’ Brazilian body culture. This idea of
‘body’ aesthetics becomes a business resource transformed into aesthetic–
corporal capital, a key component of the Brazilian beauty business filière.
Empirically, this research is based on qualitative elements, in particular 25
interviews with Brazilian women entrepreneurs of the beauty filière working
in Portugal, collected for the project BELTS-W (Brazilian Entrepreneurial
Links and Transnational Strategies – Women).This article is an output of the Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) sponsored project PIHM/GC/0111/2008 and Brazilian Entrepreneurial Links and Transnational Strategies-Women (BELTS-W)
A worldwide perspective on the management and control of Dothistroma needle blight
Dothistroma needle blight (DNB) caused by Dothistroma septosporum and Dothistroma
pini is a damaging disease of pine in many countries. The disease led to the abandonment
of planting susceptible Pinus species in parts of Africa, Asia, Australasia, Europe
and North America. Although the disease can be effectively controlled using copper
fungicides, this chemical is only routinely applied in forests in New Zealand and
Australia. Other management tactics aimed at making conditions less favourable for
disease development, such as thinning or pruning, may be effective on some, but not
all, sites. Disease avoidance, by planting non-susceptible species, is the most common
form of management in Europe, along with deployment of hosts with strong disease
resistance. Although D. septosporum is present almost everywhere Pinus is grown, it is
important that an effort is maintained to exclude introductions of new haplotypes that
could increase virulence or enable host resistance to be overcome. A global strategy to
exclude new introductions of Dothistroma and other damaging forest pathogens, facilitated
by collaborative programmes and legislation, is needed.This study was partially supported by the EU COST Action FP1102
DIAROD (Determining Invasiveness and Risk of Dothistroma, http://
www.cost.eu/COST_Actions/fps/FP1102)http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1439-03292017-10-31hb2017Forestry and Agricultural Biotechnology Institute (FABI)GeneticsPlant Scienc
Conflict-sensitive Journalism? Journalistic Role perceptions and practices in democratization conflicts
The chapter explores diverging implications of global democratic decline for public communication in new and old democracies. It draws on empirical evidence from a government-sponsored smear campaign against Serbia’s ombudsman between January and May 2015, including data from quantitative and qualitative analyses of print and electronic media and of Twitter content and from semi-structured interviews with key political, civil society and media actors. The analyses of the main arenas of conflict showed the prevalence of emotions and personal beliefs, as opposed to evidence, in public debates, just like in old democracies. It also revealed, however, a much broader repertoire of strategic deception and authoritarian manipulation, which resulted in sharp polarization in public discourse, systematic violations of press freedom and political competition, and a sharply declining quality of journalism