7 research outputs found

    Feminist Perspectives on Contemporary Inner City Neighbourhood Change: Gender and Gentrification in the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham.

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    Recent feminist critique has highlighted the need for a broader yet more nuanced approach to gentrification which examines gender, like class, within a relational and dynamic conceptual framework. This thesis adopts such a feminist perspective and aims to explore the precise ways in which gender roles and relationships are integral and significant to the cultural processes and practices of gentrification. In accordance with postmodern geographies, the research does not attempt to provide the metanarratives of 'grand theories' but, rather, focuses on interpreting locational and historical specificities in a local case study. Quantitative analyses are used initially to expose the diversity of types of gentrifier and of gentrification and to demonstrate the prominence of women in the process. Qualitative analyses are then employed; firstly, to unpack hegemonic representations of gender in gentrification and, secondly, to explore the meanings and coping strategies inherent in gentrification practices through the local narratives of women gentrifiers living in the study area. The research reveals a complex, multi-dimensional process in which women gentrifiers variously renegotiate a 'place' in the restructuring city by drawing on, reworking and sometimes rejecting dominant cultural constructions of women and the city. This entails an apparent mutual reconfiguration of landscape 'texture' and social 'text' within the changing inner city neighbourhoods of the study area. The research cautions against excessive claims, such as have been made elsewhere, that suggest an associated weakening of patriarchal relations, or which argue for the necessary primacy of class relations over those of gender, or vice versa. The thesis contributes to gentrification research by demonstrating the value of feminist epistemology and by engaging with, rather than ignoring, the complexities of gender in gentrification. Thereby, the research suggests some possibilities for a less 'chaotic conceptualisation’ and a more coherent account of gentrification

    Feminist Perspectives on Contemporary Inner City Neighbourhood Change: Gender and Gentrification in the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham.

    No full text
    Recent feminist critique has highlighted the need for a broader yet more nuanced approach to gentrification which examines gender, like class, within a relational and dynamic conceptual framework. This thesis adopts such a feminist perspective and aims to explore the precise ways in which gender roles and relationships are integral and significant to the cultural processes and practices of gentrification. In accordance with postmodern geographies, the research does not attempt to provide the metanarratives of 'grand theories' but, rather, focuses on interpreting locational and historical specificities in a local case study. Quantitative analyses are used initially to expose the diversity of types of gentrifier and of gentrification and to demonstrate the prominence of women in the process. Qualitative analyses are then employed; firstly, to unpack hegemonic representations of gender in gentrification and, secondly, to explore the meanings and coping strategies inherent in gentrification practices through the local narratives of women gentrifiers living in the study area. The research reveals a complex, multi-dimensional process in which women gentrifiers variously renegotiate a 'place' in the restructuring city by drawing on, reworking and sometimes rejecting dominant cultural constructions of women and the city. This entails an apparent mutual reconfiguration of landscape 'texture' and social 'text' within the changing inner city neighbourhoods of the study area. The research cautions against excessive claims, such as have been made elsewhere, that suggest an associated weakening of patriarchal relations, or which argue for the necessary primacy of class relations over those of gender, or vice versa. The thesis contributes to gentrification research by demonstrating the value of feminist epistemology and by engaging with, rather than ignoring, the complexities of gender in gentrification. Thereby, the research suggests some possibilities for a less 'chaotic conceptualisation’ and a more coherent account of gentrification

    "Urbanismo europeo en Caracas"

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    El artículo es una recensión del libro: Urbanismo europeo en Caracas (1870-1940). Caracas: Equinoccio, Fundación para la Cultura Urbana, 2006 (2da Edición). Debido a su segunda edición, se pone en valor la obra en relación al debate actual sobre la ciudad en Latinoamérica, analizando el aporte al mismo. Por ello, el artículo aborda el estado de los estudios de historia sobre la ciudad latinoamericana, con sus problemáticas y desafíos.Fil: Fedele Abatidaga, Javier. Universidad Nacional del Litoral. Instituto de Humanidades y Ciencias Sociales del Litoral. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Santa Fe. Instituto de Humanidades y Ciencias Sociales del Litoral; ArgentinaFil: Haggerty, Martin. Sin filiacion; Reino UnidoFil: Llanos, Douglas. Universidad Simon Bolivar.; VenezuelaFil: Sutcliffe, Anthony. Sin filiacion; Reino UnidoFil: Morley, Ian. Chinese University of Hong Kong; Hong KongFil: Steinberg, Ted. Case Western Reserve University; Estados UnidosFil: Silva, Carlos Nunes. University of Lisbon; PortugalFil: Markwick, Marion. Oxford Brookes University; Reino Unid

    Miniaturization of NMR Systems: Desktop Spectrometers, Microcoil Spectroscopy, and “NMR on a Chip” for Chemistry, Biochemistry, and Industry

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