6 research outputs found
Gratitude and hospitality: Tamil refugee employment in London and the conditional nature of integration
Healy, R. L. 2014. The definitive, peer-reviewed and edited version of this article is published in Environment and Planning A, 2014, 46(3), pp. 614-628, http:dx/doi.org/10.1068/a4655The policy of integration attempts to address different elements of exclusion, yet relatively little research has considered what integration means to the refugees themselves. This paper explores one key area for supporting integration: employment.ESRC PTA-030-2005-0082
Etiologies and contributing factors of perinatal mortality: A report from southeast of Iran
Over-the-counter medicines, economic conditions, and citizens most in need in Greece: Is it a challenge for primary care research?
Disrupting the Rhythms of Violence: Anti‐port Protests in the City of Buenaventura
This contribution draws on rhythmanalysis and the political economy of assemblage to provide a framework for understanding the productive spatio-temporal effects of physical violence on urban rhythms. The paper explores how Buenaventura, Colombia's biggest port city, is transformed both by the growth in container turnover, and through recurring, spatial and temporal practices of violence. What role does violence play in the relation between trade-driven acceleration through the port, and the aquatic, tidal rhythm that historically shaped the city? The contribution mobilizes the notion of disruption to analyse the frictions emerging between infrastructural nodes of acceleration, inhabitants’ movements, and urban space. I argue that while recurring violence provides urban rhythm itself, social movements may employ the temporal instrument of disruption as a means both of political articulation and transformation within the logics of accelerated accumulation and in a context marked by violent rhythms and forced mobility
