19 research outputs found
LMDA New & Noteworthy, November 2017
Contents include: Q & A: Amy Stoller; Q & A: Andrea Kovich; Events/Announcements.https://soundideas.pugetsound.edu/lmdanewsletter/1013/thumbnail.jp
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True citizens of Bahrain : discourse on Bahraini identity since the Arab Spring
textWhen Bahrain's uprising began in February 2011, the opposition presented united front. By the time of the national dialogue a year later, however, it had fractured both along and within sectarian lines. The government’s inconsistent response to the uprising also demonstrated tensions within Bahrain’s royal family. An analysis of discourse on the national dialogue, terrorism and violence, expatriates, and the Gulf Union plan revealed that Bahrain's political factions were divided by their conceptions of Bahraini identity and citizenship. Bahrain was a young nation and questions of identity were still very much under debate. This work drew on newspaper opinion pieces, official statements published by political groups, and posters and videos they posted on social media to explain the questions of identity that developed around these political debates. I also examined how these debates continued to divide Sunni and Shi’i groups within the opposition as well as the moderate and conservative factions within the royal family. Finally, I considered how these groups used their varying conceptions of Bahraini citizenship to justify their tactics in pursuing or attempting to quash the uprising. Even as each group demanded rights for citizens, they disagreed on what citizenship meant. Similarly, denying that their opponents were “true citizens,” allowed each group to delegitimize views they disagreed with.Middle Eastern Studie
LMDA Review, volume 10, issue 1
Contents include: Photo of Conference Participants Annual Conference 1999, Send in your Ballot, A Note to Ourselves, Increase in Dues and New Annual Membership Expiration Date, LMDA Archive, LMDA Administrator; LMDA Interns, Mid-Year Meeting, Early Career Dramaturg Program, Elliot Hayes Award 2000, Report on Canadian Caucus, Script Exchange, Report on the Dramaturgy Focus Group ATHE 1999, Elliot Hayes Award Winners Lue Douthit and Michel Volansky, Acceptance Speech Lue Morgan Douthit, Elliot Hayes Award Presentation to Michele Volansky for Space, On the Elliot Hayes Award Michele Volansky, Day One of the Conference, Day Two of the Conference, Day Three of the Conference, Day Four of the Conference, The Advocacy Caucus Presentation at the Conference, Final Thoughts, Conference 1999 Many Thanks, Arthur Ballet and the Office for Advanced Drama Research, Spotlight on Early Career Dramaturg Vanessa Porteous, A Working History of LMDA The Early Years, From Academia to Arena A Dramaturg\u27s Education in the Real World, Tony Creamer and Death of a Salesman, Two Moments, Jobs and Projects, Scriptseeker.com, LMDA Online Listserv Instructions, Note from James Magruder, Literary Managers and Dramaturgs of the Americas Bibliography 1999, Noted with Pleasure, and Internship Questionnaire.https://soundideas.pugetsound.edu/lmdareview/1020/thumbnail.jp
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Community Income, Healthy Food Access, and Repeat Surgery for Kidney Stones.
ObjectiveTo determine if limited food access census tracts and food swamp census tracts are associated with increased risk for repeat kidney stone surgery. And to elucidate the relationship between community-level food retail environment relative to community-level income on repeat stone surgery over time.MethodsData were abstracted from the University of California, San Francisco Information Commons. Adult patients were included if they underwent at least one urologic stone procedure. Census tracts from available geographical data were mapped using Food Access Research Atlas data from the United States Department of Agriculture Economic Research Service. Kaplan-Meier curves were employed to illustrate time to a second surgical procedure over 5 years, and log-rank tests were used to test for statistically significant differences. A multivariate Cox regression model was used to generate hazard ratios for undergoing second surgery by group.ResultsA total of 1496 patients were included in this analysis. Repeat stone surgery occurred in 324 patients. Kaplan-Meier curves demonstrated a statistically significant difference in curves depicting patients living in low income census tracts (LICTs) vs those not living in LICTs (P <.001). On Cox regression models, patients in LICTs had significantly higher risk of undergoing repeat surgery (P = .011). Patients from limited food access census tracts and food swamp census tracts did not have a significantly higher adjusted risk of undergoing second surgery (P = .11 and P = .88, respectively).ConclusionIncome more so than food access associates with increased risk of repeat kidney stone surgery. Further research is needed to explore the interaction between low socioeconomic status and kidney stone outcomes