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Cornell University
1.
Park, Jung.
Why Treaties Matter: The Economic And Cultural Effects Of Nineteenth Century Treaties In China, Japan, And Korea.
Degree: PhD, Sociology, 2013, Cornell University
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/34269
► Conventional views on state-formation examined within nation political and resource constraints to assess changes that took place. In my dissertation, I explored how external stressors…
(more)
▼ Conventional views on state-formation examined within nation political and resource constraints to assess changes that took place. In my dissertation, I explored how external stressors such as international treaties affected domestic legal reforms. By creating a dataset of 235 treaties involving European, Asian, North American, and South American states, I juxtaposed the restructuring process of three Asian countries - China, Japan, and Korea to global trends in trading and diplomacy. I used Chisquare tests of variance to deduce that geographic origins of the treaty partners affected the types of treaties signed and the level of symmetries for treaties. The year of when the treaties were signed also had an effect. Further, treaties tended towards mutual benefits around the early 20th century as cross-regional tensions declined. By the end of the 19th century, treaties specified to form categories such as arbitrage, consular, delimitation, and extradition treaties. China, Japan, and Korea's varied turns in the 20th century address how even if external partners approached a nation with asymmetric levels of power, the way in which a nation addressed these provocations mattered. In times of external threats, a nation, restructuring its political and social infrastructures prevented the nation from losing its domestic sovereignty.
Advisors/Committee Members: Strang, David (chair), Hirano, Katsuya (committee member), Berezin, Mabel M. (committee member).
Subjects/Keywords: treaties; imperialism; Asian history
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APA (6th Edition):
Park, J. (2013). Why Treaties Matter: The Economic And Cultural Effects Of Nineteenth Century Treaties In China, Japan, And Korea. (Doctoral Dissertation). Cornell University. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1813/34269
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Park, Jung. “Why Treaties Matter: The Economic And Cultural Effects Of Nineteenth Century Treaties In China, Japan, And Korea.” 2013. Doctoral Dissertation, Cornell University. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/1813/34269.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Park, Jung. “Why Treaties Matter: The Economic And Cultural Effects Of Nineteenth Century Treaties In China, Japan, And Korea.” 2013. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Park J. Why Treaties Matter: The Economic And Cultural Effects Of Nineteenth Century Treaties In China, Japan, And Korea. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Cornell University; 2013. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/34269.
Council of Science Editors:
Park J. Why Treaties Matter: The Economic And Cultural Effects Of Nineteenth Century Treaties In China, Japan, And Korea. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Cornell University; 2013. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/34269

Cornell University
2.
Yesukevich, Alexa.
Informal Protest Through Everyday Performance: Understanding Women'S Rugby As Dissent.
Degree: PhD, Sociology, 2013, Cornell University
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/33978
► This research is an examination of private, informal forms of protest. I conducted in-depth interviews with female adult rugby players about their personal and political…
(more)
▼ This research is an examination of private, informal forms of protest. I conducted in-depth interviews with female adult rugby players about their personal and political experiences with contact sports and gender. I suggest that political process theorists (see Tilly and Tarrow 2007) broaden their conventional understanding of politics to include power relationships inside everyday interactions. The 47 athletes interviewed in this study, drawn from 9 adult women's rugby clubs across the United States, attach contentious meaning to their sport. Both gendered bodies and gendered selves are produced through athletic practices. The symbols of organized sport practices and physical strength are among the most widely used and easily identifiable cultural indicators of masculine authority. Women's involvement in contact sports such as football, ice hockey and rugby is still widely considered nonconformist behavior. If we understand gender as a social accomplishment, following West and Zimmerman (1987), we can see that female contact-sport athletes are constantly required to justify their breach of gender norms to the people around them (as well as to themselves). Most of the players in this study explicitly describe their rugby experiences in terms of a larger collective effort to challenge dominant cultural institutions. While the majority of them express mixed feelings about being identified as "political" actors at all, they describe their experiences in terms of structural gender inequality, express frustration with it, and articulate a determination to work for widespread social change by performing alternative gender identities. These findings support and build on Rupp and Taylor's analysis of drag queens (2003). These athletes are engaged in creating change inside small communities, immediate social networks, and close relationships - without the direction of the formal movement organizations which have long been the focus of social movement scholarship. This study contributes to the explanatory value of the political process approach to social movements while also bringing attention to the important part that proponents of women's sports currently play in the redistribution of power across gender lines. It also contributes to the feminist critique of the separative self (Keller 1986, England 1993).
Advisors/Committee Members: Berezin, Mabel M. (chair), Sanyal, Paromita (committee member), Williams, Linda Brooks (committee member).
Subjects/Keywords: gender; rugby; protest
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APA ·
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APA (6th Edition):
Yesukevich, A. (2013). Informal Protest Through Everyday Performance: Understanding Women'S Rugby As Dissent. (Doctoral Dissertation). Cornell University. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1813/33978
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Yesukevich, Alexa. “Informal Protest Through Everyday Performance: Understanding Women'S Rugby As Dissent.” 2013. Doctoral Dissertation, Cornell University. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/1813/33978.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Yesukevich, Alexa. “Informal Protest Through Everyday Performance: Understanding Women'S Rugby As Dissent.” 2013. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Yesukevich A. Informal Protest Through Everyday Performance: Understanding Women'S Rugby As Dissent. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Cornell University; 2013. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/33978.
Council of Science Editors:
Yesukevich A. Informal Protest Through Everyday Performance: Understanding Women'S Rugby As Dissent. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Cornell University; 2013. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/33978

Cornell University
3.
Genkin, Michael.
An Ecological Perspective On Political Violence: The Role Of Culture, Networks, And Affiliations.
Degree: PhD, Sociology, 2014, Cornell University
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/38878
► The dissertation addresses a number of core questions about terrorism: why do some terrorist organizations, and not others, adopt the devastating tactic of suicide bombing?…
(more)
▼ The dissertation addresses a number of core questions about terrorism: why do some terrorist organizations, and not others, adopt the devastating tactic of suicide bombing? What contextual factors predict self-starter terrorism, meaning political violence that occurs without the assistance or direction of a pre-existing terrorist organization (e.g. the Boston Marathon bombers)? How are one's social networks affected by one's position in an affiliation ecology (McPherson 1983), and how do positions in affiliation ecologies affect recruitment into terrorist organizations? To address the first question, I apply event history models to a global dataset that includes all recorded suicide bombing attacks from 19812006. I show that organizations embedded in collectivist cultural ecologies are far more likely to use suicide bombings than organizations embedded in individualist cultural ecologies, conditioning on factors suggested by alternative explanations. To assess selfstarter terrorism, I develop an agent-based model, grounded in empirical data that identifies the mechanisms by which the network ecology promotes and constrains terrorist mobilization. The model is also able to distinguish the manner in which self-starter terrorism is carried out - whether by lone wolves or by small groups. To assess the relationship between affiliation ecologies and terrorist recruitment, I first generate a theoretical framework I term "Blau Status Analysis", which extends McPherson's (1983) approach to individual-level actors. Using the Add Health dataset, I validate the framework by showing that Blau statuses are associated with a variety of network properties. I then apply the framework to show how affiliation ecology affects recruitment into covert organizations. I conclude by discussing additional research veins in political violence that can be exploited using the ecological perspective as well as the theoretical and methodological contributions the dissertation made to questions of general interest to sociology.
Advisors/Committee Members: Macy, Michael Walton (chair), Macy, Michael Walton (chair), Berezin, Mabel M. (committee member), Lawler, Edward J (committee member), Lawler, Edward J (committee member), Brashears, Matthew Edward (committee member), Berezin, Mabel M. (committee member).
Subjects/Keywords: terrorism; political violence; social networks
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APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
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APA (6th Edition):
Genkin, M. (2014). An Ecological Perspective On Political Violence: The Role Of Culture, Networks, And Affiliations. (Doctoral Dissertation). Cornell University. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1813/38878
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Genkin, Michael. “An Ecological Perspective On Political Violence: The Role Of Culture, Networks, And Affiliations.” 2014. Doctoral Dissertation, Cornell University. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/1813/38878.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Genkin, Michael. “An Ecological Perspective On Political Violence: The Role Of Culture, Networks, And Affiliations.” 2014. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Genkin M. An Ecological Perspective On Political Violence: The Role Of Culture, Networks, And Affiliations. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Cornell University; 2014. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/38878.
Council of Science Editors:
Genkin M. An Ecological Perspective On Political Violence: The Role Of Culture, Networks, And Affiliations. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Cornell University; 2014. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/38878

Cornell University
4.
Ho, Jing-Mao.
Social Statisticalization: Number, State, Science.
Degree: PhD, Sociology, 2019, Cornell University
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/67698
► This dissertation explains why society becomes statisticalized—a form of rationalization that influences society through the production, consumption, and dissemination of statistical numbers. In this general…
(more)
▼ This dissertation explains why society becomes statisticalized—a form of rationalization that influences society through the production, consumption, and dissemination of statistical numbers. In this general social process, people increasingly depend on statistics to make decisions, justify practices, and update knowledge. As a result, social statistics are able to change human behavior, reconfigure social relations, shape political discourse, and constitute cultural norms. Ultimately, statistical rationality not only reproduces but also reinforces a variety of defining characteristics of modern society such as efficiency, standardization, formalization, calculability, predictability, and the replacement of humans with technologies. In Chapter 1, I ask: Why do modern states routinely keep official statistics on their societies? This chapter presents arguments about how gathering official statistics as a technology of state power facilitate modern states’ engagements in democratic state building, capitalist state building, colonial, and post-colonial state building, and war making in world society. These arguments are illustrated by historical case studies and tested by cross-national longitudinal analyses of the worldwide establishment of National Statistical Systems (NSSes) in 157 countries from 1826 to 2010. The analyses demonstrate that, although there are regional and temporal variations, democratization, capitalist development, aggregate war onsets, colonization, and inter-governmental linkages generally prompt modern states to establish NSSes. To get their hands on societies, modern states need to collect official statistics to keep societies under their watchful eyes. In Chapter 2, I ask: How does the statistics profession become globally institutionalized? This chapter analyzes the worldwide founding of national statistics associations from 1833 to 2011, arguing that the statistics profession emerged in the nineteenth-century West and spread to other parts of the world in the twentieth century. Based on an integrated institutionalist framework, I conduct event history analysis to demonstrate that the process of the global professionalization of statistics is determined by both national characteristics and the world polity. On one hand, democracy and national material capacity generally encourage the establishment of the statistics profession, and the effect of colonialism is in the opposite direction. On the other hand, intergovernmental organizations create a world polity in which the statistics profession is able to be diffused and constructed. Separate analyses for the pre-1945 and post-1945 eras indicate that, while there are regional and temporal variations, the world polity is a robust factor throughout the entire period of analysis. In Chapter 3, I ask: Why does the American state routinely collate statistical data on crime? Suprisingly, the relationship between state and criminal statistics is undertheorized. This chapter develops a theoretical framework that triangulates…
Advisors/Committee Members: Strang, David (chair), Wells, Martin Timothy (committee member), Berezin, Mabel M. (committee member), Ziewitz, Malte Carsten (committee member).
Subjects/Keywords: Statistics; Knowledge; institution; rationalization; state; Sociology; science
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Ho, J. (2019). Social Statisticalization: Number, State, Science. (Doctoral Dissertation). Cornell University. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1813/67698
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Ho, Jing-Mao. “Social Statisticalization: Number, State, Science.” 2019. Doctoral Dissertation, Cornell University. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/1813/67698.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Ho, Jing-Mao. “Social Statisticalization: Number, State, Science.” 2019. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Ho J. Social Statisticalization: Number, State, Science. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Cornell University; 2019. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/67698.
Council of Science Editors:
Ho J. Social Statisticalization: Number, State, Science. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Cornell University; 2019. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/67698

Cornell University
5.
Eilbaum, Nicolas.
As They Wait: Undocumented Ecuadorians In New York City.
Degree: PhD, Sociology, 2011, Cornell University
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/33588
► My dissertation explores the tension between temporary and permanent migration. While many migrants leave for the United States intending to work for a short time,…
(more)
▼ My dissertation explores the tension between temporary and permanent migration. While many migrants leave for the United States intending to work for a short time, many end up staying much longer than originally planned. Why does temporary migration seem so often to become permanent? The answer I explore is based on the concept of embeddedness, or lack thereof, as developed in economic sociology. The decision to leave is made in dense social spaces. Once emigrants have left, however, social density drops. The emigrant conditions-the effects of distance, the new kinds of jobs, the lack of papers-contribute to making decision-making elusive, and return is continually put off. The concept of waiting is discussed to capture the migrants' "non-decision" to stay as time goes by. The material I present concentrates on two Ecuadorian families of urban and relatively middle-class background, now undocumented in Queens (NYC). While participant observation was employed to build relationships and extended conversations with the emigrants, most of the material is socio-biographical, as I reconstruct the social world they come from in Ecuador, and discuss how this background helps us understand their emigrant trajectories. The combination of participant observation and socio-biographical methodology aims at drawing the links between life in the sending and receiving country, moving back and forth between the migrants' present and their past. One of the goals of the dissertation is to let migrants speak for themselves as much as possible-extensive transcriptions from interviews seek to convey some of the original texture of immigrant life.
Advisors/Committee Members: Swedberg, Richard (chair), Berezin, Mabel M. (committee member), Jones-Correa, Michael (committee member), Cook, Maria L (committee member).
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APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Eilbaum, N. (2011). As They Wait: Undocumented Ecuadorians In New York City. (Doctoral Dissertation). Cornell University. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1813/33588
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Eilbaum, Nicolas. “As They Wait: Undocumented Ecuadorians In New York City.” 2011. Doctoral Dissertation, Cornell University. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/1813/33588.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Eilbaum, Nicolas. “As They Wait: Undocumented Ecuadorians In New York City.” 2011. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Eilbaum N. As They Wait: Undocumented Ecuadorians In New York City. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Cornell University; 2011. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/33588.
Council of Science Editors:
Eilbaum N. As They Wait: Undocumented Ecuadorians In New York City. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Cornell University; 2011. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/33588
6.
Eads, Alicia Danielle.
CULTURAL MEANING AND DEFINING A POLICYMAKING SITUATION: MAKING SENSE OF THE POLICY RESPONSE TO THE FINANCIAL CRISIS.
Degree: PhD, Sociology, 2017, Cornell University
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/56877
► CULTURAL MEANING AND DEFINING A POLICYMAKING SITUATION: MAKING SENSE OF THE POLICY RESPONSE TO THE FINANCIAL CRISIS Alicia Danielle Eads, Ph.D. Cornell University August 2017…
(more)
▼ CULTURAL MEANING AND DEFINING A POLICYMAKING SITUATION:
MAKING SENSE OF THE POLICY RESPONSE TO THE FINANCIAL CRISIS
Alicia Danielle Eads, Ph.D.
Cornell University August 2017
Faced with a collapsing housing market, which was disrupting financial markets via
“toxic” mortgage-backed securities, U.S. policymakers acted aggressively to stabilize financial markets but remained circumspect about intervening in the housing market. Academics and policymakers alike acknowledge that the federal policy response to the housing market collapse was a “gross inadequacy.” This dissertation examines why that was so, identifying variations in key policymakers understandings and expectations of mortgage borrowers and mortgage lenders. The cultural tension was not over the causes of the crisis, as might be expected. Policymakers quickly sorted out the basic narrative of the subprime expansion, loose underwriting, and ubiquitous mortgage-backed securities. Instead, the relevant cultural meanings that implied vastly different policy responses were more fundamental: a construction of mortgage borrowers and lenders. Are mortgage borrowers rational investors who will walk away from an underwater mortgage? Or are they struggling homeowners, taken advantage of by predatory lenders? In one of these constructions it makes sense to commit tax dollars to the problem while in the other it would be irresponsible.
The dissertation also analyzes the construction of the foreclosure crisis within U.S. states, a context that allows for statistical analysis of the relationship between cultural meaning and policy adoption. Some states’ media outlets discussed the foreclosure crisis as a market phenomenon while others discussed it as the result of predatory lending practices. Applying Latent Dirichlet Allocation topic modeling to text from 2,600 newspaper articles, I measure the multiple cultural meanings that the crisis assumed in different states. Results from event history analyses show that particular cultural meanings predict the adoption of aggressive foreclosure prevention policies, adjusting for other factors such as the extent of the housing market collapse and political party control of state legislatures.
Finally, this dissertation also considers the relationships among wealth, debt, and family stability. The policies implemented in response to the recent crisis influenced which types of assets recovered value following the Great Recession, thus affecting household wealth and the longstanding trend of rising wealth inequality. The crisis policies also allowed a "debt overhang" to remain among millions of households. The family is a key micro-level institution that experiences and transmits the inequality effects of macro-economic policies. Analyses in this part of the dissertation use data from the 1996 to 2008 panels of the Survey of Income and Program Participation to offer a comprehensive account of how wealth and debt relates to family stability. The findings include that, as anticipated, higher holdings of liquid and illiquid assets are…
Advisors/Committee Members: Swedberg, Richard (chair), Mimno, David (committee member), Tach, Laura (committee member), Berezin, Mabel M. (committee member).
Subjects/Keywords: Computational text analysis; Financial crisis; Pragmatism; Economic Sociology; culture; Sociology
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Eads, A. D. (2017). CULTURAL MEANING AND DEFINING A POLICYMAKING SITUATION: MAKING SENSE OF THE POLICY RESPONSE TO THE FINANCIAL CRISIS. (Doctoral Dissertation). Cornell University. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1813/56877
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Eads, Alicia Danielle. “CULTURAL MEANING AND DEFINING A POLICYMAKING SITUATION: MAKING SENSE OF THE POLICY RESPONSE TO THE FINANCIAL CRISIS.” 2017. Doctoral Dissertation, Cornell University. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/1813/56877.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Eads, Alicia Danielle. “CULTURAL MEANING AND DEFINING A POLICYMAKING SITUATION: MAKING SENSE OF THE POLICY RESPONSE TO THE FINANCIAL CRISIS.” 2017. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Eads AD. CULTURAL MEANING AND DEFINING A POLICYMAKING SITUATION: MAKING SENSE OF THE POLICY RESPONSE TO THE FINANCIAL CRISIS. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Cornell University; 2017. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/56877.
Council of Science Editors:
Eads AD. CULTURAL MEANING AND DEFINING A POLICYMAKING SITUATION: MAKING SENSE OF THE POLICY RESPONSE TO THE FINANCIAL CRISIS. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Cornell University; 2017. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/56877
7.
Over, Defne.
Political Destabilization in Turkey: The Case of Journalism, 1980-2013.
Degree: PhD, Sociology, 2017, Cornell University
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/51546
► This research explores the making of the contemporary media in Turkey. I conducted fifteen months of fieldwork in Turkey in 2013 and 2014. During my…
(more)
▼ This research explores the making of the contemporary media in Turkey. I conducted fifteen months of fieldwork in Turkey in 2013 and 2014. During my field research I interviewed sixty-three journalists, civil society activists, state officials and legal scholars, participated at protests and civil society meetings of journalists, and collected published documents. Based on my data, I suggest that the decline in the plurality of opinions, the decline in the quality of news-making and the increase in the contentious activities of journalists in Turkey in the last decade are consequences of the destabilization in power hierarchies and journalists’ interpretations of such destabilization. In the interviews, I found that journalists commonly organized their narratives about professional practice around the notions of identity, status and emotions. They stressed that as the state’s attitude towards journalists with varying political identities changed, so did journalists’ status positions and their emotions. Building on these accounts, I define destabilization as the disturbance of power hierarchies among various identity groups. I argue that journalists’ interpretations of the redistribution of power motivated them to revise their professional practices. These practices constitute the news-content, movements and organizations in the contemporary media landscape. Overall, my theoretical explanation sets forth the concept of destabilization as an external factor that transforms social action. Moreover, it presents the role played by identity, status and emotion as mediators between the large forces that alter the conditions of existence of social actors and the social actors’ actions. I should note that while the dissertation stresses the role played by political, economic and cultural forces as well as identity and status in structuring the field of journalism, the novelty of the framework lies in integrating emotions, which have been unduly disregarded, with these other ways of describing and explaining in political analysis. In an era of rising authoritarianism, this analysis allows us to recognize the significance of understanding professional practice and institutional change in their political, economic and cultural context. Although the framework proposed in this dissertation is based on data gathered on developments in Turkey before 2014, the implications of the dissertation reach beyond that date and geography. Specifically, the dissertation provides a historical perspective on the origins of institutional decay in countries transitioning to repressive regimes.
Advisors/Committee Members: Berezin, Mabel M (chair), Swedberg, Richard (committee member), Evangelista, Matthew A (committee member), Gocek, Fatma M (committee member).
Subjects/Keywords: Political science; Sociology; Destabilization; Institutions; Journalism; Politics; Professional fields; Turkey
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Over, D. (2017). Political Destabilization in Turkey: The Case of Journalism, 1980-2013. (Doctoral Dissertation). Cornell University. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1813/51546
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Over, Defne. “Political Destabilization in Turkey: The Case of Journalism, 1980-2013.” 2017. Doctoral Dissertation, Cornell University. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/1813/51546.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Over, Defne. “Political Destabilization in Turkey: The Case of Journalism, 1980-2013.” 2017. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Over D. Political Destabilization in Turkey: The Case of Journalism, 1980-2013. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Cornell University; 2017. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/51546.
Council of Science Editors:
Over D. Political Destabilization in Turkey: The Case of Journalism, 1980-2013. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Cornell University; 2017. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/51546

Cornell University
8.
Ford, Lauraleen.
Intellectual Property: A Study In The Formulation And Effects Of Legal Culture.
Degree: PhD, Sociology, 2014, Cornell University
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/37175
Subjects/Keywords: Intellectual Property; Economic Sociology; Sociology of Property
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Ford, L. (2014). Intellectual Property: A Study In The Formulation And Effects Of Legal Culture. (Doctoral Dissertation). Cornell University. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1813/37175
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Ford, Lauraleen. “Intellectual Property: A Study In The Formulation And Effects Of Legal Culture.” 2014. Doctoral Dissertation, Cornell University. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/1813/37175.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Ford, Lauraleen. “Intellectual Property: A Study In The Formulation And Effects Of Legal Culture.” 2014. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Ford L. Intellectual Property: A Study In The Formulation And Effects Of Legal Culture. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Cornell University; 2014. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/37175.
Council of Science Editors:
Ford L. Intellectual Property: A Study In The Formulation And Effects Of Legal Culture. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Cornell University; 2014. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/37175

Cornell University
9.
Carrico, Kevin.
The Imaginary Institution Of China- Dialectics Of Fantasy And Failure In Nationalist Identification, As Seen Through China'S Han Clothing Movement.
Degree: PhD, Anthropology, 2013, Cornell University
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/34288
Subjects/Keywords: Han nationality; nationalism; tradition
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Carrico, K. (2013). The Imaginary Institution Of China- Dialectics Of Fantasy And Failure In Nationalist Identification, As Seen Through China'S Han Clothing Movement. (Doctoral Dissertation). Cornell University. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1813/34288
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Carrico, Kevin. “The Imaginary Institution Of China- Dialectics Of Fantasy And Failure In Nationalist Identification, As Seen Through China'S Han Clothing Movement.” 2013. Doctoral Dissertation, Cornell University. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/1813/34288.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Carrico, Kevin. “The Imaginary Institution Of China- Dialectics Of Fantasy And Failure In Nationalist Identification, As Seen Through China'S Han Clothing Movement.” 2013. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Carrico K. The Imaginary Institution Of China- Dialectics Of Fantasy And Failure In Nationalist Identification, As Seen Through China'S Han Clothing Movement. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Cornell University; 2013. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/34288.
Council of Science Editors:
Carrico K. The Imaginary Institution Of China- Dialectics Of Fantasy And Failure In Nationalist Identification, As Seen Through China'S Han Clothing Movement. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Cornell University; 2013. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1813/34288
.