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Temple University
1.
Gane, Mary.
Social Healing: A Theoretical Model for the Success of Housing First.
Degree: PhD, 2012, Temple University
URL: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,212216
► Sociology
Literature on Housing First indicates much success of the program in terms of financial savings and tenant positive outcome evaluations; however, there is limited…
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▼ Sociology
Literature on Housing First indicates much success of the program in terms of financial savings and tenant positive outcome evaluations; however, there is limited explanation of how these successful outcomes are produced. Within this dissertation, interactions between tenants and case managers are revealed to be the primary intervening variable in a process of transition for tenants. These interactions connect Housing First policy (independent variable) to successful outcomes for tenants experienced during continued housing tenure (dependent variable). The measurement methods in the study are triangulated to reflect the fluidity of real life processes and both qualitative and quantitative data types are collected. From March 2008 until January 2011, twenty tenant case studies were interviewed three times in six month intervals. Nine case managers were also interviewed once and two tenants who discontinued permanent housing tenure were interviewed for an overall total of 71 interviews. Overall, symbolic interactionism is found to be a reasonable framework for explaining the successes of Housing First. Through highly focused intention in interactions case managers facilitate three social processes for tenants that lead to their successful continued housing tenure. These beneficial processes can be more specifically described as `socially healing processes' or `social healing' as they heal the social dimensions of identity, affective home creation, and wellness networks to various degrees for tenants.
Temple University – Theses
Advisors/Committee Members: Zhao, Shanyang, Byng, Michelle, Wray, Matt, Eyrich-Garg, Karin.
Subjects/Keywords: Sociology; case management; chronic homeless; homeless; Housing First; social healing; social program
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APA (6th Edition):
Gane, M. (2012). Social Healing: A Theoretical Model for the Success of Housing First. (Doctoral Dissertation). Temple University. Retrieved from http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,212216
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Gane, Mary. “Social Healing: A Theoretical Model for the Success of Housing First.” 2012. Doctoral Dissertation, Temple University. Accessed March 04, 2021.
http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,212216.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Gane, Mary. “Social Healing: A Theoretical Model for the Success of Housing First.” 2012. Web. 04 Mar 2021.
Vancouver:
Gane M. Social Healing: A Theoretical Model for the Success of Housing First. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Temple University; 2012. [cited 2021 Mar 04].
Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,212216.
Council of Science Editors:
Gane M. Social Healing: A Theoretical Model for the Success of Housing First. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Temple University; 2012. Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,212216

Temple University
2.
Martin, Jason.
Marketizing the Arts: The Effect of Marketized Revenues on Constituency Size and Composition.
Degree: PhD, 2013, Temple University
URL: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,214823
► Sociology
The nonprofit arts and culture sector in the United States is uniquely situated in tension between its not-for-profit status and its growing role as…
(more)
▼ Sociology
The nonprofit arts and culture sector in the United States is uniquely situated in tension between its not-for-profit status and its growing role as a catalyst for regional economic growth. Since the mid-20th century, for metropolitan areas in particular, these organizations have become an integral part of local economies and visible symbols of regions as robust cultural centers. Their growth is increasingly viewed as a significant contribution to regional economic development. But concomitant with their newly defined roles as regional "economic engines," nonprofit arts and culture organizations also are increasingly pressed to adopt a "market orientation" with respect to both their audiences and funders. This dissertation is an investigation into how these changes have shaped the organizational structures and processes of the sector. The guiding inquiry of this research is how an increased "market orientation" in the sector is affecting organizational operations (especially expenditures), and ultimately, their constituencies. More specifically, this analysis explores the effects of marketization, defined here as dependence on earned income, agenda-oriented local corporate sponsorship, and outcomes-based foundation support, on organizational expenditures and constituency levels and composition. The present research assesses the relative utility of three organizational growth theories- resource dependency theory, institutional theory, and urban growth agenda theory-on the one hand, and the "crowding-out" hypothesis on the other hand, in accounting for the effects of increasing marketization on the size and composition of organizational constituencies. The first three frameworks suggest a connection between marketized revenues and the prioritization of organizational visibility and legitimacy, organizational professionalization, and production quality, with the end goal of constituency growth. On the other hand, the crowding-out hypothesis, though it retains a focus on revenue sources, suggests that revenue from certain sources may lead to the stagnation or even reduction of deeper organizational affiliations such as membership. Specifically, the perspective suggests that a heightened market orientation conflicts with a not-for-profit or philanthropic orientation, thereby "crowding-out" potential members. The tension between these theoretical perspectives reflects the lack of solid empirical evidence regarding the effects of economic inputs (particularly those tied to marketization) on organizational outcomes (particularly constituency composition). The current research hypothesizes that marketized revenues will ultimately lead to audience growth and expansion while simultaneously leading to stagnation or decline in membership. This study focuses on museums and performing arts institutions located within the Pennsylvania portion of the Greater Philadelphia Area. The analysis utilizes survey data on revenues, expenditures, and other organizational characteristics collected on a continuing basis through the…
Advisors/Committee Members: Elesh, David, Zhao, Shanyang, Bartelt, David, Adams, Carolyn Teich.
Subjects/Keywords: Sociology; Organizational behavior; Cultural resources management; arts and culture; crowding out; nonprofit; organizations; resource allotment; structural equation modeling
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APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
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APA (6th Edition):
Martin, J. (2013). Marketizing the Arts: The Effect of Marketized Revenues on Constituency Size and Composition. (Doctoral Dissertation). Temple University. Retrieved from http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,214823
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Martin, Jason. “Marketizing the Arts: The Effect of Marketized Revenues on Constituency Size and Composition.” 2013. Doctoral Dissertation, Temple University. Accessed March 04, 2021.
http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,214823.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Martin, Jason. “Marketizing the Arts: The Effect of Marketized Revenues on Constituency Size and Composition.” 2013. Web. 04 Mar 2021.
Vancouver:
Martin J. Marketizing the Arts: The Effect of Marketized Revenues on Constituency Size and Composition. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Temple University; 2013. [cited 2021 Mar 04].
Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,214823.
Council of Science Editors:
Martin J. Marketizing the Arts: The Effect of Marketized Revenues on Constituency Size and Composition. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Temple University; 2013. Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,214823

Temple University
3.
Kim, Jennifer.
The Merits of a Fool: Contending with Race and Racism through Sketch Comedy from the 1960s to the 2000s.
Degree: PhD, 2015, Temple University
URL: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,320730
► Sociology
Studying social movements is one way to understand social change. The historical timing of their appearance and the ways they are similar and different…
(more)
▼ Sociology
Studying social movements is one way to understand social change. The historical timing of their appearance and the ways they are similar and different from previous social movements is an excellent method for capturing localized salient concerns and the course of societal responses to systems of inequality over time. Another social arena, often undervalued in traditional sociological studies on systems of inequality and their related societal responses, also exists built for the emergence of social confrontations with the status quo. Whether as a psychological release valve, as a method to strengthen positions of dominance, or as a social position to voice criticisms too hot for everyday interaction, the mutability of comedy serves to encourage the emergence of relegated perspectives. There is a great deal of truth to saying a joke is never just a joke. Of course not without consequences, the significance of comedic instances is tempered by its temporal nature and the inherent ambiguity of interpretation. Incidentally, both of these qualities are also what gives comedy freedom from operating social norms of decorum and also allows for opportunities to confront these social norms. It should not be surprising that totalitarian regimes outlaw any practice of comedy, while the most democratic of nations, still riddled with racism, can claim a rich history of comedic challenges to race ideology. It is most likely for this reason that recurring characters like Luther, President Obama¡¦s ¡§anger translator¡¨ on Key and Peele even exist. Luther is the President¡¦s alter ego who performs and personifies all of the emotions the first non-white president must presumably feel, but is prevented from expressing, especially in relation to the trappings of contemporary racial logic. The main point here is to take a closer look at these seemingly strange bedfellows ¡V comedy and race ¡V and to consider these humorous proclamations against race and racism as types of momentary, but constant, social protest. Using popular commentary as a measure of controversy that is widely known, the most controversial sketch comedy shows in each decade from the 1960s to the 2000s were selected and analyzed. Additionally, all other sketch comedy shows that aired at the same time for each show were analyzed, leading to a more complex depiction of racial politics in the U.S. over five decades. Examining race through comedy lends itself to seeing racial dynamics from the edge and through the lens of social critics who possess wider degrees of discursive and performative acceptability. The story they tell confirms their critical social importance and their unique encounter with prevailing issues of race and racism. This study examines contemporary "fools" and how they resist, challenge, and transform race ideology. In order to capture the landscape of each show and to identify variations across the show, basic demographic characteristics will be collected through pre-established categorical determinations. As the primary level of…
Advisors/Committee Members: Kidd, Dustin;, Wray, Matt, Zhao, Shanyang, Creech, Brian;.
Subjects/Keywords: Sociology
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Kim, J. (2015). The Merits of a Fool: Contending with Race and Racism through Sketch Comedy from the 1960s to the 2000s. (Doctoral Dissertation). Temple University. Retrieved from http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,320730
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Kim, Jennifer. “The Merits of a Fool: Contending with Race and Racism through Sketch Comedy from the 1960s to the 2000s.” 2015. Doctoral Dissertation, Temple University. Accessed March 04, 2021.
http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,320730.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Kim, Jennifer. “The Merits of a Fool: Contending with Race and Racism through Sketch Comedy from the 1960s to the 2000s.” 2015. Web. 04 Mar 2021.
Vancouver:
Kim J. The Merits of a Fool: Contending with Race and Racism through Sketch Comedy from the 1960s to the 2000s. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Temple University; 2015. [cited 2021 Mar 04].
Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,320730.
Council of Science Editors:
Kim J. The Merits of a Fool: Contending with Race and Racism through Sketch Comedy from the 1960s to the 2000s. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Temple University; 2015. Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,320730

Temple University
4.
Zhu, Lin.
DEPRESSION PREVALENCE, SYMPTOM PATTERN, AND MENTAL HEALTH SERVICE USE AMONG CHINESE AMERICANS: A QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF ETHNOCULTURAL DISPARITIES.
Degree: PhD, 2016, Temple University
URL: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,421230
► Sociology
My dissertation examines the depression prevalence, symptom patterns and dimension, and mental health service use among Chinese Americans. The purpose of this research is…
(more)
▼ Sociology
My dissertation examines the depression prevalence, symptom patterns and dimension, and mental health service use among Chinese Americans. The purpose of this research is to, 1) provide epidemiological data on the prevalence of depression among Chinese Americans, 2) examine sociocultural impacts on the prevalence and specific symptoms patterns of depression, and 3) generate implications for more culturally-sensitive approaches in psychiatric diagnosis and treatment. I use secondary data from the Collaborative Psychiatric Epidemiology Studies (CPES). The CPES consists of three nationally representative surveys conducted between 2001 and 2003. Each of three substantive chapters attempts to a set of issues, and together they contribute to the literature on generational differences in mental health status and help-seeking behaviors among Chinese Americans. The first substantive chapter examines depression prevalence and correlates among different generations of Chinese Americans, using non-Hispanic whites as a comparison group, using weighted multinomial logistic regression. Results of the study indicate that Chinese Americans in general have a lower risk of depression than do non-Hispanic whites. Moreover, the prevalence and correlates of depression do not show a linear trend of difference from first to second to third-or-higher generation Chinese Americans, and then to non-Hispanic whites; rather, the risk of depression and its associated with social relational factors present distinct patterns for first and second generation Chinese Americans, compared to third-or-higher generation Chinese Americans and non-Hispanic whites. Specifically, friend network and extended family network play different roles in their influence on depression risk for different generations of Chinese Americans. In the Chapter Four, I conduct exploratory factor analysis to examine two subgroups of Chinese Americans, the foreign-born and the US-born, and compare them to the non-Hispanic whites. I also conduct weighted binary logistic regression to examine the patterns of depressive symptoms for Chinese Americans (separate by nativity status) and compare the two groups to non-Hispanic whites. I also examine how demographic characteristics and social factors are related to different dimensions of depressive symptoms for each group. I also find very similar factors structures of DSM-IV depressive symptoms among foreign-born Chinese Americans, US-born Chinese Americans, and non-Hispanic whites. For all three groups, suicidal ideation or attempt is a construct that is distinct from the rest of the symptoms items. The three groups have different social correlates, yet there are only minor differences in the social correlates for each one of the four depression dimensions within each group. Chronic physical condition is the most consistently significant predictor, for the negative affect, somatic symptoms, and cognitive symptoms among the two Chinese groups, and for all four dimensions of depression among non-Hispanic whites. Finally, in…
Advisors/Committee Members: Condran, Gretchen;, Kaufman, Robert L., Zhao, Shanyang, Ma, Grace;.
Subjects/Keywords: Sociology; Mental health; Asian American studies;
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Zhu, L. (2016). DEPRESSION PREVALENCE, SYMPTOM PATTERN, AND MENTAL HEALTH SERVICE USE AMONG CHINESE AMERICANS: A QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF ETHNOCULTURAL DISPARITIES. (Doctoral Dissertation). Temple University. Retrieved from http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,421230
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Zhu, Lin. “DEPRESSION PREVALENCE, SYMPTOM PATTERN, AND MENTAL HEALTH SERVICE USE AMONG CHINESE AMERICANS: A QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF ETHNOCULTURAL DISPARITIES.” 2016. Doctoral Dissertation, Temple University. Accessed March 04, 2021.
http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,421230.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Zhu, Lin. “DEPRESSION PREVALENCE, SYMPTOM PATTERN, AND MENTAL HEALTH SERVICE USE AMONG CHINESE AMERICANS: A QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF ETHNOCULTURAL DISPARITIES.” 2016. Web. 04 Mar 2021.
Vancouver:
Zhu L. DEPRESSION PREVALENCE, SYMPTOM PATTERN, AND MENTAL HEALTH SERVICE USE AMONG CHINESE AMERICANS: A QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF ETHNOCULTURAL DISPARITIES. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Temple University; 2016. [cited 2021 Mar 04].
Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,421230.
Council of Science Editors:
Zhu L. DEPRESSION PREVALENCE, SYMPTOM PATTERN, AND MENTAL HEALTH SERVICE USE AMONG CHINESE AMERICANS: A QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF ETHNOCULTURAL DISPARITIES. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Temple University; 2016. Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,421230

Temple University
5.
Cheung, Kin.
Meditation and Neural Connections: Changing Sense(s) of Self in East Asian Buddhist and Neuroscientific Descriptions.
Degree: PhD, 2017, Temple University
URL: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,425864
► Religion
Since its inception in the 1960s, the scientific research of Buddhist-based meditation practices have grown exponentially with hundreds of new studies every year in…
(more)
▼ Religion
Since its inception in the 1960s, the scientific research of Buddhist-based meditation practices have grown exponentially with hundreds of new studies every year in the past decade. Some researchers are using Buddhist teachings, such as not-self, as an explanation for the causal mechanism of meditation’s effectiveness, for conditions such as stress, anxiety, and depression. However, there has been little response from Buddhist studies scholars to these proposed mechanisms in the growing discourse surrounding the engagement of ‘Buddhism’ and ‘Science.’ I argue that the mechanistic causal explanations of meditation offered by researchers provide an incomplete understanding of meditative practices. I focus on two articles, by David Vago and his co-authors, that have been cited over nine hundred and three hundred times. I make explicit internal criticisms of their work from their peers in neuroscience, and offer external criticisms of their understanding of the cognitive aspects of meditation by using an extended, enactive, embodied, embedded, and affective (4EA) model of cognition. I also use Chinese Huayan Buddhist mereology and causation to provide a corrective for a more holistic understanding. The constructive aspect of my project combines 4EA cognition with Huayan mereology and causation in order to propose new directions of research on how meditative practices may lead to a changing sense of self that does not privilege neurobiological mechanisms. Instead, I argue a fruitful understanding of change in ethical behavior is a changing sense of self using support from a consummate meditator in the Japanese Zen Buddhist context: Dōgen and his text Shoakumakusa. Contemporary research looking for mechanistic causation focuses on the physical body, specifically the brain, without considering how the mind is involved in meditative practices. The group of researchers I focus on reduce the senses of self to localized parts of the brain. In contrast, according to Mahayana Buddhist terminology, Huayan offers a nondualistic understanding of the self that does not privilege the brain. Rather, Huayan characterizes the self as a mind-body complex and meditation is understood to involve the whole of the person. My critique notes how the methodology used in these studies focuses too much on the localized, explicit, and foreground, but not enough on the whole, implicit, and background processes in meditative practices. Bringing in Huayan also offers a constructive aspect to this engagement of Buddhist studies and neuroscience as there are implications of its mereology for a more complete understanding of not just meditation, but also of neuroplasticity. To be clear, the corrective is only meant for the direction of research that focuses on neural-mechanistic explanations of meditation. Surely, there is value in scientific research on meditative practices. However, that emphasis on neural mechanisms gives a misleading impression of being able to fully explain meditative practices. I argue that a more fruitful direction of…
Advisors/Committee Members: Nagatomo, Shigenori;, Bingenheimer, Marcus, Blankinship, Khalid Yahya, Zhao, Shanyang;.
Subjects/Keywords: Religion; Ethics; Philosophy;
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APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Cheung, K. (2017). Meditation and Neural Connections: Changing Sense(s) of Self in East Asian Buddhist and Neuroscientific Descriptions. (Doctoral Dissertation). Temple University. Retrieved from http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,425864
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Cheung, Kin. “Meditation and Neural Connections: Changing Sense(s) of Self in East Asian Buddhist and Neuroscientific Descriptions.” 2017. Doctoral Dissertation, Temple University. Accessed March 04, 2021.
http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,425864.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Cheung, Kin. “Meditation and Neural Connections: Changing Sense(s) of Self in East Asian Buddhist and Neuroscientific Descriptions.” 2017. Web. 04 Mar 2021.
Vancouver:
Cheung K. Meditation and Neural Connections: Changing Sense(s) of Self in East Asian Buddhist and Neuroscientific Descriptions. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Temple University; 2017. [cited 2021 Mar 04].
Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,425864.
Council of Science Editors:
Cheung K. Meditation and Neural Connections: Changing Sense(s) of Self in East Asian Buddhist and Neuroscientific Descriptions. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Temple University; 2017. Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,425864

Temple University
6.
Waters, Corey.
To V or Not to V: Narratives, Networks, and Contingencies of Veganism.
Degree: PhD, 2017, Temple University
URL: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,475064
► Sociology
This study is an examination of mobilization processes, with a particular focus on how people come to contemplate and ultimately embrace or reject veganism.…
(more)
▼ Sociology
This study is an examination of mobilization processes, with a particular focus on how people come to contemplate and ultimately embrace or reject veganism. It is a response to social movements scholarship that has called for examinations of how identity interacts with mobilization. Engaging the narratives of 34 interview participants who interacted with vegan advocacy networks in Greater Philadelphia, the study accounts for how prospective vegans negotiate forces, such as social networks and ties, that activate or hinder their mobilization; and for how they prioritize veganism amid competing priorities. Among other manners, participants came to contemplate the prospect of becoming vegan upon recognizing veganism as congruent with their other priorities. Participants who became vegan were more likely than participants who did not to prioritize altruism and to seek information that motivated and empowered them. Rather than prioritize their veganism over competing priorities, the vegans more often sought to harmonize their veganism with competing priorities. The study also measures the capacity of people from socioeconomically and racially contrasting neighborhoods in Philadelphia to engage in a behavior and a movement such as veganism. Results from a sample of 335 survey participants suggest that people from impoverished neighborhoods may be less capable because they are less likely to know people who practice veganism. The study's findings suggest that participation in movements is contingent on how prospective participants prioritize, on the incentives with which they contemplate participation, and on their capacity to participate.
Temple University – Theses
Advisors/Committee Members: Vila, Pablo;, Grasmuck, Sherri, Zhao, Shanyang, Melzer, Patricia;.
Subjects/Keywords: Sociology;
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Waters, C. (2017). To V or Not to V: Narratives, Networks, and Contingencies of Veganism. (Doctoral Dissertation). Temple University. Retrieved from http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,475064
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Waters, Corey. “To V or Not to V: Narratives, Networks, and Contingencies of Veganism.” 2017. Doctoral Dissertation, Temple University. Accessed March 04, 2021.
http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,475064.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Waters, Corey. “To V or Not to V: Narratives, Networks, and Contingencies of Veganism.” 2017. Web. 04 Mar 2021.
Vancouver:
Waters C. To V or Not to V: Narratives, Networks, and Contingencies of Veganism. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Temple University; 2017. [cited 2021 Mar 04].
Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,475064.
Council of Science Editors:
Waters C. To V or Not to V: Narratives, Networks, and Contingencies of Veganism. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Temple University; 2017. Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,475064

Temple University
7.
Cousin-Gossett, Nicole Marie.
The Sustainability of the North American Fair Trade Market.
Degree: PhD, 2010, Temple University
URL: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,100271
► Sociology
Extreme poverty remains a persistent problem across the globe. Academics, practitioners, politicians and activists have sought ways to address this persistent problem. Traditional approaches…
(more)
▼ Sociology
Extreme poverty remains a persistent problem across the globe. Academics, practitioners, politicians and activists have sought ways to address this persistent problem. Traditional approaches to dealing with endemic poverty have centered around international aid and trade. The band aid approach of using aid alone to alleviate poverty has, at best, been ineffectual. International trade has also often been used as a means to increase the economic standing of an impoverished country. Trade has the potential to increase a country's economic position (e.g., gross domestic product) however it does not necessarily reduce poverty. It has become apparent that more effect means of reducing poverty are needed. In recent years, several bottom-up alternative approaches have emerged. Fair Trade is one such approach that seeks to balance the inequalities of traditional trade and provide a market where those on the bottom can participate more fully and fairly in economic enterprise.
This study investigates the state of the alternative form of trade known as Fair Trade. Specifically, this study examines the development, functioning, and sustainability of the North American Fair Trade market. Realistically speaking, Fair Trade, which accounts for only a very small percentage of global trade, currently does not appear to be a replacement for traditional free trade. However, this study investigates if the Fair Trade market has the potential to become an important component of general efforts (e.g., by the United Nations and World Bank) to raise the living standards of the world's poor and function as an alternative market to the traditional free trade market. Two key areas of the market were examined in this study to ascertain the sustainability of the Fair Trade market.
Specifically, the financial sustainability of the Fair Trade market was assessed. Quantitative data on sales and growth of Fair Trade goods over the past several decades was compiled to illustrate the relative significance and the future prospects of this market's financial status. These data were supplemented with an analysis of the financial records of available years of operation from a sample of Fair Trade businesses.
Also, the organizational structure of the Fair Trade market was examined to ascertain the operational sustainability of the market. Organizational data were compiled to identify the business choices made by Fair Trade businesses.
Results suggest that financially the North American Fair Trade market is growing at or above the pace of comparable non-Fair Trade businesses. Further, this study highlights a distinct and largely self sustaining organizational structure of the North American Fair Trade market.
Temple University – Theses
Advisors/Committee Members: Kontopoulos, Kyriakos M., Goyette, Kimberly A., Zhao, Shanyang, Messinger, Seth.
Subjects/Keywords: Sociology, Organizational; alternative markets; Fair Trade; sustainability
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Cousin-Gossett, N. M. (2010). The Sustainability of the North American Fair Trade Market. (Doctoral Dissertation). Temple University. Retrieved from http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,100271
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Cousin-Gossett, Nicole Marie. “The Sustainability of the North American Fair Trade Market.” 2010. Doctoral Dissertation, Temple University. Accessed March 04, 2021.
http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,100271.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Cousin-Gossett, Nicole Marie. “The Sustainability of the North American Fair Trade Market.” 2010. Web. 04 Mar 2021.
Vancouver:
Cousin-Gossett NM. The Sustainability of the North American Fair Trade Market. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Temple University; 2010. [cited 2021 Mar 04].
Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,100271.
Council of Science Editors:
Cousin-Gossett NM. The Sustainability of the North American Fair Trade Market. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Temple University; 2010. Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,100271

Temple University
8.
PAN, LINGLING.
PERFORMANCE EVALUATION, COMMUNICATION ENVIRONMENT, AND DECISION LEGITIMACY: A CASE IN CHINA.
Degree: PhD, 2012, Temple University
URL: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,168740
► Mass Media and Communication
Questions regarding the concept of legitimacy are central to social and political science. Exploring how people justify legitimacy and why people…
(more)
▼ Mass Media and Communication
Questions regarding the concept of legitimacy are central to social and political science. Exploring how people justify legitimacy and why people grant legitimacy to leadership and collective decisions in groups, organizations, and nations is generally agreed to be essential to scholarship on legitimacy. One line of research finds contributing factors in bureaucratic effectiveness and efficiency that can provide substantive benefits to people. Another line of research expands legitimacy to procedural elements such as fairness of treatment or quality of communication (deliberation) in the decision making process. This dissertation intends to contribute to the research of legitimacy and hopes to further the understanding of communication's role in decision outcome legitimacy by incorporating two sets of contributing factors: Performance factors and communication factors. This will enable a side-by-side comparison of instrumentalist and communicative factors in predicting legitimation. In addition, the study will observe the quality of the communication environment as a contextual variable upon which the relationship between performance elements and decision outcome legitimacy depends. Specifically, how the communication environment moderates the strength of the relationship between output of public service in a certain domain and the perceived legitimacy of the decision made in the same domain will be observed. Drawing on the framework from Habermas's theory of communicative action and the public sphere, the literature on deliberative democracy, and organizational studies, the project intends to observe how the communication environment or speech conditions (in Habermasian terms) may affect the legitimacy of a decision outcome, and at the same time may influence the relationship between the perceived performance in a certain public service sector and the perceived legitimacy of a decision outcome in the same sector. Using a sample of 255 adult residents in Chengdu, the capital city of Sichuan province in southwest China, the study found that perceived government performance and perceived speech conditions were both positively related to perceived legitimacy of government decision; furthermore, perceived speech conditions moderated the relationship between the performance evaluation and legitimacy perception. These findings suggest some important insights into the role of communication in political legitimation and the evolving communication expectations in China.
Temple University – Theses
Advisors/Committee Members: Jacobson, Thomas L., Zhao, Shanyang, Xu, Kaibin, Pratt, Cornelius B..
Subjects/Keywords: Communication; Mass communication; COMMUNICATION ENVIRONMENT; DELIBERATION; HABERMAS; PERFORMANCE; PROCEDURE; SPEECH CONDITIONS
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APA (6th Edition):
PAN, L. (2012). PERFORMANCE EVALUATION, COMMUNICATION ENVIRONMENT, AND DECISION LEGITIMACY: A CASE IN CHINA. (Doctoral Dissertation). Temple University. Retrieved from http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,168740
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
PAN, LINGLING. “PERFORMANCE EVALUATION, COMMUNICATION ENVIRONMENT, AND DECISION LEGITIMACY: A CASE IN CHINA.” 2012. Doctoral Dissertation, Temple University. Accessed March 04, 2021.
http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,168740.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
PAN, LINGLING. “PERFORMANCE EVALUATION, COMMUNICATION ENVIRONMENT, AND DECISION LEGITIMACY: A CASE IN CHINA.” 2012. Web. 04 Mar 2021.
Vancouver:
PAN L. PERFORMANCE EVALUATION, COMMUNICATION ENVIRONMENT, AND DECISION LEGITIMACY: A CASE IN CHINA. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Temple University; 2012. [cited 2021 Mar 04].
Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,168740.
Council of Science Editors:
PAN L. PERFORMANCE EVALUATION, COMMUNICATION ENVIRONMENT, AND DECISION LEGITIMACY: A CASE IN CHINA. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Temple University; 2012. Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,168740

Temple University
9.
Avery-Natale, Edward Antony.
Narrative Identifications among Anarcho-Punks in Philadelphia.
Degree: PhD, 2012, Temple University
URL: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,174972
► Sociology
This dissertation uses in depth interviews and participant observation in order to understand an important contemporary subculture: anarcho-punks. The research was done in Philadelphia,…
(more)
▼ Sociology
This dissertation uses in depth interviews and participant observation in order to understand an important contemporary subculture: anarcho-punks. The research was done in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania between the years of 2006 and 2012. The overarching theme that connects the different chapters of the dissertation together is a focus on the ways in which the identification narratives of participants are ethical in nature, meaning that the narrators are working to maintain an ethical sense of self in their narration. In addition, I show the identitarian consequences of the ways in which the hyphenation of the anarcho-punk identification works to both separate and join the two different identifications "anarchist" and "punk." I also show the ways in which identifications are narratively structured. This is done throughout the ten chapters of the dissertation. Each of the substantive chapters focuses on the different narratives used by the participants to understand a particular theme that is important to developing an understanding of the subculture overall.
Temple University – Theses
Advisors/Committee Members: Vila, Pablo, Gordon, Lewis R. (Lewis Ricardo), Zhao, Shanyang, Wright, Thomas.
Subjects/Keywords: Sociology; Music; American studies; Anarchism; Ethics; Identity; Punk; Social Movements; Subculture
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
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APA (6th Edition):
Avery-Natale, E. A. (2012). Narrative Identifications among Anarcho-Punks in Philadelphia. (Doctoral Dissertation). Temple University. Retrieved from http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,174972
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Avery-Natale, Edward Antony. “Narrative Identifications among Anarcho-Punks in Philadelphia.” 2012. Doctoral Dissertation, Temple University. Accessed March 04, 2021.
http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,174972.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Avery-Natale, Edward Antony. “Narrative Identifications among Anarcho-Punks in Philadelphia.” 2012. Web. 04 Mar 2021.
Vancouver:
Avery-Natale EA. Narrative Identifications among Anarcho-Punks in Philadelphia. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Temple University; 2012. [cited 2021 Mar 04].
Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,174972.
Council of Science Editors:
Avery-Natale EA. Narrative Identifications among Anarcho-Punks in Philadelphia. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Temple University; 2012. Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,174972

Temple University
10.
Norton, Michael.
Secondary Mortgage Markets & Place-Based Inequality: Space, GSEs and Social Exclusion in the Philadelphia Region.
Degree: PhD, 2015, Temple University
URL: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,342021
► Sociology
Secondary Mortgage Markets and Place-Based Inequality: Space, GSEs and Social Exclusion in the Philadelphia Region Michael H. Norton Temple University, 2015 Doctoral Advisory Committee…
(more)
▼ Sociology
Secondary Mortgage Markets and Place-Based Inequality: Space, GSEs and Social Exclusion in the Philadelphia Region Michael H. Norton Temple University, 2015 Doctoral Advisory Committee Chair: Dr. Anne Shlay In 2015 virtually the entire US mortgage market is subsidized by US taxpayers. When the Federal Government took control of the Government Sponsored Enterprises (GSEs) Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in the summer of 2008, US tax payers assumed responsibility for the vast majority of outstanding mortgage debt in the country. This dissertation examined the historical development and contemporary activity of the secondary mortgage market to understand the way the secondary market contributes to the reproduction of place-based inequality in American cities. Specifically, this dissertation analyzed the political-economic history of the secondary mortgage market to ground a contemporary analysis of the impact of secondary mortgage market activity on neighborhood change in the Philadelphia region at the turn of the 21st century. At the turn of the 21st century secondary market institutions coordinated a financial production process referred to in this study as the financialization of space. This process transforms the individual spatial relationships between individuals and their homes into financial commodities that are bought and sold by financial institutions. Individual mortgage loans make the financialization of space possible by providing the raw material that transmits capital embedded in the social spaces of individual homes and communities through secondary market institutions and into the abstract spaces of international capital markets. However, the financialization of space itself is made possible by a number of key contradictions that created considerable tension between the ongoing expansion of finacialized space and mortgage lending to individual home owners. These tensions were built into the very framework of the legislative policies governing the secondary mortgage market. The evolution of the secondary mortgage market was informed by parallel streams of housing policy that alternately sought to expand and regulate the primary and secondary mortgage markets at the end of the 20th century. The confluence of these policy streams initially created the conditions for the GSEs to pioneer financial productions processes that led to the financializaiton of space. At the same time, the emergence of subprime lending in the primary market, combined with the expansion of the secondary mortgage market to unregulated, private institutions, created dual housing markets differentiated by the types of loans available in the primary market and the funding sources for these loans in the secondary market. Throughout the study period (1996 – 2007), the GSEs concentrated the vast majority of all their purchasing activity buying conventional loans in the more affluent areas of the region. On the other hand, private institutions steadily eroded GSE market share in the conventional market, represented virtually the…
Advisors/Committee Members: Shlay, Anne B.;, Adams, Carolyn Teich, Zhao, Shanyang, Galster, George C.;.
Subjects/Keywords: Sociology; Geography; Public policy;
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Norton, M. (2015). Secondary Mortgage Markets & Place-Based Inequality: Space, GSEs and Social Exclusion in the Philadelphia Region. (Doctoral Dissertation). Temple University. Retrieved from http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,342021
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Norton, Michael. “Secondary Mortgage Markets & Place-Based Inequality: Space, GSEs and Social Exclusion in the Philadelphia Region.” 2015. Doctoral Dissertation, Temple University. Accessed March 04, 2021.
http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,342021.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Norton, Michael. “Secondary Mortgage Markets & Place-Based Inequality: Space, GSEs and Social Exclusion in the Philadelphia Region.” 2015. Web. 04 Mar 2021.
Vancouver:
Norton M. Secondary Mortgage Markets & Place-Based Inequality: Space, GSEs and Social Exclusion in the Philadelphia Region. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Temple University; 2015. [cited 2021 Mar 04].
Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,342021.
Council of Science Editors:
Norton M. Secondary Mortgage Markets & Place-Based Inequality: Space, GSEs and Social Exclusion in the Philadelphia Region. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Temple University; 2015. Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,342021

Temple University
11.
Sun, Xiaoyang.
SOCIAL CAPITAL AND CROSS-ETHNIC FRIENDSHIPS AMONG MIN KAO MIN, MIN KAO HAN, AND HAN STUDENTS AT MINZU UNIVERSITY OF CHINA: A QUALITATIVE STUDY.
Degree: PhD, 2018, Temple University
URL: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,484631
► Sociology
This study examines ethnic minority students at Minzu University of China (Minzu) and the ways in which students form social capital and cross-ethnic friendships…
(more)
▼ Sociology
This study examines ethnic minority students at Minzu University of China (Minzu) and the ways in which students form social capital and cross-ethnic friendships as strategies to support their academic and career pursuits. Minzu University of China (in Beijing) is selected as the site for the study because it is the leading minority university in China and its mission is to promote educational attainment and social integration among the nation’s ethnic minority population. The study calls on sociological work on social capital and schooling as well as work on cross-racial and cross-ethnic friendship formation to guide the theoretical and conceptual analysis. Three groups of students based on ethnic background and primary language spoken form the basis for the interview sample: 1) Han students whose primary language is Chinese Mandarin; 2) Min Kao Han students who are ethnic minorities fluent in Chinese Mandarin and who took the college entrance exam (the Gaokao) in Mandarin; and 3) Min Kao Min students representing ethnic minority students who took the college entrance exam in their native language and who may have limited Mandarin ability. The following research questions served to guide the study: 1) What differences exist among Han, Min Kao Han, and Min Kao Min college students in terms of the observable characteristics of their social connections and relations? 2) How do students form social relationships and connections and to what extent are there observable differences when comparing the three groups of students? 3) How do the students form cross-ethnic friendships and relations and to what extent are there observable differences across the three groups of students? 4) How does guanxi influence the formation of social relationships and connections among the three groups of students? Methodologically speaking, the study borrows from the qualitative tradition and emphasizes the kind of perspective taking critical to understanding the collegiate experiences of ethnic minorities. Field work was conducted during the spring semester 2017 over a five-month period and involved semi-structured interviews with 42 students (14 from each ethnic grouping and equal numbers of males and females), informal interviews, participant observation (mainly in the form of shadowing) and document analysis. Key research findings point to the fact that Min Kao Min students tend to lack confidence about their pre-college education and their Gaokao performance. The vast majority of students appreciated the cultural and ethnic diversity at Minzu University, although some reported shortcomings with the educational environment in terms of the academic quality and the campus infrastructure. Two major forms of social relations constituted students’ social capital formation—peer to peer connections and faculty/staff connections. Extracurricular activities and social media/online platforms provided important spaces for students to build social capital and cross-ethnic friendships. Guanxi, as a unique form of social capital in the…
Advisors/Committee Members: Goyette, Kimberly A.;, Zhang, Lu, White, Sydney Davant, Zhao, Shanyang;.
Subjects/Keywords: Sociology;
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Sun, X. (2018). SOCIAL CAPITAL AND CROSS-ETHNIC FRIENDSHIPS AMONG MIN KAO MIN, MIN KAO HAN, AND HAN STUDENTS AT MINZU UNIVERSITY OF CHINA: A QUALITATIVE STUDY. (Doctoral Dissertation). Temple University. Retrieved from http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,484631
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Sun, Xiaoyang. “SOCIAL CAPITAL AND CROSS-ETHNIC FRIENDSHIPS AMONG MIN KAO MIN, MIN KAO HAN, AND HAN STUDENTS AT MINZU UNIVERSITY OF CHINA: A QUALITATIVE STUDY.” 2018. Doctoral Dissertation, Temple University. Accessed March 04, 2021.
http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,484631.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Sun, Xiaoyang. “SOCIAL CAPITAL AND CROSS-ETHNIC FRIENDSHIPS AMONG MIN KAO MIN, MIN KAO HAN, AND HAN STUDENTS AT MINZU UNIVERSITY OF CHINA: A QUALITATIVE STUDY.” 2018. Web. 04 Mar 2021.
Vancouver:
Sun X. SOCIAL CAPITAL AND CROSS-ETHNIC FRIENDSHIPS AMONG MIN KAO MIN, MIN KAO HAN, AND HAN STUDENTS AT MINZU UNIVERSITY OF CHINA: A QUALITATIVE STUDY. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Temple University; 2018. [cited 2021 Mar 04].
Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,484631.
Council of Science Editors:
Sun X. SOCIAL CAPITAL AND CROSS-ETHNIC FRIENDSHIPS AMONG MIN KAO MIN, MIN KAO HAN, AND HAN STUDENTS AT MINZU UNIVERSITY OF CHINA: A QUALITATIVE STUDY. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Temple University; 2018. Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,484631

Temple University
12.
Lee, Hojeong.
DIGITAL MEDIA AND THE KOREAN DIASPORA: A JOURNEY OF IDENTITY CONSTRUCTION.
Degree: PhD, 2018, Temple University
URL: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,512560
► Media & Communication
This dissertation explores how developed digital media technology influences individuals’ daily lives and their everyday practices. Furthermore, it examines how digital media…
(more)
▼ Media & Communication
This dissertation explores how developed digital media technology influences individuals’ daily lives and their everyday practices. Furthermore, it examines how digital media usage has impacted diasporic members’ identity construction process. With the example of the Korean diaspora in the United States as a case study, this dissertation focuses on the impact of digital media, first, in regard to the ways in which diasporic members communicate with others and respond to the national and social issues of the homeland, and second in regard to their understanding of themselves, as well as their surroundings. Through an analysis of in-depth interviews with 35 Korean immigrants and my fieldwork in the New York City, Jersey City, and Philadelphia metropolitan areas from October 2016 to March 2017, this dissertation examines how and to what extent Korean diasporic members have connected to and paid attention to their homeland issues, and how they have responded to them, in tandem with the development of media communication technology throughout the immigration history of the Korean diaspora. This research finds that the advent of digital media has had a significant impact on the Korean diaspora. Despite a generational split in terms of Korean diasporic members’ digital media usage, all of my interviewees use digital media on a daily basis to interact with others, regardless of geographical limitations. As a result, global digital diaspora enables Korean diasporic members to reconfirm the significance of the Korean diaspora. These members recognize the Korean diaspora not as an exclusive community limited to specific local individuals, but rather as a transnational community on a global level. Hence, Korean diasporic members’ self-identification is often based on such an understanding of the Korean diaspora.
Temple University – Theses
Advisors/Committee Members: Morris, Nancy A.;, Darling-Wolf, Fabienne, Yu, Sherry, Zhao, Shanyang;.
Subjects/Keywords: Communication;
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Lee, H. (2018). DIGITAL MEDIA AND THE KOREAN DIASPORA: A JOURNEY OF IDENTITY CONSTRUCTION. (Doctoral Dissertation). Temple University. Retrieved from http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,512560
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Lee, Hojeong. “DIGITAL MEDIA AND THE KOREAN DIASPORA: A JOURNEY OF IDENTITY CONSTRUCTION.” 2018. Doctoral Dissertation, Temple University. Accessed March 04, 2021.
http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,512560.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Lee, Hojeong. “DIGITAL MEDIA AND THE KOREAN DIASPORA: A JOURNEY OF IDENTITY CONSTRUCTION.” 2018. Web. 04 Mar 2021.
Vancouver:
Lee H. DIGITAL MEDIA AND THE KOREAN DIASPORA: A JOURNEY OF IDENTITY CONSTRUCTION. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Temple University; 2018. [cited 2021 Mar 04].
Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,512560.
Council of Science Editors:
Lee H. DIGITAL MEDIA AND THE KOREAN DIASPORA: A JOURNEY OF IDENTITY CONSTRUCTION. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Temple University; 2018. Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,512560
.