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  1. Parental Control over Mate Choice to Prevent Marriages with Out-group Members.Abraham P. Buunk, Thomas V. Pollet & Shelli Dubbs - 2012 - Human Nature 23 (3):360-374.
    The present research examined how a preference for influencing the mate choice of one’s offspring is associated with opposition to out-group mating among parents from three ethnic groups in the Mexican state of Oaxaca: mestizos (people of mixed descent, n = 103), indigenous Mixtecs (n = 65), and blacks (n = 35). Nearly all of the men in this study were farmworkers or fishermen. Overall, the level of preferred parental influence on mate choice was higher than in Western populations, but (...)
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  • Puerto Rican Wannabes: Sexual Spectacle and the Marking of Race, Class, and Gender Boundaries.Amy C. Wilkins - 2004 - Gender and Society 18 (1):103-121.
    The “Puerto Rican wannabe” is one contemporary, local expression of contested racial identities—identities that are also inflected with class and gender meanings. This study uses interviews with local youth and young adults to explore their use of the caricature of the wannabe to create and contest race, class, and gender boundaries. The wannabe’s challenge to racially designated categories provides a symbol onto which nonwannabe kids project their own stereotypes, anxieties, and desires. The stories told about the wannabe in this study (...)
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  • Social dimensions of health across the life course: Narratives of Arab immigrant women ageing in Canada.Jordana Salma, Norah Keating, Linda Ogilvie & Kathleen F. Hunter - 2018 - Nursing Inquiry 25 (2):e12226.
    The increase in ethnically and linguistically diverse older adults in Canada necessitates attention to their experiences and needs for healthy ageing. Arab immigrant women often report challenges in maintaining health, but little is known about their ageing experiences. This interpretive descriptive study uses a transnational life course framework to understand Arab Muslim immigrant women's experiences of engaging in health‐promoting practices as they age in Canada. Women's stories highlight social dimensions of health such social connectedness, social roles and social support that (...)
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  • “Time to Show Our True Colors”: The Gendered Politics of “Indianness” in Post-Apartheid South Africa.Smitha Radhakrishnan - 2005 - Gender and Society 19 (2):262-281.
    Facing marginalization in the political context of the “new South Africa” and lost social and economic privileges under a Black government, South African Indians articulate the need to keep up culture. In so doing, they simultaneously extend the isolation fostered through apartheid and utilize newly available political language to assert a partially disadvantaged minority voice in a distinctly gendered and racialized way. Echoing the spirit of nationalism in colonial India that figured the bourgeois Indian woman as the essence of the (...)
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  • “How You Bully a Girl”: Sexual Drama and the Negotiation of Gendered Sexuality in High School.Sarah A. Miller - 2016 - Gender and Society 30 (5):721-744.
    Over the past decade, sexual rumor spreading, slut-shaming, and homophobic labeling have become central examples of bullying among young women. This article examines the role these practices— what adults increasingly call “bullying” and what girls often call “drama”— play in girls’ gendering processes. Through interviews with 54 class and racially diverse late adolescent girls, I explore the content and functions of “sexual drama.” All participants had experiences with this kind of conflict, and nearly a third had been the subject of (...)
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