Ditemukan 154 dokumen yang sesuai dengan query
Sanders, Stephan, 1961-
Amsterdam: Bezige Bij, 1991
BLD 839.36 SAN a
Buku Teks Universitas Indonesia Library
Marier, Roger
Paris: UNESCO, 1953
370.78 MAR s
Buku Teks Universitas Indonesia Library
"In the developing world, standard measures of occupational segregation by sex may be deeply misleading because of structural, cultural and historical differences between developing countries and the developed countries that often feature in studies of segregation. In Jamaica in particular, the legacy of slavery has made female labour an integral part of the workforce for centuries ? whereas large-scale female participation in the developed countries can only be measured in decades. The authors find that the country's large, undifferentiated pools of unskilled labour ironically translate into lower levels of occupational segregation, with women outpacing men in the professional categories."
ILR 154 (4) 2015
Artikel Jurnal Universitas Indonesia Library
Chichester : Wiley, 1990
612.8 AI
Buku Teks Universitas Indonesia Library
Blake, Judith
New York: The Free Press of Glencoe, 1961
301.329 BLA f
Buku Teks Universitas Indonesia Library
Back, Kurt W.
[Ithaca, N.Y.]: Society for Applied Anthropology, 1969
301.321 BAC s
Buku Teks Universitas Indonesia Library
Peter J.M. Nas
"In this essay we present three case studies of Peru, Jamaica and Indonesia to illustrate the use of the concept of race in daily life in relation to labour, popular culture and beauty respectively. These cases demonstrate how the use of the concept of race changes in the transition from a colonial into a postcolonial setting, depending on the role of the state and nation building. In Peru, we see a clear continuation of racialized thinking; thinking and speaking in terms of ?race? is still the norm. In Jamaica we find a process of inversion: the concept of race is maintained as a frame of societal analysis, but blackness is revalidated and has become a prerequisite for national and cultural belonging. In Indonesia racialized categorizations have disappeared almost completely as "race" has become subjected to the development rhetoric, which just allows limited space for ethnic manifestations. However, discrimination on other rhetorical basis, such as non-citizenship, remains."
Depok: Faculty of Humanities University of Indonesia, 2009
pdf
Artikel Jurnal Universitas Indonesia Library
Buku Teks Universitas Indonesia Library
Mushanokoji, Saneatsu
Tokyo: Hokuseido Press, 1967
859.63 MUS l
Buku Teks Universitas Indonesia Library
Kuprin, A.I.
891.73
Buku Teks Universitas Indonesia Library