Sökning: "Cecilia Åse"
Visar resultat 1 - 5 av 6 avhandlingar innehållade orden Cecilia Åse.
1. Makten att se : om kropp och kvinnlighet i lagens namn
Sammanfattning : The female body is crucial to the ways in which relations of power between the sexes are constructed and reinforced. The body is the kernel of oppression because the body is what women are while at the same time it is made to legitimate women's own subordination. LÄS MER
2. Powered mobility device use: participation and accessibility
Sammanfattning : This thesis elucidates the use of powered mobility devices in a Swedish context. The overall aim was to increase and deepen the knowledge on powered mobility device use in relation to participation and accessibility in different environments and among different user groups, with a specific focus on independence and autonomy. LÄS MER
3. The Art of Making Democratic Trouble : Four Art Events and Radical Democratic Theory
Sammanfattning : Heated debates and strong emotions occasionally arise in the public sphere in the wake of an art object. The interaction that follows becomes part of what we as citizens share in a democracy, with its particular conditions of political speech and democratic exchange. LÄS MER
4. Gendering Nuclear Disarmament : Identity and Disarmament in Sweden during the Cold War
Sammanfattning : This dissertation provides new knowledge about gender, nuclear weapons and disarmament. Previous feminist research has shown that in contexts where positive associations are made between military strength, masculinity and nuclear weapon possession, it is hard to imagine nuclear renunciation and disarmament as anything other than potential emasculation or feminization. LÄS MER
5. The dis/appearances of violence : When a 'peace-loving' state uses force
Sammanfattning : The research problem that this dissertation addresses is how and with what implications the use of force in ‘distant’ places is made seen and known at home. As practices change and ‘peacework’ is becoming increasingly violent, the book argues that it is imperative to examine how war ‘comes home’ and to what extent the narratives emerging in public discourse open up for public reflection and (re)consideration. LÄS MER