Repositorio temático
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The DSpace digital repository system captures, stores, indexes, preserves, and distributes digital research material.2024-03-25T01:23:50Z‘‘Never Go Out Alone’’: An Analysis of College Rape Prevention Tips
http://repositorio.ciem.ucr.ac.cr/jspui/handle/123456789/453
Title: ‘‘Never Go Out Alone’’: An Analysis of College Rape Prevention Tips
Authors: Bedera, Nordmeyer,KristjaneNicol
Abstract: The role of women in college sexual assault prevention and risk reduction has been controversial as movements for men’s participation become more popular. Research on college sexual assault prevention and risk reduction has largely focused on individual programs or universities. Previous research has largely
avoided larger studies of the messages many colleges give their students regarding who is responsible for rape prevention on campus. This article attempts to fill that gap by examining rape prevention and risk reduction tips posted on 40 college websites. Each tip was analyzed for frequency and intended audience and the women’s tips as a group were analyzed for common themes. Researchers found that most tips are still directed at women and that they convey four main messages: there are no safe places for women, women can’t trust anyone, women should never be alone, and women are vulnerable. Findings imply that the burden of college sexual assault prevention still falls primarily on female students.2015-01-01T00:00:00ZOld, broken, disposable critical : Discourse analysis of the public health narrative about at-risk populations during the COVID-19 pandemic in Costa Rica
http://repositorio.ciem.ucr.ac.cr/jspui/handle/123456789/452
Title: Old, broken, disposable critical : Discourse analysis of the public health narrative about at-risk populations during the COVID-19 pandemic in Costa Rica
Authors: Arguedas-Ramírez, Gabriela
Abstract: During February and March, in Costa Rica, as well as in many other countries in Latin America, public health authorities and government officials insisted that there was no reason to panic or to hoard toilet paper, canned food, and disinfectants.
Even though, by this time, the World Health Organization had declared that transmission of the viral infection caused by the novel coronavirus (SARS-Cov-2) had reached the level of pandemic, these health authorities and elected officials asserted that most people need not feel afraid. After all, they claimed, the disease caused by this virus appeared to be mild in most cases, that is, except in people older than 70
years of age and people with concomitant health issues such hypertension or diabetes. The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate that the epistemic authority from which the dominant narrative about COVID-19 has emerged in Costa Rica is rootedin extended and normalized discriminatory and oppressive ideologies regarding the value of people and their bodies. This official discourse is an expression of the condescending and paternalistic tradition of medical epistemology in the country.2021-01-01T00:00:00ZCapítulo 4: Desigualdades por género en primaria y secundaria [2023]
http://repositorio.ciem.ucr.ac.cr/jspui/handle/123456789/451
Title: Capítulo 4: Desigualdades por género en primaria y secundaria [2023]
Authors: Costa Rica. Consejo Nacional de Rectores2023-01-01T00:00:00ZCapítulo 6: Un camino largo por recorrer: la participación de las mujeres en las áreas de Ingeniería, Ciencias, Tecnologías y Matemática (STEM) [2023]
http://repositorio.ciem.ucr.ac.cr/jspui/handle/123456789/450
Title: Capítulo 6: Un camino largo por recorrer: la participación de las mujeres en las áreas de Ingeniería, Ciencias, Tecnologías y Matemática (STEM) [2023]
Authors: Costa Rica. Consejo Nacional de Rectores2023-01-01T00:00:00Z