ijcs

IJSC

Intersections of Culture, Migration and Intimate Partner Violence as Told by Migrant Youth
Pages 208-219
David Tokiharu Mayeda and Raagini Vijaykumar

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6000/1929-4409.2015.04.21

Published: 04 November 2015

Open Access 


Abstract: Like many other western nations, New Zealand has experienced significant migration since the mid-1980s. According to the most recent census, roughly one out of every four persons living in New Zealand is foreign born. The significant number of migrants to New Zealand of Asian and Middle Eastern ancestries has led to the development of rich and diverse ethnic enclaves. However, young people from these communities experience significant pressures to assimilate into western culture, which sometimes clash with parental desires to perpetuate cultural traditions. Drawing on 10 small group interviews conducted with 11 adolescent and 16 young adult female interviewees of Asian and Middle Eastern backgrounds in Auckland, New Zealand, this study examines how participants traverse culturally prescribed gender roles as they relate to intimate partner violence (IPV). Emergent themes from the study address participants’ conceptualization of IPV, processes of learning IPV, and pressures to follow rigid gender-roles tied to IPV that are culturally embedded. The article closes with discussion on interpretation of research findings without perpetuating an Orientalist framework.

Keywords: Honor, shame, Orientalism, intimate partner violence, migrant, youth, coercive control.
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IJSC

Major Selection among Saudi Male University Students: a Multinomial Logit Model
Pages 200-207
Guoping Jiang

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6000/1929-4409.2015.04.20

Published: 30 September 2015

Open Access 


Abstract: Major selection is an important decision faced by all university freshmen. The topic has been studied thoroughly in individualistic cultures, particularly the US and Europe. The topic has not been as intensely investigated in the Middle East, an area influenced heavily by Islamic collectivist culture. Because of digital media and globalization, the Middle East is shifting toward individualism. Given this, we used a sample of male students at a science and engineering university to explore mechanisms that drive major selection in Saudi Arabia. A multinomial logistic analysis shows that family and high school teachers are important factors in their decision making process. Ease of study is also a factor considered when choosing a major.

Keywords: Collectivist culture, social influences, major selection, multinomial logit model, male university students, Saudi Arabia.
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IJSC

The Effect of Marijuana Legalization on Anticipated Use: A Test of Deterrence Theory 
Pages 181-191


Christine Arazan, Michael Costelloe and Tricia M. Hall

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6000/1929-4409.2015.04.18

Published: 03 September 2015

Open Access

Abstract: Marijuana is the most frequently used illicit drug in the world (Erickson, Van Der Maas, and Hathaway, 2013:428). Here in the United States, public support for the legalization of marijuana for recreational use is substantial. With public support, both Colorado and Washington passed state initiatives in 2012 to legalize recreational use of marijuana for individuals aged 21 years and older. Even the federal government has recently reversed their initial position to continue to enforce federal drug laws within these states. With what appears to be increasingly liberal attitudes toward marijuana use and even toward legalization, some are concerned about what this may mean for drug use in America. To many, it appears obvious that with changing attitudes and more lenient policies, use of marijuana will increase and in turn exacerbate a host of individual and societal problems that marijuana use is thought to cause. The primary focus of this study examines the first part of these concerns: to what extent will marijuana use increase with these policy changes? Specifically, this research looks at what extent current abstainers of marijuana might use if it were legalized.

Keywords: legalization, marijuana, deterrence theory, college marijuana use, Monitoring the Future.

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IJSC

Can a Racist Society Produce and Sustain Just and Healthy Interracial Relationships? A Few South African Case Studies
Page 166-180


E.M. Mojapelo-Batka

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6000/1929-4409.2015.04.17

Published: 03 September 2015

Open Access

Abstract: In this study the experiences, perceptions and challenges of being in a mixed-race relationship (M-R) are explored against the backdrop of previous South African pieces of legislation meant to keep the various race groups apart. The study is located within a conceptual framework predominantly informed by a constructivist approach, including some tenets from the social constructionist approach. For the purposes of this study, six cases of mixed-race couples consisting of black and white partners only were recruited through snowball sampling. The results of the study indicate that individuals found their involvement in M-R relationships to be a positive experience, and thus resulting in a positive attitude change and a sense of personal growth. However, M-R couples and their extended families experienced cognitive dissonance which required them to discard their previously internalised racial stereotypes. To do this, strategies such as cognitive differentiation, re-categorization and de-categorization were used. This enabled the couples and their families to attempt the shift toward non-racial socially constructed categories. Most of the challenges of being in M-R relationships were experienced on both the interpersonal and the inter-group levels. The losses, disadvantages, challenges, concerns and pains experienced by M-R couples were mainly related to family and social disapproval as well as general family and social efforts aimed at discouraging race mixing.

Keywords: Interracial, relationships, social category, social contact, racial stereotypes and attitudes.

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International Journal of Criminology and Sociology

A Three-dimensional Perspective on Wrongful Convictions in Israel: Organizational-Forensic, Psychosocial and Practical
Pages 154-165
Ashkelon Academic College, Israel

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6000/1929-4409.2015.04.16

Published: 18 August 2015

Open Access 


Abstract: It is difficult to find an injustice committed against the citizen by the state that is greater than the conviction of an innocent person. At this stage, it may be tentatively stated that the phenomenon is not insignificant. This theoretical article describes the various aspects of the criminal justice system associated with the undesirable outcome of wrongful convictions. The paper reviews a series of organizational and forensic aspects that could bring about a bias in investigation of the legal truth. Furthermore, a number of psychosocial aspects relating to wrongful convictions, followed by practical aspects are described and discussed. It appears that on the practical level the phenomenon cries out for changes in the law enforcement system (e.g. implementation of the US Innocence Project or the biometric databank) and the need for empirical investigation. It appears that there is still a long way to go before a full understanding can be obtained of wrongful convictions and their prevention. One way or another, the authors are of the opinion that greater academic and public importance should be assigned to the question of wrongful convictions and perhaps turn the issue of truth and falsehood in criminal law into a theoretical and research field in its own right.

Keywords: Wrongful conviction, criminal justice system, innocent people, false confessions.
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