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LIVING CONDITIONS (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   126853


Explosive situation in Silwan: the government's complicity in right-wing settler activity in Silwan creates immense obstacles to a peaceful resolution on Jerusalem / Oppenheimer, Yehudit   Journal Article
Oppenheimer, Yehudit Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract If there is one area in the country where state control should develop, plan, manage and preserve, it is this area of the historic City of David." That is what the Israeli Antiquities Authority wrote in a letter to the attorney general. And they were not alone in this opinion. The City of David is located a few dozen meters from the Temple Mount, in the heart of the crowded Palestinian neighborhood of Silwan
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2
ID:   169794


Understanding Bachelorhood in Poverty-stricken and High Sex Ratio Settings: an Exploratory Study in Rural Shaanxi, China / Attané, Isabelle   Journal Article
Attané, Isabelle Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Coupled with the social practice of female hypergamy, the male surplus within the never-married population means that today's Chinese marriage market is extremely tight in particular for men from a rural background and the least privileged socio-economic categories. Drawing on quantitative data from a survey conducted in 2014–2015, this article sheds light on the situation of single men who are past prime marriage age in three rural districts of Shaanxi particularly affected by this phenomenon. It compares single men's characteristics to those of their married counterparts and offers insights into the heterogeneity of single men with the aim of challenging some commonly accepted assumptions about bachelorhood in rural China. Results suggest a strong internalization of the various characteristics, centred on being able to offer social mobility to a potential wife, that a man is expected to have to be attractive to women in a context where women have more choice in mate selection. We conclude that mate selection is highly marked by class, social norms, social interactions, health, generation and age, and requires the mobilization of certain amounts of individual, social and economic resources. Unwanted bachelorhood would thus be better understood using an intersectional approach rather than mainly in numeric terms.
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