Essays about: "marrying"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 12 essays containing the word marrying.
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1. Exploring budgeting as an underlying guidance tool for the management of externally induced crises
University essay from Mälardalens högskola/Akademin för ekonomi, samhälle och teknikAbstract : Date: 02.06. READ MORE
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2. Intermarriage and Economic Integration in Unites States: A Case of Southeast Asian Women
University essay from Lunds universitet/Ekonomisk-historiska institutionenAbstract : The association between income of immigrants and nationality of their spouse has been extensively studied. Marrying to a native spouse is expected to improve the immigrant’s income, but it can also impose an income penalty to immigrants from specific ethnicity and gender. READ MORE
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3. Chinese Men and "Leftover Women" : How do Chinese Men Position Themselves in Relation to the Concept of Labelling Women as "Leftover"?
University essay from Högskolan Dalarna/KinesiskaAbstract : In recent years there has been a resurgence of gender inequality in China. Today, women are pressured to get married by the state and their social surroundings, as they told if they remain unmarried and have the "three highs"; high age, education and salary, they will become leftovers on the marriage market. READ MORE
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4. Breaking the silos: Bridging the resource nexus in the textile industry when adapting to Zero Liquid Discharge
University essay from Uppsala universitet/Institutionen för geovetenskaperAbstract : The concept of resource nexus is an acknowledgement of the interconnections between the uses of natural resources. This research will further the work done on the resource nexus by examining the multiple effects of measures taken in the Indian textile industry to lower the costs incurred due to the implementation of Zero Liquid Discharge (ZLD). READ MORE
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5. Tackling Violence Against Women through Human Rights Law-Inspired Approaches (With Observations from the Philippines).
University essay from Lunds universitet/Juridiska institutionenAbstract : Violence against women (“VAW”) is a global matter; and human rights law-inspired approaches, also universal in nature (it is argued), can be the missing link in tackling a global problem. In underlining the universal applicability of human rights standards, principles and norms; it is suggested that drawing inspiration from human rights-based approaches would contribute to implementation of holistic and wholesome methods through which victims of VAW can be better served and VAW in its entirety can be tackled, even preventatively. READ MORE