首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
文章检索
  按 检索   检索词:      
出版年份:   被引次数:   他引次数: 提示:输入*表示无穷大
  收费全文   1611篇
  免费   314篇
  2023年   7篇
  2022年   3篇
  2021年   20篇
  2020年   16篇
  2019年   113篇
  2018年   85篇
  2017年   92篇
  2016年   139篇
  2015年   99篇
  2014年   98篇
  2013年   321篇
  2012年   97篇
  2011年   106篇
  2010年   86篇
  2009年   66篇
  2008年   73篇
  2007年   76篇
  2006年   58篇
  2005年   26篇
  2004年   43篇
  2003年   38篇
  2002年   24篇
  2001年   25篇
  2000年   33篇
  1999年   7篇
  1998年   20篇
  1997年   22篇
  1996年   16篇
  1995年   14篇
  1994年   18篇
  1993年   5篇
  1992年   6篇
  1991年   3篇
  1990年   5篇
  1987年   3篇
  1986年   2篇
  1985年   5篇
  1984年   2篇
  1983年   2篇
  1982年   4篇
  1981年   5篇
  1980年   5篇
  1979年   3篇
  1978年   4篇
  1977年   7篇
  1976年   6篇
  1975年   2篇
  1974年   2篇
  1973年   3篇
  1969年   2篇
排序方式: 共有1925条查询结果,搜索用时 0 毫秒
1.
2.
China has officially become a predominantly urban country, with over 50% of the population now registered as urban residents. Its urbanization process has been described as the most managed in human history. The Chinese government manages the building of new cities, regulates the housing of displaced people and controls squatters. As an historically poorer area, the west of China has been the target of ongoing efforts at infrastructural development. Describing urbanization as managed however masks the conflicts and contradictions involved in a process which is far from smooth. Although villagers are usually seen to be largely the powerless victims of these initiatives, it is clear that many try to take advantage of the situation, while others are unable to do so. Based on recent fieldwork and eight years of visits to one village undergoing urbanization, this article looks at the complex dynamics involved and at the moral battleground which they lay bare.  相似文献   
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
Rural, remote, northern, and Indigenous communities on Turtle Island are routinely—as Cree Elder Willie Ermine says—pathologized. Social science and health scholarship, including scholarship by geographers, often constructs Indigenous human and physical geographies as unhealthy, diseased, vulnerable, and undergoing extraction. These constructions are not inaccurate: peoples and places beyond urban metropoles on Turtle Island live with higher burdens of poor health; Indigenous peoples face systemic violence and racism in colonial landscapes; rural, remote, northern, and Indigenous geographies are sites of industrial incursions; and many rural and remote geographies remain challenging for diverse Indigenous peoples. What, however, are the consequences of imagining and constructing people and places as “sick”? Constructions of “sick” geographies fulfill and extend settler (often European white) colonial narratives about othered geographies. Rural, remote, northern, and Indigenous geographies are discursively “mined” for narratives of sickness. This mining upholds a sense of health and wellness in southern, urban, Euro‐white‐settler imaginations. Drawing from multi‐year, relationship‐based, cross‐disciplinary qualitative community‐informed experiences, and anchored in feminist, anti‐colonial, and anti‐racist methodologies that guided creative and humanities‐informed stories, this paper concludes with different stories. It unsettles settler‐colonial powers reliant on constructing narratives about sickness in others and consequently reframes conversations about Indigenous well‐being and the environment.  相似文献   
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号