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Description
Naming and naming practices take place at various sites associated with international politics. These sites include border crossings, migrations, diasporas, town halls, and offices of political parties representing minorities. This project is an investigation of these and other sites. It takes seriously questions of names and naming practices and particularly

Naming and naming practices take place at various sites associated with international politics. These sites include border crossings, migrations, diasporas, town halls, and offices of political parties representing minorities. This project is an investigation of these and other sites. It takes seriously questions of names and naming practices and particularly asks how people participate in these practices, often doing so with states and state authorities. It not only looks at and discusses how people proceed in these practices but also assesses the implications for people regarding how and when they can be at home as well as how and where they can move. Through an ethnography of Aegean Macedonians involving interviews, participant observation, and archival research, I find that naming practices occur well beyond the sites where they are expected. Names themselves are the result of negotiation and are controlled neither by their bearers nor those who would name. Similarity of demonyms with toponyms, do not ensure that bearers of such demonyms will be at home in the place that shares there name. Changes in names significance of names occur rapidly and these names turn home into abroad and hosts into guests.
ContributorsPout, Daniel (Author) / Doty, Roxanne L (Thesis advisor) / Ashley, Richard K. (Committee member) / Hjorleifur Jonsson (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2014
Description

The era of name, image, and likeness in college athletics is not even two years old, yet it is already raising numerous moral and regulatory concerns regarding the opportunities available to student-athletes. Given the NCAA’s outright commitment to fairness, as expressed in their mission statement, these regulatory and ethical dilemmas

The era of name, image, and likeness in college athletics is not even two years old, yet it is already raising numerous moral and regulatory concerns regarding the opportunities available to student-athletes. Given the NCAA’s outright commitment to fairness, as expressed in their mission statement, these regulatory and ethical dilemmas should not be possible. However, the reality of the first two years of NIL is the NCAA’s blatant disregard of their mission of fairness, and in order to create a lasting, sustainable NIL landscape, the NCAA must address these issues through policy change. This paper will introduce Name, Image, and Likeness, and explain how NIL evolved into something drastically different that what it intended to become. It will then explain eight of the most pervasive moral and regulatory issues that NIL has created and offer a two-pronged solution in the form of policy changes that will lead to more equitable and fair treatment of student-athletes within the NIL landscape.

ContributorsEvans, Katie (Author) / Lee, Christopher (Thesis director) / McIntosh, Daniel (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / Department of Marketing (Contributor)
Created2023-05