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20 pages, 321 KiB  
Article
The Swedish Adoption World and the Process of Coming to Terms with Transnational Adoption
by Tobias Hübinette
Genealogy 2025, 9(3), 77; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy9030077 - 6 Aug 2025
Abstract
In October 2021 the Swedish government committee of inquiry, the Adoption Commission, was appointed, which presented its final report in June 2025. The Adoption Commission investigated irregular and unethical adoptions to Sweden from the 1950s until today, and it was a part of [...] Read more.
In October 2021 the Swedish government committee of inquiry, the Adoption Commission, was appointed, which presented its final report in June 2025. The Adoption Commission investigated irregular and unethical adoptions to Sweden from the 1950s until today, and it was a part of an ongoing global process of coming to terms with past concerning transnational adoptions. This qualitative media text study examines how the Adoption Commission was perceived by the Swedish adoption world’s three stakeholders, the adoptive parents, the adoption organizations, and the adoptees, between 2021 and 2024 and in relation to transitional justice theories, with a focus on the issues of retributive and restorative justice. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Adoption Is Stranger than Fiction)
18 pages, 296 KiB  
Article
New Religious Movements in the Philippines: Their Development, Political Participation, and Impact
by Yuchen Ma
Religions 2025, 16(4), 471; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16040471 - 7 Apr 2025
Viewed by 3765
Abstract
The Philippines’ new religious movements (NRMs) emerged in the context of the rise of the religious nationalism movement and gradually flourished during the martial law period in the 1970s. Compared with traditional Catholicism, the theology of NRMs is more realistic and temporal, therefore [...] Read more.
The Philippines’ new religious movements (NRMs) emerged in the context of the rise of the religious nationalism movement and gradually flourished during the martial law period in the 1970s. Compared with traditional Catholicism, the theology of NRMs is more realistic and temporal, therefore creating an inherent demand to become politicized. After the People Power Movement, changes in the social environment, media technology, and electoral system in the Philippines created conditions for NRM groups to participate in politics more extensively and directly. They intervened in the political process through various means, such as bloc voting and running for public positions, with characteristics such as opposition to the Catholic Church, proactive and pragmatic political strategies, grassroots appeals, and a transnational mass base. The participation of NRM groups in politics has impacted the Catholic Church’s transcendental political status, enriched the political ecology dominated by oligarchic families, improved public welfare, and provided new channels for the voice of the grassroots. Overall, the rise of NRMs has not only changed the religious landscape of the Philippines but also profoundly affected its democratization process as an important factor, especially in the coming 2025 election. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Religion as a Political Instrument)
14 pages, 274 KiB  
Article
Transnational Karbala: From Rebellion to Reconciliation
by Minoo Mirshahvalad
Religions 2024, 15(12), 1536; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15121536 - 16 Dec 2024
Viewed by 1921
Abstract
This article for the first time examines the activities of transnational information campaigns initiated by young Shiʿa Muslims across European, Russian, and Armenian cities. These campaigns aim to disseminate knowledge about Imam Hussain and his mission to non-Shiʿa audiences. The campaigns serve as [...] Read more.
This article for the first time examines the activities of transnational information campaigns initiated by young Shiʿa Muslims across European, Russian, and Armenian cities. These campaigns aim to disseminate knowledge about Imam Hussain and his mission to non-Shiʿa audiences. The campaigns serve as vivid examples of the struggles faced by Muslims in relatively hostile contexts as they seek integration and acceptance as law-abiding and peaceful citizens. They also represent new avenues of Islamic activism, focusing on dismantling stereotypes and correcting “misunderstandings” within host societies. Drawing on semi-structured interviews, participant observation, and an analysis of campaign handouts and social media content between 2018 and 2024, this study explores how campaigners adapt the narrative of the Karbala tragedy—widely regarded as the metahistorical cornerstone of Shiʿa identity—to make it accessible and relevant to external audiences. These strategies enable campaigners to engage with out-group communities, testing and refining effective methods for presenting this pivotal historical event. The findings reveal that, through this process, the Karbala narrative undergoes both content-based and linguistic modifications, while the concept of justice—central to the commemoration of this tragedy—is reinterpreted in new contexts. This research contributes to the understanding of transnational Islamic activism and highlights the importance of strategic communication in fostering intercultural dialogue and promoting mutual understanding in diverse societies. Full article
15 pages, 2716 KiB  
Article
Understanding the Nature of the Transnational Scam-Related Fraud: Challenges and Solutions from Vietnam’s Perspective
by Hai Thanh Luong and Hieu Minh Ngo
Laws 2024, 13(6), 70; https://doi.org/10.3390/laws13060070 - 21 Nov 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 4604
Abstract
Practical challenges and special threats from scam-related fraud exist for regional and local communities in Southeast Asia during and after the COVID-19 pandemic. The rise in pig-butchering operations in Southeast Asia is a major concern due to the increased use of digital technology [...] Read more.
Practical challenges and special threats from scam-related fraud exist for regional and local communities in Southeast Asia during and after the COVID-19 pandemic. The rise in pig-butchering operations in Southeast Asia is a major concern due to the increased use of digital technology and online financial transactions. Many of these operations are linked to organized crime syndicates operating across borders, posing challenges for law enforcement. As a first study in Vietnam, we combined the primary and secondary databases to unveil the nature of transnational scam-related fraud. Findings show that scammers are using advanced methods such as phishing, fraudulent investments, and identity theft to maximize their sophisticated tactics for achieving financial possession. There are organized crime rings operating in Vietnam and Cambodia, with Chinese groups playing a leading role behind the scenes. Social media and its various applications have become common platforms for these criminal activities. This study also calls for practical recommendations to consider specific challenges in combating these crimes, including building a strong framework with clear policies, encouraging multiple educational awareness campaigns in communities, enhancing effective cooperation among law enforcement and others, and supporting evidence-based approaches in research and application. While we recognized and assumed that pig-butchering operations with scam-related fraud are a complex problem that requires a well-rounded and coordinated response, the exact approach would depend on each country’s specific circumstances. Full article
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15 pages, 338 KiB  
Article
An Autoethnography on Intergenerational Relationships and Transnational Care for Older Parents
by Weiguo Zhang
Genealogy 2024, 8(2), 56; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy8020056 - 10 May 2024
Viewed by 3356
Abstract
I employ autoethnography to undertake a broader scholarly inquiry on intergenerational relationships and transnational care shaped by global migration and aging. Specifically, I reflect on the dynamics of my relationship with my mother, beginning with my departure from my home and spanning a [...] Read more.
I employ autoethnography to undertake a broader scholarly inquiry on intergenerational relationships and transnational care shaped by global migration and aging. Specifically, I reflect on the dynamics of my relationship with my mother, beginning with my departure from my home and spanning a period of 40 years, 8 in China and 34 outside China. In doing so, I contemplate theoretical models of intergenerational solidarity, ambivalence, and role ambiguity. I also challenge cultural assumptions of filial piety. The geographical distance, passage of time, and acculturation process have profoundly influenced my perception of filial piety, which differs markedly from my mother’s. However, this divergence in consensual solidarity—marked by variations in attitudes, beliefs, and values—does not translate into weakened affectual solidarity, characterized by positive sentiments and emotions. Furthermore, aided by advancements in transportation and social media technology, I have been able to extend crucial emotional and some “instrumental” care to my mother, along with financial support if needed, despite limited hands-on care. Nevertheless, I must negotiate my care for my mother and navigate a delicate balance in coordinating my care efforts with those of my non-migrant siblings. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Challenges in Multicultural Marriages and Families)
17 pages, 11696 KiB  
Article
Satirizing News Media, Changing Taiwan’s Feelings: The Night Night Show with Brian Tseng’s Adaptation of the American Satire News Format
by Muyun Zhou
Journal. Media 2023, 4(4), 1097-1113; https://doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia4040070 - 7 Nov 2023
Viewed by 5574
Abstract
The US television program The Daily Show has inspired creative talents worldwide to adapt the American political satire news formats to their own political environments. One example is The Night Night Show, hosted by Brian Tseng between 2018 and 2020 and produced [...] Read more.
The US television program The Daily Show has inspired creative talents worldwide to adapt the American political satire news formats to their own political environments. One example is The Night Night Show, hosted by Brian Tseng between 2018 and 2020 and produced by the STR Network from Taiwan. Instead of approaching the show as the result of the diffusion of the US cultural and political model into the rest of the world, this article contextualizes The Night Night Show’s adaptation of an American satirical news format in the Sinophone political discourse of laughter and satire in the modern history of Taiwan. It argues that while the show’s adaptation of an American satirical news format demonstrates how satire can dismantle linguistic and national boundaries as a transnational bonding force, it also brings this American format to critical scrutiny. In particular, the principal cultural understanding of news media as sensationalistic and propagandist instead of truthful in the local context contests the notions of “truthiness” central to the American satire news formats. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Satire and Journalism in Global Perspective)
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13 pages, 247 KiB  
Article
Restoring Community and Covenant in the 21st Century: The History and Potential Revival of Coventism in the Era of the ‘Global Village’
by Sean Oliver-Dee and Joseph Prud’homme
Religions 2023, 14(10), 1267; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14101267 - 6 Oct 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1714
Abstract
This article offers a rationale for research and engagement on conceptions of ‘community’ in the twenty-first century in the context of changing conceptions of relationality through the impact of secularisation, social media, and online gaming. It highlights the growing concerns and healthcare outcomes [...] Read more.
This article offers a rationale for research and engagement on conceptions of ‘community’ in the twenty-first century in the context of changing conceptions of relationality through the impact of secularisation, social media, and online gaming. It highlights the growing concerns and healthcare outcomes of isolation in the context of shifting perceptions of ‘community’ as the basis for a re-examination of the value of ‘covenant’ as ‘communities of purpose’ in our interdependent world. In so doing, it proposes that covenant communities offer a route through which fundamental relationalities which engender belonging, security, and personal value can be restored at local, national or even trans-national levels. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue History of Christianity: The Relationship between Church and State)
17 pages, 353 KiB  
Review
Notes on the Present and Future Research on World Literary Journalisms
by John S. Bak
Journal. Media 2023, 4(3), 984-1000; https://doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia4030063 - 18 Sep 2023
Viewed by 3401
Abstract
This review article offers a glimpse into the problems and promises of current research on world literary journalism. It discusses the rise and spread of press cultures via colonialism, the contentious nature and taxonomy of the fact—its subjectivism, accessibility, and veracity—within an [...] Read more.
This review article offers a glimpse into the problems and promises of current research on world literary journalism. It discusses the rise and spread of press cultures via colonialism, the contentious nature and taxonomy of the fact—its subjectivism, accessibility, and veracity—within an inconsistent global press, and how the porous divide between fiction and nonfiction genres is affecting the production and consumption of literary journalism around the world. The article concludes by offering nine areas of research (from canon-building and historiographies to digital news platforms and gendered media) still under-represented in international and transnational literary journalism studies. Full article
30 pages, 5741 KiB  
Article
Critical Immersive-Triggered Literacy as a Key Component for Inclusive Digital Education
by Chrysoula Lazou and Avgoustos Tsinakos
Educ. Sci. 2023, 13(7), 696; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13070696 - 9 Jul 2023
Cited by 13 | Viewed by 4751
Abstract
The present empirical study investigates, analyzes, and discusses the affordances and limitations of an augmented reality (AR)-based educational intervention for the critical digital awareness of secondary school students through a sociocultural framework of instruction. The design of the educational intervention focuses on the [...] Read more.
The present empirical study investigates, analyzes, and discusses the affordances and limitations of an augmented reality (AR)-based educational intervention for the critical digital awareness of secondary school students through a sociocultural framework of instruction. The design of the educational intervention focuses on the empowerment of students’ critical digital skills in the new media produsage ecosystem in parallel with the development of target language skills through content and language integrated learning (CLIL) in a mobile augmented reality (MAR)-based transnational educational setting. This study focuses on examining the usefulness rather than the digital use of MAR from a socio-constructivism perspective with 77 participants from diverse socio-cultural backgrounds and educational settings. More specifically, an investigation of the potential of internalization of new knowledge through immersive-triggered inclusive educational practices is carried out, examining the effectiveness of the universal design for learning principles (UDL) as a pedagogical framework for AR-based instruction related to long-term memory retention, the synthesis of meaningful learning instances, and the creation of new knowledge. The study findings suggest that AR-based instruction, if incorporated into a robust pedagogical framework, can enhance attention and long-term memory retention, provide meaningful, inclusive learning opportunities, and facilitate digital well-being in the ever-evolving complex learning ecosystem. This study concludes by proposing the term of critical immersive-triggered literacy (CIT Literacy), defined as a skill development framework that triggers learners’ attention and facilitates digital well-being for meaningful learning instances via immersive technologies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Virtual and Augmented Reality in Education)
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22 pages, 14359 KiB  
Article
Urban Devis: Fashioning Lay Women’s Holiness in Krishna Bhakti Networks
by Claire Robison
Religions 2023, 14(6), 786; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14060786 - 14 Jun 2023
Viewed by 2614
Abstract
Although many Hindu communities today foreground women as religious authorities, some lineages officially recognize only men as gurus and renouncers. If official models of religious authority are gendered masculine, what space do women have to embody holiness? This article investigates this question with [...] Read more.
Although many Hindu communities today foreground women as religious authorities, some lineages officially recognize only men as gurus and renouncers. If official models of religious authority are gendered masculine, what space do women have to embody holiness? This article investigates this question with reference to women in the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON), a transnational religious organization that has developed prominent communities in India and abroad. Amidst an ongoing disagreement about whether women can be gurus in the organization, this article considers how devotee women are cultivating spaces of religious authority in their temple communities and online media forums through embodying Krishna bhakti as a form of vernacular holiness. This includes the development of personal websites and the use of YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok to produce media content that ranges from overtly devout recordings of temple lectures to subtle signals towards Krishna bhakti in the aesthetic style of social media influencers. Case studies discuss women affiliated with ISKCON communities in India and the US. Full article
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15 pages, 4360 KiB  
Article
Defeat and Glory: Social Media, Neoliberalism and the Transnational Tragedy of a Divinized Baba
by Ronie Parciack
Religions 2023, 14(1), 123; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14010123 - 16 Jan 2023
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 3481
Abstract
This essay addresses the intersection between the Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Tik-Tok and Pinterest social media platforms and a contemporary religious leader/teacher who exploited them to rise from subalternity to the status of a deified celebrity. It examines his underprivileged disciples and followers and [...] Read more.
This essay addresses the intersection between the Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Tik-Tok and Pinterest social media platforms and a contemporary religious leader/teacher who exploited them to rise from subalternity to the status of a deified celebrity. It examines his underprivileged disciples and followers and rival formal and informal levels, within Indian Sufi circles. Employing a combined perspective of ethnography, media studies and textual analysis, I discuss the transformations engendered by this social media celebrity and the impact of neo-liberalism on religious teacher–disciple (peerimureedi) relations. I show that this transformation involved a commodification of peerimureedi relations, leading to a neoliberal morphing of religious practices into marketable products. In so doing, I provide a critical reading of Mazzarella’s social media as “re-enlightened” or “inclusive capitalism” that gives voice, agency and new economic possibilities to capitalism’s most marginal subjects, who aspire to break the grip of what I term the “economies of despair”. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Media, Religion and Celebrity Culture)
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2 pages, 208 KiB  
Abstract
Control of Invasive Plant Species in Wetland Forests (91E0*)
by Estêvão Portela-Pereira, Paulo Monteiro and Patricia María Rodríguez-González
Biol. Life Sci. Forum 2022, 13(1), 84; https://doi.org/10.3390/blsf2022013084 - 14 Jun 2022
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1110
Abstract
The main objective of the LIFE Fluvial project is the improvement of the conservation status of Atlantic river corridors in the Natura 2000 network, developing a transnational strategy for the sustainable management of river corridor habitats in several Atlantic river basins of the [...] Read more.
The main objective of the LIFE Fluvial project is the improvement of the conservation status of Atlantic river corridors in the Natura 2000 network, developing a transnational strategy for the sustainable management of river corridor habitats in several Atlantic river basins of the Iberian Peninsula. The project includes seven partners in Northwest Spain (Galicia, Asturias) and one partner in Portugal (Instituto Superior de Agronomia). In Portugal, the preparatory, conservation, monitoring and dissemination actions of the project are focused on the improvement of the state of conservation of habitat 91E0* in the Estorãos River (ZEC Lima River, PTCON0020), with a total intervention area of circa 21 ha, within the property of the Municipality of Ponte de Lima. Special effort has been devoted to the control and removal of invasive plants directly affecting the riparian habitats, and indirectly affecting the aquatic habitats. The major target species addressed in ZEC Lima River are the trees Acacia melanoxylon, A. dealbata, invading the riparian zone; Eucalyptus camaldulensis plantations in the floodplains of Estorãos river; and the herbaceous species Phytolacca americana and Tradescantia fluminensis. The restoration measures were designed according to the spatial and temporal scale of threats and applied species-specific methods. This included the tree cut and control of vegetative sprouts (Eucalyptus), debarking and cut (Acacia spp.), and the uprooting of seedlings of invasive exotic individuals; complete uprooting of the individuals and the destruction of fruits (Phytolacca americana); and exposition to sunlight (Tradescantia fluminensis). An additional key action included Public Awareness and Dissemination. Throughout the development of the project, knowledge transfer to different target audiences was promoted, and several didactic materials, including an online game for children, were produced. For the general public, the project created a website, in four languages, and different social media pages, TV programs, promotional videos and an annual bulletin, and celebrated several events used for awareness-raising (e.g., World Wetlands Day in 2018, or Natura 2000 day). Notably, for invasive species control and awareness, we promoted training and volunteer actions that engaged students, technicians, NGOs and other relevant stakeholders. The major lessons learned are to be followed up during the After Life period. Full article
(This article belongs to the Proceedings of The IX Iberian Congress of Ichthyology)
22 pages, 372 KiB  
Article
Deployments of Multiracial Masculinity and Anti-Black Violence: The Racial Framings of Barack Obama, George Zimmerman, and Daunte Wright
by Jasmine Mitchell
Soc. Sci. 2022, 11(6), 238; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11060238 - 27 May 2022
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 4007
Abstract
In this article, I examine how political and media discourses of multiraciality are deployed to justify guilt and innocence. I trace the deployment of multiraciality to determine who is deserving of life or death in media coverage, political rhetoric, and court records during [...] Read more.
In this article, I examine how political and media discourses of multiraciality are deployed to justify guilt and innocence. I trace the deployment of multiraciality to determine who is deserving of life or death in media coverage, political rhetoric, and court records during Obama’s presidency, in George Zimmerman’s 2013 acquittal, and in the 2021 killing of Daunte Wright. I examine the weaponization of discourses of multiracial identities as tools of white supremacy and anti-Blackness. Through such weaponization, the construction of the multiracial man as an index of racial progress and post-racism evident in the Barack Obama era enabled the violence and miscarriages of justice in the killings of Trayvon Martin and Daunte Wright. I consider how transnational and U.S. narratives of multiraciality, joined with anti-Blackness and white supremacy, enabled the acquittal of George Zimmerman. Furthermore, I examine how white womanhood and fears of Black masculinity facilitated the sympathy garnered towards Kim Potter. In considering the killing of Daunte Wright, this paper shows how multiraciality and racial malleability are valuable only when utilized for preserving racial hierarchies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Multiracial Identities and Experiences in/under White Supremacy)
16 pages, 1106 KiB  
Article
To Trust or Not to Trust? COVID-19 Facemasks in China–Europe Relations: Lessons from France and the United Kingdom
by Emilie Tran and Yu-chin Tseng
J. Risk Financial Manag. 2022, 15(4), 187; https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm15040187 - 18 Apr 2022
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 3830
Abstract
At the crossroads of sociology and international relations, this interdisciplinary and comparative research article explores how the COVID-19 outbreak has impacted China–Europe relations. Unfolding the critical moments of the COVID-19 outbreak, this article characterizes the evolution of China–Europe relations with regard to the [...] Read more.
At the crossroads of sociology and international relations, this interdisciplinary and comparative research article explores how the COVID-19 outbreak has impacted China–Europe relations. Unfolding the critical moments of the COVID-19 outbreak, this article characterizes the evolution of China–Europe relations with regard to the facemask. This simple object of self-protection against the coronavirus strikingly became a source of contention between peoples and states. In the face of this situation, we argue that the facemask is the prism through which to illustrate (1) the transnational links between China and its overseas population, (2) the changing social perceptions of China and Chinese-looking people in European societies, and (3) the advent of China’s health diplomacy and its reception in Europe. Comparing two European settings—France and the United Kingdom (UK)—the common denominator appears to be the reduced trust, if not outright distrust, between individuals and communities in the French and British contexts, and in Sino–French and Sino–British relations at the transnational level. Combining critical juncture theory and (dis)trust in international relations as our analytical framework, this article examines how the facemask became a politicized object, both between states and between Mainland China and its overseas population, as the epidemic unfolded throughout Europe. Adopting a qualitative approach, our dataset comprises the analysis of official speeches and statements; press releases; traditional and social media content (especially through hashtags such as #JeNeSuisPasUnVirus, #IAmNotAVirus, #CoronaRacism, etc.); and interviews with Chinese, French, and British community members. Full article
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22 pages, 3017 KiB  
Article
Online EU Contestation in Times of Crisis: Towards a European Digital Demos?
by Milica Pejovic
Societies 2022, 12(2), 34; https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12020034 - 25 Feb 2022
Viewed by 3258
Abstract
Crises, as critical moments in the process of European integration, are particularly conducive to the increased politicisation of the European Union (EU) and its contestation. The year 2015 saw the peaks of the Greek and the refugee crises, the two crises that put [...] Read more.
Crises, as critical moments in the process of European integration, are particularly conducive to the increased politicisation of the European Union (EU) and its contestation. The year 2015 saw the peaks of the Greek and the refugee crises, the two crises that put the two flagships of the European project—the Euro and the Schengen zone—into imminent peril, causing a prolonged EU legitimacy crisis. Building on the literature that considers Euroscepticism as a context-dependent and discursive phenomenon, this study analyses Facebook debates that emerged in response to the Greek and refugee crises, trying to identify how the EU was evaluated and how these evaluations were justified. To answer this question, this study involved the qualitative content analysis of over 7000 Facebook comments related to the Greek and migration crises published in 2015 on the pages of the European Parliament and the European Commission. Contrary to the literature that explains popular Euroscepticism by utilitarian or cultural factors, the findings of this study show that the most recurrent justification for negative EU polity evaluations is the lack of democratic credentials. Furthermore, the commentators mostly assessed the EU’s current set-up and, to a much lesser extent, the principle and the future of European integration. Moreover, the Facebook public extensively commented on the level of inclusiveness, particularly bemoaning the lack of inclusiveness of “ordinary” people in EU decision making. Nevertheless, the commentators frequently referred to themselves as “we Europeans” or “we people”, opposing themselves to EU, national, or financial “elites”. Despite its populist elements, this sense of “we-ness” incepted in social media suggests the capacity of transnational online discussion to foster European digital demos. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue EU-Rope: (Trans)nationalism, Media, Legitimacy)
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