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UA12/2/1 December Magazine
Special magazine edition of the College Heights Herald. This issue includes articles: Fish, Tim. Sorcererâs Apprentice â Deniece Rogers Clark-Tod, Tom. â70s A Quiet Revolution: Re-Evaluating a Revolution - & Revealing Another Beshear, Tom. â70s A Quiet Revolution: Serving Leftovers from the â60s Salato, Nancy. â70s A Quiet Revolution: The Great Buildup â Construction Bilbrey, Greg & Cecelia Mason. â70s A Quiet Revolution: Glancing Back at Wester
School business management: a quiet revolution, part 2
"Revolutions in education tend to occur quietly. The upsurge
in numbers of teaching assistants and higher level classroom
assistants in schools is one such revolution. Another is the
growth of school to school leadership support working beyond
their own school sites to support other leaders and schools in need of help. A third revolution is presently under way; it is the move to the appointment and effective deployment of school business managers (SBMs). - Page 3
From the valley to the summit: a brief history of the quiet revolution that transformed women's work
We can have a meaningful discussion today about "women at the top" only because of a quiet revolution that took place 30 years ago.Women - Employment ; Women executives
A NOT SO QUIET REVOLUTION
The inspiration for this paper stems from the unprecedented media coverage surrounding the legal process in relation to Oscar Pistorius. Overnight South Africaâs criminal justice system became a world-spectacle, highlighting the realities of an era engulfed by modern communication and its plethora of mediums. Evidence was made public, live-feed flowed from the court, the news was saturated, the public was encapsulated, and the presiding officer issued warnings to the media. Despite this, the assertion that the media has no impact on presiding officers is strongly asserted. Deliberately ignoring the potential influence and failing to scrutinise the relationship between the media and the legal process, means we will never understand the impact the media may have on the criminal trial and on our presiding officers
A quiet revolution: STV and the Scottish Council elections of 2007
This article examines the introduction of the single transferable vote for the Scottish council elections of 2007. It suggests that the new system had a variety of effects barely-noticed by the media â there was, indeed, a quiet revolution â and that these will resonate in Scottish local government and politics for a long time to come
A Quiet Revolution in Diplomacy: QuebecâUK Relations Since 1960
Quebecâs modern international outlook and its current paradiplomacy can be dated largely from the Quiet Revolution of the 1960s. Since then, the provincial government in Quebec City and the federal government in Ottawa have had to tread a fine line in accommodating each otherâs constitutional rights in the field of international relationsâa line that has occasionally been breached, especially in the years following the Quiet Revolution and in critical periods such as those prior to the 1980 and 1995 referenda. Foreign governments have also had to engage in careful diplomacy in order to avoid upsetting either Ottawa or Quebec Cityâand this has been especially true in the case of the countries historically most involved with Canada and QuebecâFrance, the United States, and Britain. But whereas there has been some academic writing on Quebecâs relationships with France and the United States, very little attention has been devoted to QuebecâUK relations since the Quiet Revolution. This article seeks to fill that gap and argues that the QuebecâUK relationship since the 1960s can itself best be characterized as a âquiet revolutionâ in diplomacy that has largely avoided the controversies that have sometimes dogged Quebecâs relations with France and the United States
A Quiet Revolution
CD box set review of The Complete Obscure Records Collection, Various Artists (10CD, Dialago
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A Quiet Revolution
This Article argues that juvenile court judges can safely reduce the number of children entering foster care by faithfully and rigorously applying the law. Judges often fail to perform this core functon when a state child welfare agency separates a child from their family. Judges must perform their role as impartial gatekeeper despite the temptation to be "omnipotent moral busybodies".
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