153 research outputs found

    Harpur Palate, Volume 3 Number 1, Summer 2003

    Get PDF
    Contributors: Coral Smart | Richard Jordan | Aimee Parkison | Karen R. Porter | James Norcliffe | Owen King | Leslie Birdwell | Tomas Venclova | Knute Skinner | Brendan Connell | Jim Douglas | Elizabeth Bear | Deborah H. Doolittle | Richard William Pearce | Ryan Miller | nila northSun | Judy Klass | Frank Matagrano | Guenter Eic

    Mirror - Vol. 34, No. 27 - April 30, 2009

    Get PDF
    The Mirror (sometimes called the Fairfield Mirror) is the official student newspaper of Fairfield University, and is published weekly during the academic year (September - May). It runs from 1977 - the present; current issues are available online.https://digitalcommons.fairfield.edu/archives-mirror/1769/thumbnail.jp

    Et Cetera, 2019-2021

    Get PDF
    Founded in 1953, Et Cetera is an annual literary magazine that publishes the creative writing and artwork of Marshall University students and affiliates. Et Cetera is free to the Marshall University community. Et Cetera welcomes submissions in literary and film criticism, poetry, short stories, drama, all types of creative non-fiction, photography, and art

    The Social Production of National Security

    Get PDF
    This Article analyzes a recent policy innovation offered by governments on both sides of the Atlantic as a means of mitigating one form of national security risk: the idea that private individuals and voluntary associations have an untapped capacity for combating terrorism and in particular al Qaeda. Bold assertions in recent strategy statements mooting this possibility have wanted for any supporting account of how private behavior conduces to security. Even if the claimed social production of security against terrorism is causally well-founded, it is unclear how the state can elicit desirable private conduct. Consequently, the proposal’s legal and policy ramifications remain elusive. To begin to address these gaps, this Article develops a comprehensive analysis of three plausible causal mechanisms that might yield the putative security-related benefits of social action. I label these ideological competition, ethical anchoring, and cooperative coproduction. Drawing on legal, economic, and social psychology scholarship to illuminate these three mechanisms, this Article further investigates the state’s role in eliciting potentially desirable private action against terrorism risk. The Article concludes by highlighting threshold legal, strategic, and ethical puzzles in designing policies to elicit counterterrorism’s social production—puzzles that to date have received short shrift in American counterterrorism debates

    A Japanese fishing joint venture: worker experience and national development in the Solomon Islands

    Get PDF
    Tuna fisheries, Joint ventures, Fishery development, Sociological aspects, Solomon Islands, Japan,

    Parnassus 2002

    Get PDF
    The 2002 edition of the student literary journal, Parnassus, published by Taylor University in Upland, Indiana
    • …
    corecore