8 research outputs found
Cyclic loading deterioration effect in RC moment frames in pushover analysis
- Author
- Publication venue
- 'Informa UK Limited'
- Publication date
- Field of study
Minimum Wages and the Labour Market â Recent and Contemporary Issues in the British Hotel Industry
- Author
- Atkinson J.
- Bayliss F.J.
- Employment Department figures on youth unemployment in the 1980s are difficult to interpret because the basis on which they have been compiled has changed on more than one occasion and many youngsters on YTS were subsequently excluded from the unemployment statistics because they had no contract of employment.
- Hornsey T.
- National Economic Development Office
- Rosemary Lucas
- Publication venue
- 'Emerald'
- Publication date
- Field of study
Protonated Aminocyclopentadienyl Ruthenium Hydride Reduction of Benzaldehyde and the Conversion of the Resulting Ruthenium Triflate to a Ruthenium Hydride with H 2
- Author
- Publication venue
- 'American Chemical Society (ACS)'
- Publication date
- Field of study
The effect of the European collective agreement? In the context of the European Social Dialogue
- Author
- A
- Amsterdam Resulting
- Because
- Bercusson B.
- Bercusson B.
- Brian Bercusson
- Browning Robert
- Brussels COM
- C
- COM
- COM
- Commission Communication on adapting and promoting the Social Dialogue at Community level 20th May 1998 (COM
- Council Directive No. 75/129 (O.J. 1975 L.48/29) on collective redundancies Article 5 which talks of
- Court From
- European Treaty
- For
- Four concluding remarks are proposed before some additional points are made which were based on ECOSOC's opinion to the Commission
- Great The
- Green The
- Guidelines Employment Policy
- In this short exposé on the milestones of the social dialogue mention should be made of the Commission
- It
- Jo CarbyâHall
- Maastricht Article
- Medium-Term Social In
- Monde Le
- Public Padraig Flynn's
- Should
- Social Article
- Tallinn Addressing
- That
- The
- The
- The choice made by the Member State of
- The Commission set out a framework outlining the future development of European Social Policy for the period 1998 to 2000 (COM
- The ETUC UNICE, CEEP
- These four key areas of action proposed by the Commission spell (a) a fuller role by the social partners in a more transparent social dialogue
- This
- To
- To be noted in particular is the Opinion of the Economic and Social Committee of the European Community to the Commission's Communication (Opinion 94/C 397/17 O.J. 397/40 of 31 December 1994).
- Under Article 2(3) (Consolidated Version of the Treaty Establishing the European Community Article 137(3)) the Council must act unanimously on a proposal from the Commission
- With
- Publication venue
- 'Emerald'
- Publication date
- Field of study
Unity in the eye of the beholder? Reasons for decision in theory and practice in the Ontario Works program
- Author
- Because of this many public law scholars assume that judicial review is a more effective mechanism for reforming administrative agencies than it appears to be in practice.
- Canadian courts have stated that they are no longer apex legal interpreters vis-Ă -vis administrative bodies but, as public law scholars often note, courts still struggle with deferring to administrative decision makers.
- Commission for the Review of Social Assistance in Ontario
- David Dyzenhaus
- David Dyzenhaus
- Eubanks
- Field Notes August 2015
- Fleur Johns
- Fleur Johns
- In this way the complexities of the Ontario Works program are similar to those identified in the United Kingdom.
- Jeffrey Manditch Prottas
- Jennifer Raso
- Jerry L Mashaw
- Keith Hawkins
- Listonâs
- Lorne Sossin
- Mariana Valverde
- Mary Liston
- Mary Liston
- Michael Lipsky
- Michael Power
- Mireille Hildebrandt
- Office of the Auditor General of Ontario Annual Report, supra note 66 at 471â2. Together, Ontario Works and Ontario Disability Support Program (the other half of Ontarioâs social assistance scheme that assists individuals who are found to be too disabled to work) provide financial and other assistance to almost one million Ontarians. Commission for the Review of Social Assistance in Ontario
- Ontario has followed new public management techniques introduced in other jurisdictions and appears to be pursuing the new wave of new public analytics developments.
- Other scholars have identified similar documentary practices in different institutional contexts.
- Raso
- Roderick Macdonald
- Saskia Sassen
- The Supreme Court of Canadaâs tendency to parse reasons from thin decision-making records which appears to be less than deferential, has been the subject of recent comment by some of its justices â that is, Justices Russell Brown and Suzanne CĂŽtĂ© â as well as by legal scholars.
- This trend is not entirely new particularly in front-line agencies and in last-resort benefits programs.
- Valverde
- Valverde
- Whether or not letters are sent out following a supplementary benefits decision depends on local office practices.
- Wildeman
- Publication venue
- 'University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress)'
- Publication date
- Field of study
The Case of John Joseph Griffin. From Artisan-Chemist and Author-Instructor to Business-Leader
- Author
- According to Ernest Child
- Advertisement in
- At the time that Heinrich Rose
- Berzelius
- Birkbeck George
- Birkbeckâs additional lectures for young people may have reflected the concerns expressed for practical education by the Edgeworths who in 1802
- Brian Gee
- Brock
- Crosland M. P.
- Daubeny C.
- Exhibition of Works and Industry of All Nations
- For an assessement of Grahamâs and Waringtonâs influence in founding the Chemical Society see
- For an expanded account of the chemical contents of Henryâs textbooks see Farrar
- For Andrew Ure (1778â1857) see
- For Wardâs retirement see
- From
- Garnett Thomas
- Gee B.
- Graham Thomas
- Griffin
- Griffin
- Griffin
- Griffin
- Griffin
- Griffin
- Griffin Charles
- Griffin left his nephew
- Griffin Richard
- Griffinâs
- Ibid. p. 111. Florence flasks were also popular with
- Ibid. Some feeling for the lack of demand for translations is encapsulated in a contemporary remark concerning Berzeliusâs wish to see his
- Ibid. but also see
- Ibid. p. 243. For similar, and even more effective, criticism by August Laurent, see
- In the endpapers of
- International Exhibition of
- It is occasionally reported (e.g.
- It was the two-volume third ed. of the
- Keddie VV.
- Kelly
- Mitscherlich For Eilhardt
- Moseley Henry
- Most of the original collection of Andersonâs instruments has been dispersed but see
- Muir
- No registers of Thomas Thomsonâs classes have survived. It is conceivable that Griffin may have gained some laboratory training under Thomson though Michael Moss, archivist at the University of Glasgow, is of the opinion that he would have received a âsufficient grounding in practical chemistryâ at the Andersonian Institution, citing James âParaffinâ Young as evidence of the calibre of student then emerging. (Personal communications 13.9.84 and 3.10.84.) In this case, it remains of some considerable interest to know whether Ure ran extramural practical classes like Thomson. See
- Note 7. above. The Ure-Griffin connection came to fruition in 1846 when Griffin developed the concept of a ânormalâ solution in titrimetry. See
- Other works in the Polytechnic Library Series included:
- Preface to
- Report of the Committee on Chemical Notation
- Rose
- Rose
- Scots Magazine (1825) P- 2- The full text of Andersonâs will is printed in Muir
- See
- The announcement of Wardâs retirement and transfer of business to Griffinâs appears in explanatory letters to customers form both Ward and Griffin dated 1 March 1850. Griffinâs
- The Glasgow Mechanicsâ Institution survived until 1886 then changed its name to the College of Arts and Science. Muir, op
- The Griffin and Tatlock history
- The remainder of the Scientific Miscellany series included:
- This is reinforced by a knowledge of the books in his library which were donated to the (Royal) Chemical Society. See
- This supplementary catalogue of August 1844 is not paginated continuously with Parts I and II but forms the endpapers of Griffinâs re-issue of Humphry Davyâs
- This travel diary has lain unrecognized at the Royal Chemical Society because it was catalogued with the papers of Henry Roscoe. It does not bear any name though the handwritten symbol RG (signifying Richard Griffin &
- This was a position of some considerable importance because over the intervening years, negotiations had led to the compounding of the Society with the Andersonian Institution Library, and Museum at their George Street building. Thus, the Directors of the Society became supervisors of the administration and finance of the Anderson Library. See
- This work is quite unique for its seventeen double copper plates of instruments and apparatus engraved by Adlard. It is not obvious from the text that Accum was the author although
- Thomson
- Thomson
- Whewell W.
- William H. Brock
- Williams C. G.
- Publication venue
- 'Maney Publishing'
- Publication date
- Field of study
Damaged Goods
- Author
- Alan Brant
- Although these two films are named in the article an exhaustive search conducted of MPW and online has offered no tangible results for the years, directors, or production companies for Godâs Good Man, aside from a 1919 British production.
- Barnum remains famous for his advertising techniques that hinged on offering all style and little substance.
- Cassel
- Cassel
- Cassel
- Cassel
- Cassel
- D. W. Johnson
- Films dealing with the white slave trade are perhaps the most famous of the social problem films to be released in the transitional era. Titles such as Traffic in Souls (George Loane Tucker 1913) and Inside of the White Slave Traffic (Frank Beal, 1913) were controversial and popular in American cities.
- For example film historians Paul Moore, Ben Singer, Miriam Bratu Hansen, Tom Gunning, and Michael Aronson have all placed significant emphasis on the connections between modernity and cinema in the context of early film exhibition and social anxiety in metropolitan America. In these works, a direct correlation between the development of a conception of modernity in a community and the rise of public amusements, as highlighted by the establishment of motion-picture theatres, can be recognized
- For more on the public conception of VD infection in Canada and the United States
- For more recent research in âusefulâ films and the movement toward an educative cinema
- George Potamianos
- Jay Cassel
- John F. Kasson
- Loren Lerner
- Richardson was initially motivated to tour the region because his wife was born in Digby
- Robert M. Seiler
- Schaefer
- Schaefer
- Seiler
- Shelly Stamp
- Sinclair
- The contrast to this film would be the white slave trade films that had been the subject of a censorship battle in the United States.
- The play was novelized by Upton Sinclair in 1913 with the permission of Brieux. It is this version of the story from which I have garnered the summary of the plot. Although there were differences between the novel play, and film, these will be accounted for using reviews of the film published at the time of its initial release in 1915.
- This group is present in the pages of MPW in 1916 and 1917 (though absent in 1918 and 1919) but does not appear in any of the local newspapers that have been surveyed. Although from an industry standpoint this was an important development in the Maritime film industry, the public appear to have been generally unaware of the groupâs existence.
- W. Stephen Bush
- Publication venue
- 'University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress)'
- Publication date
- Field of study
Who Controls the Power over Pain? A Comparative History of Nurse Anaesthesia
- Author
- Agatha C. Hodgins
- Alice Kessler-Harris
- Although Lakeside hospital was the first such institution to assemble and dispatch a surgical team that included nurse anaesthetists for the Allied war effort it was not the only one. In 1917, the medical school at the University of Minnesota organized Base Hospital No. 26, colloquially known as the Mayo Unit.
- Amott
- An early nursing textbook
- Anna Hamilton
- Anna Hamilton
- Anselm Strauss
- Arlene W. Keeling
- Arthur de Prenderville
- Arthur de Prenderville
- Bankert
- Bankert
- Bankert
- Between 1916 and 1934 there were three legal challenges to nurse anaesthesia.
- By 1965 there would be eight such schools. By 2003, their number had grown to 28.
- C.H.M. Woollam
- Cedric Prys-Roberts
- Christine E. Hallett
- Christine E. Hallett
- Clapesattle
- Crile
- Crile
- Darlene Clark Hine
- Darrow
- David Baker
- Dudley W. Buxton
- Duncum
- Edmond I
- Eleanor J. Hamilton
- Emile Forgue
- Ernest Kern suggests that the popularity of the
- F. MacG. Loughnane
- F.B. Parsons
- For a contemporary nurseâs view of the
- Frances Dickinson Berry
- Frances Truckey
- Francis Long Taylor
- George Crile
- H.E. Hoff
- Helen Clapesattle
- Hewittâs efforts to introduce a General Anaesthetics Act in 1908 failed. For the discussion the issue sparked
- In 1873 a mere 178 hospitals existed in the entire United States. By 1909, the number had risen to 4,359.
- In the 1870s religious women still ran almost all of Franceâs 1,500 hospitals. By 1911, lay hospital staff, including nurses, had exploded to an astounding 95,000.
- Isabel Hampton Robb
- J. Frederick
- J. Ross Mackenzie
- J.F. OâConnor
- J.I. Murray Lawson
- James Young Simpson
- Jean Lassner
- Jean-Marie Desmonts
- Joel D. Howell
- Johan Sebastian Pöll
- John Elam
- John Snow
- Judith Moore
- Karin Schultheiss
- Kern
- Kern
- Kern
- Knibiehler
- Lassner
- Lucien E. Morris
- Magawâs
- Marie-ThérÚse Cousin
- Mary J. Roche Stevenson
- Medical specialization emerged in the nineteenth century and became international by the 1930s.
- Melosh
- Mignon
- Modern nursing has evolved within an Atlantic context as Evelyne Diebolt and Nicole Fouché persuasively argue, and the same holds true for nurse anaesthesia.
- Moore
- Nicolet
- Nurse S.C.
- Nursing is the quintessential female profession. As late as 1980 96Â percent of all registered nurses in the US were women
- O. Golden
- On the discovery of antisepsis and sepsis
- On the experience of one nurse anaesthetist
- On the importance of the London context for the distinct path of British anaesthesia
- Patricia DâAntonio
- Pernick speculates that British physicians continued to prefer chloroform because of the danger associated with this agent
- Porter
- Porter
- Pöll
- Rachel Meyer
- Ralph M. Waters
- Sandelowski
- Sarnecky
- Sharon Hadenfeldt
- Since its inception anaesthesia history has been written mostly by medical professionals who are amateur historians in search of a celebratory genealogy. As a result, nurses have routinely been excluded. Even scholarly histories tend to disregard the social aspect of providing anaesthetic services and care.
- Snow
- Susan M. Reverby
- Susan M. Reverby
- Thatcher
- The AANA has also sponsored two histories of nurse anaesthesia.
- The Canadian-born nurse subsequently played an important role in teaching. In the absence of suitable materials she herself completed a set of teaching notes
- The idea behind this creation dated back to the 1930s when Robert Macintosh travelled to the US and was alarmed by the lack of trained anaesthetists.
- There is no consensus on the professional status of nursing. While Joan Jacobs Brumberg and Nancy Tomes view nursing as a semi-profession Barbara Melosh flatly denies the possibility of any womenâs profession.
- There seem to have been some nurse anaesthetists in the British Empire
- Turner
- Waters
- William W.J. Knox
- Z. Mennell
- Publication venue
- 'University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress)'
- Publication date
- Field of study