1,734 research outputs found

    Valuing Farm Financial Information

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    Despite the merits of good farm record keeping, little is known about the value farmers place on their farm financial records. This study uses a willingness-to-accept experimental second price auction to elicit such values from farmers. Results indicate farm records are extremely valuable and that some diversity in values is explained by the characteristics of the records and farmers. We find that experimental auctions can be used to elicit values for extremely high-valued goods, and we demonstrate how they can be used to value a complex good comprised of many sub-components.Farm Management,

    Concert: An excerpt (the Finale of Act II) from The Wolf by the Ears

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    After Dinner Mint: Faculty Recital Showcase Series: The Chamber Music of Dana Wilson

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    'Clearly Necessary', 'Wonderful' and 'Engrossing'? Mass observation correspondents discuss forensic technologies

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    This article explores the perspectives of Mass Observation (MO) correspondents on crime investigation and application of forensic technologies in police work. Using the Panel's replies to two distinct, independently commissioned Directives (the 2006 Spring Directive, Part 1 'Genes, Genetics and Cloning' and the 2011 Autumn/Winter Directive, Part 1, 'Crime and Investigation'), the article examines the meanings and place correspondents give to genetics and forensic science in everyday life and in relation to crime and investigation, surveillance and law and order. The analysis surveys MO correspondents' understandings of the relationship between forensic technologies and policing and identifies the ways in which correspondents interpret, engage with and discuss their writing tasks. It is argued that MO data offer significant insights into how individuals select and appropriate information on different topics and incorporate this knowledge into distinct worldviews. These accounts constitute a rich, yet under-explored resource for (1) documenting the range of resources that inform the 'forensic imaginary' on which correspondents draw in explaining their fascination with or disinterest in criminal investigation and (2) conceptualising the ways in which distinct publics reflect on representations of crime. While the analysis highlights the benefits and limitations of a Mass Observation approach to documenting collective views on the role of forensic technologies in crime investigation, the conclusion reflects more broadly on both the contribution such an approach could make to the literature on public understandings of science and the uses and potential of MO data for social science researchers

    Mental health in British Columbia’s post-secondary institutions’ disability policies

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    In British Columbia’s public post-secondary institutions, the needs of students living with physical or psychological disabilities are usually addressed through a dedicated disability policy. This approach focuses on making accommodations for eligible students but because mental illness is often less visible than physical impairment, it tends to be forgotten in policy design. As a result, students living with mental illness do not receive a comparable level of institutional support. This inadvertent exclusion creates a service gap that disadvantages students living with mental illness because of the very policies that are meant to support them. With a focus on shrinking this service gap, a review of existing post-secondary disability policies in BC is supplemented by academic literature on post-secondary mental health, as well as stakeholder interviews, all of which are used to develop policy options that will help to alleviate this gap. The policy alternatives are evaluated, and a recommendation is made

    Review of \u3cem\u3eNative American Postcolonial Psychology.\u3c/em\u3e Eduardo Duran and Bonnie Duran. Reviewed by Dana Wilson Klar, Washington University.

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    Eduardo Duran and Bonnie Duran, Native American Postcolonial Psychology. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 1995. $16.95 hardcover

    Mental wellbeing in non-ambulant youth with neuromuscular disorders: What makes the difference?

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    The physical and social challenges associated with neuromuscular disorders may impact mental wellbeing in non-ambulant youth during the more vulnerable period of adolescence. This cross-sectional survey investigated non-ambulant youths’ mental wellbeing and relationships with physical health, participation and social factors. The conceptual model was the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF). Thirty-seven youth aged 13 – 22 years old (mean age 17.4 years; n = 30 male; n = 24 Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy) and their parents provided biopsychosocial data through a comprehensive self-report questionnaire. The primary outcome measure was the Warwick Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale (WEMWBS). Relationships between mental wellbeing and variables within and across each ICF domain were explored using linear regression models. Mean WEMWBS scores (55.3/70 [SD 8.1]) were higher than for typically developing youth and comparable to youth with other chronic conditions. Over half of youth reported severe co-morbidities across all body systems. Multivariable modelling indicated that mental wellbeing was independently associated with academic achievement and perceived family support but not with physical health variables. Beyond management of physical co-morbidities, enabling youths’ educational attainment and attending to social support likely optimises youth’s wellbeing

    Concert: Composition Premieres IV

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