522 research outputs found

    Irregular marriage: myth and reality

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    This article examines the historiography, the law, and the practice of irregular marriage in Britain. It argues that there has been a confusion of terms in the historiography of irregular marriage that has served to obscure its meaning, pattern, and incidence. Using evidence from Scotland where irregular marriage continued to be legally valid until 1939 (with one form remaining legally valid until 2006), the article argues that despite its legally valid status, the interpretation of what constituted irregular marriage was extremely limited and that it served as a de facto or functional equivalent to civil marriage.<p></p> In the formal legal sense Scotland had stood virtually alone amongst Western European countries in enshrining simple exchange of consent as sufficient basis for marriage. However, in practice Scotland was very similar to other countries in what was regarded as acceptable forms of contracting marriage and the same stigma was attached to informal or irregular unions that we see elsewhere. However, as elsewhere, the majority of people conformed to the legal rules and the legal paradigms of marriage, but equally there was no neat correspondence between legal codes and social practice with ordinary people adopting a more flexible definition of marriage than the official one

    Speaking bigotry to power: sticks, stones and the bounds of free speech

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    Scholarships & Prizes Office. University of Sydne

    Criminalising search and rescue activities can only lead to more deaths in the Mediterranean

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    Search and rescue activities have provided life-saving assistance to migrants in the Mediterranean, but they have also been portrayed by some actors in Europe as a ‘pull factor’ that encourages more migrants to attempt dangerous crossings. Eleanor Gordon and Henrik Kjellmo Larsen argue that efforts to criminalise the provision of search and rescue services by private vessels, together with the alleged use of ‘pushbacks’ to encourage boats to return to shore, can only lead to more deaths

    Experimental Framework for Testing the Finishing of Additive Parts

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    Selective laser melting (SLM) is a metal additive manufacturing (AM) process involving the selective layer-wise scanning of a powder bed. It is capable of producing metal parts for applications including the aerospace and medical industries. However, components made by SLM are currently not always reaching their potential in industry, due to limitations in the process leading to inadequate part quality. One particular example is the attachment of partially melted particles to the surface which can act as crack-initiation sites reducing part fatigue life. It is therefore necessary to find finishing processes for metal AM parts that remove these particles without compromising the advantages of AM. This paper presents the challenges of finishing AM parts, outlines techniques reported in the literature, and proposes an experimental framework for analysing the effectiveness of finishing processes for AM. The outlined framework will help improve the scientific understanding of finishing processes for AM

    Mass differentiated reading skills instruction in high school

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    Thesis (M.Ed.)--Boston University N.B.: Page 3 Misnumbered

    Visible and ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy of fullerenes using femtosecond laser pulses

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    Photoelectron spectra are presented for C60 excited with fs pulses of wavelengths 532 and 267 nm. The spectra indicate a quick redistribution of the excitation energy. Excitation of SAMO states is observed with 532 nm excitation, but due to the relatively large photon energy of the 267 nm pulses, these orbitals are not populated for this wavelength

    The future of philanthropy: the role of entrepreneurs and entrepreneurial philanthropy

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    Chapter from Philanthropy and a better society, published by Alliance Publishing; available online at http://www.alliancepublishing.org/wp-content/uploads/PHILANTHROPY__A_BETTER_SOC.pdfEleanor Shaw and others (Chapter 12) take a second look at entrepreneurial philanthropists, whose absence from the Big Society discourse strikes them as bizarre, when they are so well placed to make substantial contributions to stopping the gaping hole in the public purse. Considering this bewilderingly untapped resource, the authors wonder why such philanthropists have not been more centrally enlisted in support of the cause, when they could bring so many other attributes (innovations and partnerships across the three sectors) to the table.Centre for Charitable Giving and Philanthrop

    How can social enterprises impact health and wellbeing?

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    Purpose -The objective of this paper is to examine the impacts of social enterprise on individual and community health and well-being. It focuses on community food initiatives, their impact on the social determinants of health and the influence of structure on their outcomes. Design – Using an interpretive qualitative approach through case studies focused on two community food social enterprises, the research team conducted observations, interviews and ad-hoc conversations. Findings - Researchers found that social enterprises impacted all layers of the social determinants of health model but that there was greater impact on individual lifestyle factors and social and community networks. Impact at the higher socio-economic, cultural and environmental layer was more constrained. There was also evidence of the structural factors both enabling and constraining impact at all levels. Implications – This study helps to facilitate understanding on the role of social enterprises as a key way for individuals and communities to work together to build their capabilities and resilience when facing health inequalities. Building upon previous work, it provides insight into the practices, limitations and challenges of those engaged in encouraging and supporting behavioural changes. Value - The paper contributes to a deeper insight of the use, motivation and understanding of social enterprise as an operating model by community food initiatives. It provides evidence of the impact of such social enterprises on the social determinants of health and uses structuration theory (Giddens, 1984) to explore how structure both influences and constrains the impact of these enterprises
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