3,080 research outputs found
The Concept of Substantial Proportionality in Title IX Athletics Cases
I. Introduction In the past several years, four federal court decisions interpreting Title IX 1 have sent tremors through the collegiate athletic establishment. 2 In all of these cases, the courts found the universities to have failed to provide effec- tive accommodation for the athletic interests and abilities of their women students, as required by the regulations issued pursuant to Title IX. 3 Al- though the regulations state that such accommodation is only one of the factors to be considered in determining compliance with Title IX, it was because of deficiencies in this area that courts found the institutions in viola- tion of the statute. In particular, courts asserted that the universities did not provide participation opportunities to women and men in numbers substan- tially proportionate to their respective enrollments. Unfortunately, the courts failed to supply guidance as to the precise meaning of substantially propor- tionate. This Article suggests a statistical framework for such guidance. II. Statutory Background A. The Title IX Statute and Regulations Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 requires that institutions not discriminate on the basis of sex in their athletics programs, including intercollegiate athletics. 4 When Congress originally enacted Title IX, it pro- vided that the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare issue regula- tions that would assist educational institutions in complying with the stat- ute. 5 After the Title IX regulations were promulgated, the Office for Civil Rights (OCR) of the Department of Education issued a Policy Interpretation Manual ..
Enforcement of pollution regulations in a declining industry
An examination of the effect of EPA enforcement activity as it relates to company plant-closing decisions and company compliance decisions in the U.S. steel industry, finding fewer enforcement actions taken toward plants with an already high probability of closing.Steel industry and trade ; Pollution
Mary Gray to James Meredith (Undated)
https://egrove.olemiss.edu/mercorr_pro/1731/thumbnail.jp
Reading: Why?
The question in the title is open to some variety in interpretation. Among the options are the following: Why should we read? Why do we read? It is to this latter question that this article is addressed
Activist Modernisms: Human Rights and Anti-Totalitarianism in Mid-Twentieth Century Literature
The period after World War II saw the emergence of a new discourse of human rights, with the signing of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights. In the postwar period and throughout the twentieth century, human rights would often be vieas a set of self-evident, monolithic, and timeless values that had merely reached their full realization after the horrors of the war. This study examines a body of literature from the 1930s and 40s, the wartime moment just before the foundation of the twentieth century universal rights ideology, to explore the process by which theories of human rights are formed from among a multiplicity of possible human rights philosophies. The texts in this study - from the work of wartime journalists Rebecca West and Martha Gellhorn, to the anti-fascist spy novels of Eric Ambler, and the writing of communist dissidents like Arthur Koestler – respond to the rise of fascism and totalitarianism and the mass displacements and genocide that occur as a consequence. These writers create narratives to understand and contend with the historical ruptures of their time. These narratives theorize human rights by providing differing answers to the underlying questions of those rights, including the ultimate authorities in which rights are grounded and the ideal kinds of community for nurturing rights. Using the strategies of narrative and fiction to create compelling visions of the proper shape of human society, these authors variously defend rights based in the nation-state or a universal worldview. Creating rather than inheriting human rights ideals, these texts from the dawn of the era of human rights reveal the ways in which human rights are always historically situated, always imagined and negotiated, rather than being eternal truths that need only to be revealed
Religious atheism in contemporary western thought: a Christian problem and a Buddhist perspective
The thesis is divided into two parts, the first presenting the
material and undertaking general interpretation, and the second
engaging in more specific interpretation, analysis and development
of themes. Both of these parts are in turn divided into two sections, and the thesis as a whole is begun with an introduction and
ended with a brief conclusion. The Introduction describes the
preliminary difficulties of the subject and.sets the tone in which
the thesis will be developed. The conclusion represents a summary
of the subject based upon the development within the body of the
thesis and includes a personal evaluation of the present contribution
and significance of Christian atheism.The first part of the thesis constituting a little over half of
its length, looks at atheism in Christianity in the first section
and in Buddhism in the second section. The Christian section begins
with a long but crucial chapter on the general atheistic position of
each of the ten persons whom we are considering to be Christian
atheists. This is followed by three chapters in which sub-topics
which emerge naturally as the major concerns of the Christian atheists,
are surveyed. The final chapter of this section is designed to
categorise the thought of each of the Christian atheists and their
relationships to each other. With the exception of this latter
chapter, we have attempted to draw all of the material for this
section from the writings of the Christian atheists themselves.The second section of Part I attempts to do for Buddhism what
the first section does for Christian atheism. It begins with a
brief introductory chapter and proceeds with a chapter on general
Theravada Buddhism based primarily on the Suttas, and a chapter on
the more specific Theravada theories based primarily on the Abhidharma,
Finally, there is a chapter on Mahayana teaching developed largely
from Madhyamikan teaching and a chapter summarising both the
Theravada and Mahayana systems in terms which are especially meaningful when undertaking a study of modern Christian atheism. Materials
cited in this section are from Buddhism or from the works of
students of Buddhism,The second part of the thesis begins with a section in which
the Christian atheists are individually considered, especially in
light of Buddhist thought. Here they are treated singly but in the
course of five chapters organised so as to keep those most like
each other together. Effort is made to outline all the major
similarities and dissimilarities with Buddhism and some of the
minor ones, as they appear to the author of this thesis. This kind
of activity appears not to have been undertaken elsewhere and
consequently citations are primarily to works used in the first part
of the thesis.The second section of Part II—the final section of the thesis sketches
the overall structure of Christian atheism with reference
to Buddhist structure where applicable. This section draws from
contemporary reactions to all kinds of atheism or developments
relevant to it, and thus intends to set the matter of Christian
atheism within the context of modern theology and theological
discussion. It does this by considering in turn the primary
differences between the Christian atheists and Christian orthodoxy,
the characteristic methodology or modes of thought which Christian
atheists tend to display, the general outlines in which the "sacred"
can be identified within their thought, and their relationship to a
changing orthodoxy taking Post-Vatican II Roman Catholicism as an
example.The thesis as a whole attempts to describe a plane on which
it is meaningful to speak of Christian atheism and to seek an
atheistic form of religiousness which is both characteristically
Christian and cognisant of the development of atheism within
Buddhism, It assumes that future development in the West of-this form
of religiousness will be most fruitful if it is able to understand
its own Christian roots and the profound possibilities of atheism
as exemplified by Buddhism
Is the Influence of Psycholinguistic Research Evident in Preservice Teachers\u27 Views of the Reading Process?
The overall aim of this investigation was to attempt to determine whether the psycholinguistic view of the reading process was being reflected in the views of preservice teachers
Appreciation of Reading Through the Five Senses
While the definition of reading remains an elusive one for reasons pointed out by Edmund Huey (1908) more than seventy years ago, there is one component of the reading process which surely deserves attention. That component is the appreciation gained in reading through the five senses. How is this accomplished? An examination of reading and its relation to the five senses should help to make this clear
- …