1,721 research outputs found

    The Fragile Fabric of Union: Cotton, Federal Politics, and the Global Origins of the Civil War.

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    Cotton’s Effect on the Southern Political Economy This excellent book begins by emphasizing the usefulness of studying past societies by investigating their leaders’ views on political economy. This research method leads not to the determinism of pure economics nor to a purely legali...

    The Slave Power: Its Character, Career, and Probable Designs: Being an Attempt to Explain the Real Issues Involved in the American Contest

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    The dismal science and American slavery 19th century analysis of King Cotton For decades, historians have used classical economist John Cairnes\u27 The Slave Power as a vital source of analysis and information about the economy of slavery and the society it produced. Cairne...

    A Nation of Counterfeiters: Capitalists, Con Men, and the Making of the United States

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    Counterfeit Capitalism in the Antebellum Era The history of antebellum counterfeiting, supplemented with a brief sojourn into the latter part of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth, is amply detailed in this book by Stephen Mihm. Historians will be interested in how ...

    Cwbr Author Interview: The British Gentry, The Southern Planter, And The Northern Family Farmer: Agriculture And Sectional Antagonism In North America

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    Interview with James L. Huston, Regents Professor of History at Oklahoma State University Interviewed by Zach Isenhower Civil War Book Review (CWBR): Today the Civil War Book Review is happy to speak with James L. Huston, Regents Professor of History at Oklahoma State University. Professor Huston previously authored, among several books, Calculating the Value of the Union: Slavery, Property Rights, and the Coming of the Civil War, as well as Stephen A. Douglas and the Dilemma of Democratic Equality. Today we get to talk about his most recent book, The British Gentry, the Southern Planter, and the Northern Family Farmer: Agriculture and Sectional Antagonism in North America. Professor Huston, thank you for joining us today. James L. Huston (JH): My pleasure, and thank you for the invitation

    The Nebraska-Kansas Act of 1854

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    Review of: "The Nebraska-Kansas Act of 1854," edited by John R. Wunder and Joann M. Ross

    The Nebraska-Kansas Act of 1854

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    Review of: "The Nebraska-Kansas Act of 1854," edited by John R. Wunder and Joann M. Ross

    CD4 Effector T Cell Subsets in the Response to Influenza: Heterogeneity, Migration, and Function

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    The immune response of naive CD4 T cells to influenza virus is initiated in the draining lymph nodes and spleen, and only after effectors are generated do antigen-specific cells migrate to the lung which is the site of infection. The effector cells generated in secondary organs appear as multiple subsets which are a heterogeneous continuum of cells in terms of number of cell divisions, phenotype and function. The effector cells that migrate to the lung constitute the more differentiated of the total responding population, characterized by many cell divisions, loss of CD62L, down-regulation of CCR7, stable expression of CD44 and CD49d, and transient expression of CCR5 and CD25. These cells also secrete high levels of interferon Îł and reduced levels of interleukin 2 relative to those in the secondary lymphoid organs. The response declines rapidly in parallel with viral clearance, but a spectrum of resting cell subsets reflecting the pattern at the peak of response is retained, suggesting that heterogeneous effector populations may give rise to corresponding memory populations. These results reveal a complex response, not an all-or-none one, which results in multiple effector phenotypes and implies that effector cells and the memory cells derived from them can display a broad spectrum of functional potentials

    Effects of shell thickness on the electric field dependence of exciton recombination in CdSe/CdS core/shell quantum dots

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    Here we examine the effects of shell thickness on the photophysical properties of CdSe/CdS core/shell quantum dots (QDs) in an electric field. Photoluminescence (PL) of QDs in an applied electric field is observed to decrease markedly with increasing shell thickness, with a thick-shelled (4.9 nm shell) sample exhibiting an order of magnitude greater PL suppression than a thin-shelled sample (1.25 nm shell) with the same core

    Strategic Planning for Environmental Stewardship at Eastern Kentucky University

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    The 2006-2010 Strategic Plan for Eastern Kentucky University, under Strategic Direction 5.4, mandates the formulation of a plan to guide the University toward greater environmental stewardship. The creation and implementation of that plan is the charge of the Eastern Committee on Responsible Environmental Stewardship (ECRES), which was formed in September of 2005. On October 27th, 2006, ECRES hosted a Strategic Planning Workshop. This workshop brought together a wide range of paticipants, including elected officials, college and university representatives, and interested citizens. The result was a broad consensus in the identification of environmental goals and objectives toward which EKU should strive

    Awareness, Treatment, and Control of Hypertension and Hypercholesterolemia Among Insured Residents of New York City, 2004

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    Introduction: Health care access and sociodemographic characteristics may influence chronic disease management even among adults who have health insurance. The objective of this study was to examine awareness, treatment, and control of hypertension and hypercholesterolemia, by health care access and sociodemographic characteristics, among insured adults in New York City. Methods: Using data from the 2004 New York City Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, we investigated inequalities in the diagnosis and management of hypertension and hypercholesterolemia among insured adults aged 20 to 64 years (n = 1,334). We assessed differences in insurance type (public, private) and routine place of care (yes, no), by sociodemographic characteristics. Results: One in 10 participants with hypertension and 3 in 10 with hypercholesterolemia were unaware and untreated. Having a routine place of care was associated with treatment and control of hypertension and with awareness, treatment, and control of hypercholesterolemia, after adjusting for insurance type, age, sex, race/ethnicity, foreign birth, income, and education. Differences in systolic blood pressure and total cholesterol between people with versus without a routine place of care were 2 to 3 times the difference found between people with public versus private insurance. Few differences were associated with sociodemographic characteristics after adjusting for routine place of care and insurance type; however, male sex, younger age, Asian race, and foreign birth with short-term US residence reduced the odds of having a routine place of care. Neither income nor education predicted having a routine place of care. Conclusion: Sociodemographic characteristics may influence chronic disease management among the insured through health care access factors such as having a routine place of care
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