27 research outputs found
Volume 06
Introduction from Dean Dr. Charles Ross
Caught Between Folklore and the Cold War: The Americanization of Russian Children\u27s Literature by Kristen Gains
Graphic Design by Amanda Willis
Graphic Design by Holly Backer
Prejudices in Swiss German Accents by Monika Gutierrez
Photography by Cara O\u27Neal
Photography by Sara Nelson
Edmund Tyrone\u27s Long Journey through Night by Sasha Silberman
Photography by Jessica Beardsley
Photography by Jamie Gardner and Edward Peeples
The Republican Razor: The Guillotine as a Symbol of Equality by Jamie Clift
Graphic Design by Matthew Sakach
Genocide: The Lasting Effects of Gender Stratification in Rwanda By Tess Lione and Emily Wilkins
Photography by Kelsey Holt and Jessica Page
Morocco and the 20 February Movement by Charles Vancampen, Gilbert Hall, Jenny Nehrt, Kasey Dye, Amanda Tharp, Jamie Leeawrik, & Ashley McGee
Photography by Emily Poulin
Photography by Michael Kropf
Improving Performance of Arbitrary Precision Arithmetic Using SIMD Assembly Code Instructions by Nick Pastore
Art by Austin Polasky and Morgan Glasco
Art by Laura L. Kahler
The Effects of the Neutral Response Option on the Extremeness of Participant Responses by Melinda L. Edwards and Brandon C. Smith
Graphic Design by Mariah Asbell
Graphic Design by Cabell Edmunds
College Bullying: An Exploratory Analysis by Amelia D. Perry
Photography by Alyssa Hayes
Death-Related Crime: Applying Bryant\u27s Conceptual Paradigm of Thanatological Crime to Military Settings by Irina Boothe
Graphic Design by Perry Bason
Graphic Design by James Earl
Antibiotic research and development: business as usual?
This article contends that poor economic incentives are an important reason for the lack of new drugs and explains how the DRIVE-AB intends to change the landscape by harnessing the expertise, motivation and diversity of its partner
Bankruptcy Conference: The World of Insolvency Panel 2
Participants: Jenny Clift (United Nations Commission on International Trade Law Secretariat) Martin Glenn (U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York) Sean Hagan (International Monetary Fund) Charles Mooney (University of Pennsylvania Law School) Daniel Glosband (Goodwin Procter) Moderato
Bankruptcy Conference: The World of Insolvency Panel 1
Participants, as introduced by Boston College Law School Dean Vincent Rougeau and J. Michael Deasy (U.S. Bankruptcy Court, New Hampshire): Jenny Clift (United Nations Commission on International Trade Law Secretariat) Martin Glenn (U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York) Sean Hagan (International Monetary Fund) Charles Mooney (University of Pennsylvania Law School) Daniel Glosband (Goodwin Procter) Moderato
What Would a Rhythmanalysis Of a Qualitative Researcher’s Life Look Like?
Rhythmanalysis (Lefevbre, 2004) is a particular approach to qualitative research that asks us to consider the rhythms, the pauses, the discordant notes and the eurhythmic moments. As explained and utilised by Dawn Lyon (2016) it is an embodied approach to research, that incorporates a holistic, reflexive researcher, aware of their physicality and occupation of space, and positionality within their research. Like other embodied approaches to research (Leigh 2019), rhythmanalysis allows us to live, breathe and tune into the layered pattern of rhythms in our own bodies and the world around us, and in our own bodies in reaction and response to the world around us. As such, it requires a level of self-awareness, and conscious self-awareness of our embodied and reflexive processes (Leigh & Bailey 2013) similar to that sought in autoethnographic research (Bochner & Ellis 2016). However, a longitudinal rhythmanalysis would not be possible without a history of embodied practice