401 research outputs found

    Tom Kerr interview

    Get PDF
    Tom Kerr taught in the political science department at Central Washington University beginning in 1970.https://digitalcommons.cwu.edu/cwura_interviews/1123/thumbnail.jp

    Project Shine

    Get PDF
    They still might not understand the language or culture, but for years many U.S. immigrants have adapted theor former way of life in effort to stake their claim for a share of the American Drea

    Decarbonizing development: three steps to a zero-carbon future

    Get PDF
    This report lays out three steps for a smooth transition to a zero-carbon future and provides data, examples and policy advice to help countries makes the shift. Overview Getting to zero net emissions and stabilizing climate change starts with planning for the long-term future and not stopping at short-term goals. It means getting prices right as part of a broad policy package that can trigger changes in both investments and behaviors, and it requires smoothing the transition for those most affected. A new World Bank report walks policymakers through those three steps with data, examples and policy advice to help put countries on a path to decarbonizing their development in a smooth and orderly way. The solutions exist, and they are affordable – if governments take action today, the report says

    The antinomies of insurgency: the case of the Scottish National Party

    Get PDF
    The Scottish National Party (SNP) has emerged from generations on the periphery to make a substantial imprint on mainstream British politics. However, in only a matter of months, the foundations of that success have crumbled and, by the admission of its leaders, the SNP is experiencing its greatest crisis in five decades. The roots of this crisis are not well understood, since most recent research has sought to explain the SNP's post-2014 successes. However, the article argues that these successes have always hinged upon a prior moment of politicisation in 2014 on the one hand, and annual cycles of mobilisation and demobilisation on the other. The article draws attention to the SNP's governing strategy of stabilising itself through a process of strategic depoliticisation on independence, which supplanted activist mobilisation with a politics of spectatorship. It then goes on to suggest that, for the SNP, this depended on a paradox of crisis in the British state and being a governing party of the British state

    Use of Online Health Forums by Patients with Chronic Cough: Qualitative Study

    Get PDF
    Background: Online health discussion forums are used by different patient groups for sharing advice and information. Chronic cough is a common problem, and people with chronic cough use online health forums alongside formal medical therapies. Objective: The objective of this study was to assess how chronic cough sufferers use online health forums, including the treatment advice they share with one another and the possible clinical uses of online forums in chronic cough. Methods: Three open-access health forums were searched for threads related to chronic cough. Identified threads were screened against inclusion and exclusion criteria adapted from the British Thoracic Society (BTS) Guidelines related to chronic cough diagnosis. Included data were subjected to qualitative thematic analysis. All study data were cross-validated by a second author and discrepancies were resolved. Results: In total, 96 threads were included in the analysis, consisting of posts by 223 forum users. Three main themes were identified: the effect of chronic cough on the lives of patients, the treatment advice shared between users, and the provision of support within forums. Conclusions: Chronic cough symptoms had impacts on multiple aspects of patients’ health and well-being. To try and combat these issues, forum users suggested a variety of treatments to one another, ranging from mainstream traditional therapies to odd alternative remedies. The provision of support and empathy were also prominent themes in discussion threads. Online forums themselves may provide increasing benefit to users through the addition of a moderator

    Koinonia

    Get PDF
    The ProfessionFaculty and Student Development Staff as Partners in Education, Barry Loy Is it Okay to Struggle as Student Development Professionals?, Terry Williams Conference SpotlightLeading Ladies: Transformative Biblical Images for Women\u27s Leadership, Jeanne Porter Mi Abuelito, Tom Neven Campus EventsQuestions Without Answers, JR Kerr Book ReviewsLet Your Life Speak, reviewed by Dana Forbes Mountains and Passes, reviewed by Jeff Doyle FeaturesThe President\u27s Corner Editor\u27s Diskhttps://pillars.taylor.edu/acsd_koinonia/1009/thumbnail.jp

    Code Assesses Risks Posed by Meteoroids and Orbital Debris

    Get PDF
    BUMPER II version 1.92e is a computer code for assessing the risk of damage from impacts of micrometeoroids and orbital debris on the International Space Station (ISS), including those parts of the ISS covered by shielding that affords partial protection against such impacts. (Other versions of BUMPER II have been written for other spacecraft.) Bumper II quantifies the probability of penetration of shielding and the damage to spacecraft equipment as functions of the size, shape, and orientation of the spacecraft; the parameters of its orbit; failure criteria that quantify impact damage at the threshold of failure for each spacecraft surface; and the impact-damage resistance of each spacecraft surface as defined by "ballistic limit equations" that return the size of a failure-causing particle as a function of target parameters (including materials, configurations, thicknesses, and gap distances) and impact conditions (impact velocity and the density and shape of the impactor). BUMPER II version 1.92e contains several dozen ballistic limit equations that are based on results from thousands of hypervelocity impact tests conducted by NASA on ISS shielding and other hardware, and on results from numerical simulations of impacts

    Determination of Point and Nonpoint Source Toxicity in the Clark Fork River Basin Using the Daphnid, Ceriodaphnia Dubia

    Get PDF
    Ceriodaphnia dubia, a small planktonic daphnid was used to biomonitor point sources of toxicity in wastewater and nonpoint source toxicity in stream samples obtained from the Clark Fork River Basin, MT. Brief descriptions, results and discussions are presented for studies of wastewater from a kraft mill near Frenchtown, MT and potential toxicity of water samples from 19 sites along the Clark Fork River in 1985. In 1987, dilutions of Missoula, MT municipal wastewater fortified with ammonia were tested, as was the wastewater before and after chlorination. Potential toxicity of water samples from eight sites along the upper Clark Fork River were also tested. All studies were cooperative efforts with the Montana Departments of Health and Environmental Sciences and Fish, Wildlife and Parks. Ceriodaphnia appear to be indicators of toxicity in a variety of test conditions such as ammonia in wastewater and metals from past mining activities. The daphnids indicated toxicity from other substances in the wastewater or perhaps the influence of characteristics of the wastewater that increased ammonia toxicity. All example of nonpoint source effects was toxicity in samples from Silver Bow Creek MT, where impaired conditions to aquatic life resulting from the presence of metals have been reported for years. During some of the tests with wastewater, toxicological endpoints were observed using the actual number of daphnids that reproduced in a test, not the average number of young. There was circumstantial evidence in 1985 that copper alone was responsible for the toxicity in Silver Bow Creek. However, the later studies performed under different hydrological conditions found toxicity was probably due to a combination of metals, some of which had not been measurable earlier. For well-defined control of standard conditions during testing, there are indications that waters to be used as reference media for Ceriodaphnia need further research. Nevertheless, the use of daphnids to test the ambient conditions described in this paper should encourage environmental managers to consider approaches with this or similar species in the future

    Feasibility study to objectively assess activity and location of Hispanic preschoolers: a short communication

    Get PDF
    Abstract. Both physical and social environmental factors influence young children’s physical activity, yet little is known about where Hispanic children are more likely to be active. We assessed the feasibility of simultaneously measuring, then processing objective measures of location and physical activity among Hispanic preschool children. Preschool-aged Hispanic children (n = 15) simultaneously wore QStarz BT100X global positioning system (GPS) data loggers and Actigraph GT3X accelerometers for a 24- to 36-hour period, during which time their parents completed a location and travel diary. Data were aggregated to the minute and processed using the personal activity location measurement system (PALMS). Children successfully wore the GPS data loggers and accelerometers simultaneously, 12 of which yielded data that met quality standards. The average percent correspondence between GPS- and diary-based estimates of types of location was high and Kappa statistics were moderate to excellent, ranging from 0.49-0.99. The between method (GPS monitor, parent-reported diary) correlations of estimated participant-aggregated minutes spent on vehicle-based trips were strong. The simultaneous use of GPS and accelerometers to assess Hispanic preschool children’s location and physical activity is feasible. This methodology has the potential to provide more precise findings to inform environmental interventions and policy changes to promote physical activity among Hispanic preschool children
    corecore