203 research outputs found

    Through the Eyes of Children: Social Oppression Under Nazi Rule from 1933 to 1938 Reflections of Three Holocaust Survivors

    Full text link
    This paper discusses the experiences of three Berlin native child survivors of the Holocaust through analysis of their oral testimonies. Their unique voices help shed light on the various ways in which lives were forever changed for those who were legally identified as Jewish in Nazi Germany by way of social oppression. This paper highlights three key years that each survivor discussed at length in their testimonies: Hitler’s Chancellorship in 1933, the Nuremberg Laws in 1935, and Kristallnacht in 1938. Ultimately, this paper argues for the importance of these years and labels them as being a crucial part in the events that led up to the Holocaust and carrying out of the Final Solution, in regards to the victims, perpetrators, and bystanders

    Open Education Week @ Gettysburg College 2019

    Get PDF
    During Open Education Week 2019, Musselman Library\u27s Department of Scholarly Communications educated the campus community about issues of textbook affordability and about the development of Open Educational Resources. This poster provides basic information about what Open Education is and how it is a response to the high cost of course materials, which creates barriers for many students who cannot afford to purchase their books. Open Education seeks to create equitable access to all course materials and transform traditional ideas about pedagogy

    Hidden Victims: An exploration of the criminal justice experiences of homicide bereaved people in England and Wales

    Get PDF
    This thesis explores the experiences of the criminal justice system according to a distinct group of crime victims: homicide bereaved people. It focuses on the criminal justice system in England and Wales. By ‘homicide bereaved people’ is meant anyone with a familial relationship to the deceased victim, and in this research involved parents of, adult siblings of and adult offspring of victims. Since the focus is on the criminal justice system, ‘homicide’ was taken to be victims of murder and manslaughter, rather than road traffic accidents or infanticide. The central aim of the research is to explore what the criminal justice experiences of homicide bereaved people are and what is meaningful to them in their interactions throughout the CJS and their experiences of support mechanisms, using an interpretive lens and privileging their perspective. The interactional constitution of victims is the theoretical viewpoint that underpins this project. Drawing upon qualitative interviews with 17 homicide bereaved people, observations of murder trials within three Crown Court centres and semi-structured interviews with criminal justice and victims’ practitioners, this thesis highlights that the criminal justice processes that are encountered cannot be separated from the complex grief processes that occur in the aftermath of homicide. They form a reciprocal relationship and as result homicide bereaved people’s experiences do not fit within a normative legal framework on which responses to victimisation occurs. As a result, the current support frameworks for homicide bereaved people often render them feeling powerless and voiceless which prolongs grief and victim status. Despite victimology being a field of study in its own right for approximately 50 years, there remains a number of gaps in our understanding of victims of crime and their experiences through the criminal justice system. There is a paucity of literature and research about homicide bereaved people as a distinct group of crime victims, so this research aims to situate the experiences of homicide bereaved people within the victimological and criminological literature, by drawing out the distinctive features of their criminal justice experiences which coincide with traumatic grief processes and bereavement. My research offers unique insights into the experiences of those collaterally victimised through bereavement by homicide. Through analysis of their stories and comparison with data gained from interviewing criminal justice and associated professionals and observations from court visits, my research informs suggestions for change that would improve the experiences of those bereaved by homicide

    Philanthropy for a safe, healthy, and just world

    Get PDF
    In 2019, Candid and Centris, with support from PeaceNexus Foundation, conducted a survey, Philanthropy for a Safe, Healthy, and Just World. The results, based on 823 civil society organization responses, reveal philanthropists can do better to support global peacebuilding efforts.The world today continues to be shaken by armed conflicts, yet, according to research by Candid, peace-related grantmaking comprises less than 1 percent of all grants. Further, the study found that only 18 percent of survey respondents indicated that conflict transformation and peacebuilding were "very important" to their work; in fact, it ranked at the very bottom of the list. Still, 57 percent of respondents said that supporting resilience and stable societies—a key component of peacebuilding— is either important or central to their work. Moreover, it was more common for organizations to see their work through the lens of social justice or human rights than through the lens of peace, suggesting a broader understanding and acceptance of these frameworks compared to peace

    Three Super-Earths Orbiting HD 7924

    Get PDF
    We report the discovery of two super-Earth mass planets orbiting the nearby K0.5 dwarf HD 7924 which was previously known to host one small planet. The new companions have masses of 7.9 and 6.4 M⊕_\oplus, and orbital periods of 15.3 and 24.5 days. We perform a joint analysis of high-precision radial velocity data from Keck/HIRES and the new Automated Planet Finder Telescope (APF) to robustly detect three total planets in the system. We refine the ephemeris of the previously known planet using five years of new Keck data and high-cadence observations over the last 1.3 years with the APF. With this new ephemeris, we show that a previous transit search for the inner-most planet would have covered 70% of the predicted ingress or egress times. Photometric data collected over the last eight years using the Automated Photometric Telescope shows no evidence for transits of any of the planets, which would be detectable if the planets transit and their compositions are hydrogen-dominated. We detect a long-period signal that we interpret as the stellar magnetic activity cycle since it is strongly correlated with the Ca II H and K activity index. We also detect two additional short-period signals that we attribute to rotationally-modulated starspots and a one month alias. The high-cadence APF data help to distinguish between the true orbital periods and aliases caused by the window function of the Keck data. The planets orbiting HD 7924 are a local example of the compact, multi-planet systems that the Kepler Mission found in great abundance.Comment: Accepted to ApJ on 4/7/201

    The State of Global Giving by U.S. Foundations, 2011-2015

    Get PDF
    The State of Global Grantmaking Giving by U.S. Foundations is the latest report in a decades-long collaboration between Foundation Center and The Council on Foundations and aims to help funders and civil society organizations better navigate the giving landscape as they work to effect change around the world. The analysis reveals that global giving by U.S. foundations increased by 29% from 2011 to 2015, reaching an all-time high of $9.3 billion in 2015. In addition to a detailed analysis of trends by issue area, geographic region, population group, and donor strategy, this analysis also relates these trends to key events and developments, including the adoption of the Sustainable Development Goals, the spread of Ebola in West Africa, and the increasing legal restrictions faced by civil society in countries around the world

    Transcriptome-Stable Isotope Probing Provides Targeted Functional and Taxonomic Insights Into Microaerobic Pollutant-Degrading Aquifer Microbiota

    Get PDF
    While most studies using RNA-stable isotope probing (SIP) to date have focused on ribosomal RNA, the detection of 13C-labeled mRNA has rarely been demonstrated. This approach could alleviate some of the major caveats of current non-target environmental “omics.” Here, we demonstrate the feasibility of total RNA-SIP in an experiment where hydrocarbon-degrading microbes from a BTEX-contaminated aquifer were studied in microcosms with 13C-labeled toluene under microoxic conditions. From the total sequencing reads (∌30 mio. reads per density-resolved RNA fraction), an average of 1.2% of reads per sample were identified as non-rRNA, including mRNA. Members of the Rhodocyclaceae (including those related to Quatrionicoccus spp.) were most abundant and enriched in 13C-rRNA, while well-known aerobic degraders such as Pseudomonas spp. remained unlabeled. Transcripts related to cell motility, secondary metabolite formation and xenobiotics degradation were highly labeled with 13C. mRNA of phenol hydroxylase genes were highly labeled and abundant, while other transcripts of toluene-activation were not detected. Clear labeling of catechol 2,3-dioxygenase transcripts supported previous findings that some of these extradiol dioxygenases were adapted to low oxygen concentrations. We introduce a novel combination of total RNA-SIP with calculation of transcript-specific enrichment factors (EFs) in 13C-RNA, enabling a targeted approach to process-relevant gene expression in complex microbiomes

    Fischer-Tropsch Catalyst for Aviation Fuel Production

    Get PDF
    As the oil supply declines, there is a greater need for cleaner alternative fuels. There will undoubtedly be a shift from crude oil to nonpetroleum sources as a feedstock for aviation (and other transportation) fuels. The Fischer-Tropsch process uses a gas mixture of carbon monoxide and hydrogen which is converted into various liquid hydrocarbons; this versatile gas-to-liquid technology produces a complex product stream of paraffins, olefins, and oxygenated compounds such as alcohols and aldehydes. The Fischer-Tropsch process can produce a cleaner diesel oil fraction with a high cetane number (typically above 70) without any sulfur and aromatic compounds. It is most commonly catalyzed by cobalt supported on alumina, silica, or titania or unsupported alloyed iron powders. Cobalt is typically used more often than iron, in that cobalt is a longer-active catalyst, has lower water-gas shift activity, and lower yield of modified products. Promoters are valuable in improving Fischer-Tropsch catalyst as they can increase cobalt oxide dispersion, enhance the reduction of cobalt oxide to the active metal phase, stabilize a high metal surface area, and improve mechanical properties. Our goal is to build up the specificity of the Fischer-Tropsch catalyst while adding less-costly transition metals as promoters; the more common promoters used in Fischer-Tropsch synthesis are rhenium, platinum, and ruthenium. In this report we will describe our preliminary efforts to design and produce catalyst materials to achieve our goal of preferentially producing C8 to C18 paraffin compounds in the NASA Glenn Research Center Gas-To-Liquid processing plant. Efforts at NASA Glenn Research Center for producing green fuels using non-petroleum feedstocks support both the Sub-sonic Fixed Wing program of Fundamental Aeronautics and the In Situ Resource Utilization program of the Exploration Technology Development and Demonstration program

    When ‘ideal victim’ meets ‘criminalised other’: Criminal records and the denial of victimisation

    Get PDF
    This article critically examines the restrictions on access to statutory compensation in Great Britain for victims of serious crime with criminal records. Drawing on original analysis of Criminal Injuries Compensation Authority transparency data it reveals the scale of the denial of victimisation as a so-called ‘collateral consequence of a criminal record’. The policy is then critiqued on the basis that it reproduces the problematic social construction of the ‘ideal victim’, delineates people with criminal records as subaltern citizens and gives rise to harmful secondary victimisation of applicants whose criminal records are often unrelated to their victimisation event
    • 

    corecore