4,519 research outputs found
The Wifeâs Administration of the Earningsâ? Working-Class Women and Savings in the Mid-Nineteenth Century
King and Tomkins (2002) in their study of the âeconomy of makeshiftsâ1 of the poor in Britain in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries identify a network of different âsources and benefitsâ from which âpoor households cobbled together incomesâ.2 Poor people, they argue, used complementary resources which included wages, self-help and family support, as well as charity and parish benefits and research has not yet adequately explored the strategies by which these resources were combined. More needs to be known, they argue, about the effects on these strategies of a variety of factors, which include different gender roles, and more use needs to be made of a wide variety of sources whose âfull potential has yet to be exploredâ,3 such as parish minutes, begging letters, wage accounts, and the records of pawnbrokers. The paper examines the role played in the makeshift economy by workingclass womenâs use of the savings banks that were founded in Britain as resources for the poor at the beginning of the nineteenth century. It begins with a brief survey of the history of savings banks and of their relationship with working-class and women savers, and an overview of previous studies of UK savings banks, before outlining the results of surveys of two Yorkshire banks: the Sheffield and Hallamshire Savings bank and the Huddersfield Penny Savings Bank
There is no such thing as an audit society
[First Paragraph] Any discussion of Powerâs Audit Society paper of 1994 has to start by acknowledging that it has enjoyed an extraordinary degree of success for an academic paper, let alone for an academic paper about audit. His terms audit society and audit explosion have gained very wide currency within the social sciences and on the wider stages of quality journalism and serious-minded websites. Some of this is, admittedly, due to Powerâs own copious output on the topic (Power, 1994a,1994b, 1997, 2000a, 2000b, 2000c, 2000d, 2002, 2003a, 2003b, 2005a, 2005b), some to exegeses of it (see for instance Bowerman et al 2000, Humphrey and Owen 2000 and Courville, Parker, and Watchirs 2003)) but a great deal to admirers from all sorts of disciplines
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Remembering the Falklands War: subjectivity and identification
This paper explores the ways in which remembering is enacted, performed and contested with media and how this becomes intrinsically linked to issues of power, agency and identity. Drawing on ethnographic data collected with Falkland Islanders during the 30th Anniversary of the 1982 Falklands War I critically consider the context, motivation and agency involved in how and why Islanders remember through and with the media, and the potentially profound implications this may be having on their understanding, negotiation and performance of identity, that is (at times) at odds with their everyday existence. The result of the analysis raises critical questions about what societies remember, and want to be remembered for, the implications of which extend far beyond the Falklands
âWe do not share the troubles of our trans-Atlantic cousins" : The statutory framework for accounting in the UK and the US in the interwar period
âAmerican experience has proved, we think, that the greater the degree of control exercised by governmental authorities over corporate accounting, the greater is the number of difficulties which inevitably crop up; for this reason it seems to us that the task of the American accountant must today be much harder than that of his British brotherâ (The Accountant, 21 May 1938 p. 690). âThe US financial reporting model places far more emphasis on extensive rules and regulations. This focus on detailed rules can encourage compliance with the letter of the law rather than the spiritâ Submission to the Treasury Committeeâs Inquiry into the Financial Regulation of Public Limited Companies by the ICAEW 10 April 20
There is no such thing as an audit society
Tny discussion of Powerâs Audit Society paper of 1994 has to start by acknowledging that it has enjoyed an extraordinary degree of success for an academic paper, let alone for an academic paper about audit. His terms audit society and audit explosion have gained very wide currency within the social sciences and on the wider stages of quality journalism and serious-minded websites. Some of this is, admittedly, due to Powerâs own copious output on the topic (Power, 1994a,1994b, 1997, 2000a, 2000b, 2000c, 2000d, 2002, 2003a, 2003b, 2005a, 2005b), some to exegeses of it (see for instance Bowerman et al 2000, Humphrey and Owen 2000 and Courville, Parker, and Watchirs 2003)) but a great deal to admirers from all sorts of disciplines.
Celebrity worship and incidence of elective cosmetic surgery: evidence of a link among young adults.
Purpose: The purpose of the current study was to explore among young adults whether celebrity worship
predicted the incidence of elective cosmetic surgery within the period of 8 months after controlling for
several known predictors of elective cosmetic surgery.
Methods: A total of 137 young adults completed questionnaire measures of attitudes toward a celebrity
whose body image they admired, previous and vicarious experience of elective cosmetic surgery, attitudes
toward cosmetic surgery, and a range of psychological and demographic measures at time 1. Participants
were then asked to report whether they had undergone elective cosmetic surgery 8 months later.
Results: After controlling for several known predictors of elective cosmetic surgery, intense-personal celebrity
worship of a celebrity whose body shape was admired by the participant predicted the incidence of
elective cosmetic surgery within an 8-month period.
Conclusions: The current findings suggest that the type of para-social relationship that young adults form
with celebrities, particularly with those whose body shape is admired, may need to be considered by those
when speaking to, and educating, young people about their choices around elective cosmetic surgery
Virtual learning environments â help or hindrance for the âdisengagedâ student?
The introduction of virtual learning environments (VLEs) has been regarded by some as a panacea for many of the problems in todayâs mass numbers modular higher education system. This paper demonstrates that VLEs can help or hinder student engagement and performance, and that they should be adapted to the different types of learner. A project is described that aimed to investigate whether the introduction of a VLE can assist âdisengagedâ students, drawing on click count tracking data and student performance. The project took place in the context of two very large undergraduate modules (850 and 567 students) in a Business School of a new university in the UK. In an adaptation of a model of learner engagement in Web-enhanced environments, four distinct learner types have emerged: model, traditionalist, geek and disengaged. There was evidence that use of the VLE exacerbated, rather than moderated, the differences between these learner types
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