115,070 research outputs found
Highly transitive actions of free products
We characterize free products admitting a faithful and highly transitive
action. In particular, we show that the group \PSL_2(\Z)\simeq
(\Z/2\Z)*(\Z/3\Z) admits a faithful and highly transitive action on a
countable set.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, Minor change
Resources for use with reflection or learning journals
The material includes instructions for exercises on the depth and quality of reflection, a generic framework for reflective writing and an exercise on starting with reflective learning, and improving its depth and quality
University Scholar Series: Danelle Moon
Daily Life of Women During the Civil Rights Era
On September 28, 2011, Danelle Moon spoke in the University Scholar Series hosted by Provost Gerry Selter at the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Library. Danelle Moon is the Director of Special Collections & Archives, a Full Librarian, and Adjunct Professor of History at SJSU. In this seminar, she talks about her book, Daily Life of Women During the Civil Rights Era, which looks at the variety of women\u27s experiences in promoting social justice and human rights into the United States from 1920 to the 1980s. It gives the audience a deeper understanding of the complexity of gender, class, and race in America.https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/uss/1009/thumbnail.jp
Difficult Dialogues: The Technologies and Limits of Reconciliation
Projects known as dialogue or reconciliation build on the common ground between members of historically adversarial groups to help overcome vicious cycles of retaliation. This chapter compares observations from two studies of religious and religio-ethnic communities. The more recent is a qualitative study of American Jews\u27 understandings and experiences of anti-Semitism and how it relates to politics, particularly around the IsraeliâPalestinian conflict. It compares some of the findings from this study with findings that emerged in earlier ethnographic research on debates about homosexuality within the United Methodist Church. The chapter explores the intersection of politics with the self, which sociological theories of the self have generally ignored
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