48,724 research outputs found
Facilitating Meaningful Change Within U.S. Law Schools
Despite the widely recognized challenges and complaints facing U.S. legal education, very little is understood about how law schools can adapt faster and better. This Article uses institutional theory, behavioral economics, and psychology to explain why change has proven so difficult for U.S. law schools. Next, using institutional entrepreneurship, the Article explains the theoretical steps necessary to overcome the institutional resistance to change. The Article then discusses the characteristics of opportunities that are most likely to better meet the needs of law students while also providing sustainable benefits to the individually innovating law schools. Using management theory, the Article then proposes a seven-step change process model to enable individual law schools to systematically overcome institutional resistance, formulate unique strategies, and actually achieve meaningful change
Byngâs and Currieâs Commanders: A Still Untold Story of the Canadian Corps
In 1915, the Canadian Corps was little more than a rabble of enthusiastic amateurs. Yet by 1917-18, it had become an accomplished professional fighting force, one characterized by Denis Winter as âmuch the most effective unit in the BEFâ and by Shane Schreiber as âthe shock army of the British Empire.â While Canadian military historians have studied this evolution extensively few have examined the decisive element in the transformationâthe development of a cadre of proficient senior combat officers. No one questions Currieâs status as Canadaâs best fighting general, but of the supporting team he and his predecessor, General Byng, assembled we know precious little. Who, then, were the men commanding the Corpsâ four divisions, 12 infantry brigades and supporting machine gun and artillery unitsâthe senior officers whose abilities as trainers and fighters were integral to the CEFâs battlefield success
A black British male perspective of identities
Recently an email was circulated requesting papers for âthe first scholarly investigation of the African Diaspora as an aspect of intra-European historyâ (Johann-Gutenberg-University, 10-13 November, 2005). The organizersâ stated goal was also to âadvance the development of new theoretical and methodological tools to understand the African Diaspora within Europe.â The supporting literature provided a diagram that considers Black European identity in relation to a number of constitutive factors (for instance, social and economic variables, âWhite sampleâ ideology, etc). These factors underpinned the motivation for the conference, the recognition that the African Diaspora is understood âwithâ and through North American academia. Implicitly, the conference literature recognized African-American influence in a detailed list of measurement scales used to generate dimensions of Black identity. Such an approach, in wanting to measure a substance-type identity, embraces positivism and tends to be at odds with Africentricism. This raises a number of problems concerning Black identity: (1) the need for an understanding of Black identity within a local context while recognising the hegemonic position of African-American accounts; (2) finding an appropriate means of empirically giving voice to this conception whilst recognizing the claims of an African particularism, and; (3) allowing a diversity of views or consensus about Black identity to emerge.
The aim of this paper is to respond to these questions from a particular region, that of Black British male identity. This paper will present some of the identity positions articulated by British born African-Caribbean men. In a previous paper, Hylton & Miller (2004) considered Black Identity in term of macro-narratives. That paper provided a historical context to notions of âBlacknessâ, this paper provides a more micro-analytic, fine-grained analysis of Black identity, from an exclusively Black British stance
WHICH AVENUE FOR SUGAR TRADE REFORM: WTO, REGIONAL OR BILATERAL? A EUROPEAN UNION PERSPECTIVE
International Relations/Trade,
Primitive Divisors in Arithmetic Dynamics
Let F(z) be a rational function in Q(z) of degree at least 2 with F(0) = 0
and such that F does not vanish to order d at 0. Let b be a rational number
having infinite orbit under iteration of F, and write F^n(b) = A_n/B_n as a
fraction in lowest terms. We prove that for all but finitely many n > 0, the
numerator A_n has a primitive divisor, i.e., there is a prime p such that p
divides A_n and p does not divide A_i for all i < n. More generally, we prove
an analogous result when F is defined over a number field and 0 is a periodic
point for F.Comment: Version 2 is substantial revision. The proof of the main theorem has
been simplified and strengthened. (16 pages
Issues in the development of advance directives in mental health care
<i>Background</i>: Interest in advance directives in mental health care is growing internationally. There is no clear universal agreement as to what such an advance directive is or how it should function. <i>Aim</i>: To describe the range of issues embodied in the development of advance directives in mental health care. <i>Method</i>: The literature on advance directives is examined to highlight the pros and cons of different versions of advance directive. <i>Results</i>: Themes emerged around issues of terminology, competency and consent, the legal status of advance directives independent or collaborative directives and their content. Opinions vary between a unilateral legally enforceable instrument to a care plan agreed between patient and clinician. <i>Conclusion</i>: There is immediate appeal in a liberal democracy that values individual freedom and autonomy in giving weight to advance directives in mental health care. They do not, however, solve all the problems of enforced treatment and early access to treatment. They also raise new issues and highlight persistent problems. <i>Declaration</i> <i>of</i> <i>interest</i>: The research was funded by the Nuffield Foundation grant number
MNH/00015G
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