23,831 research outputs found
Distributed Media in the Age of Eisenhower: Political Buttons
This paper describes the purpose and effectiveness of distributed campaign materials in the context of President Dwight D Eisenhower\u27s 1952 and 1956 elections. It analyzes campaign buttons and political cartoons distributed by the Eisenhower administration to determine how they furthered the image Eisenhower wished to convey during his campaigns. This image is presented by applying certain aesthetic qualities to the campaign materials
What now for urban regeneration?
It is against recent experiences of virulent neoliberalism and commodification in UK urban environments that regeneration practitioners and core professionals must confront assumptions about the impact and purpose of recent renewal strategies. Over the last decade, urban landscapes have been reinvigorated through intense design and renewal and a massification of private investment, which have come to characterise a new urbanism. Urban regeneration – the broad banner under which much of this change has occurred – has been encouraged by many localities to the extent that it has been beyond reproach by political and critical analysts. This paper makes use of the current respite in urban renewal, which has been brought about by changes in financial markets, to revisit the policy principles and impacts of existing renewal projects as well as the strategic aspirations of several urban areas. It is hoped that this paper might stimulate debate about the future form of urban regeneration and consideration of the need for changes in policy design
Mental health difficulties and service use of incarcerated women: The influence of violence perpetration and victimization
The study investigated the relationships between incarcerated women’s experiences with violence and their mental health with the goal of identifying avenues for more tailored, compassionate responses to their mental health difficulties during incarceration. To achieve this aim, a secondary data analysis was performed using data from the Survey of Inmates in State Correctional Facilities completed by the Bureau of Justice Statistics in 2004 (N=2553). Six research questions guided the inquiry, which involved univariate, bivariate, and multivariate statistical analyses, including latent class analysis—performed to identify patterns in mental health difficulties among incarcerated women—and multiple logistic regression procedures. The latent class analysis resulted in selection of a 4-class solution. The four classes presented subgroups of women with varying mental health difficulties, including the serious mental illness group, the mood and drug use disorders group, the substance use only group, and the resilient group. Women were less likely to be in the resilient mental health group and more likely to engage with a range of mental health services if they had perpetrated violence or experienced sexual or physical victimization in either childhood or adulthood. Social workers should develop and implement clinical mental health treatment in correctional centers that targets the specific co-occurring needs of incarcerated women, especially those needs related to trauma stemming from victimization and perpetration of violence. Additionally, social workers should advocate for policies and programs to prevent and remediate drug-related crime and divert women with serious mental illness away from the criminal justice system.https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/gradposters/1031/thumbnail.jp
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A Service Evaluation of the use of Mealtime Advice Mats within an Adult Learning Disability Service
This study aimed to gather the views of residential support staff and multidisciplinary team members (MDT) in order to evaluate the effectiveness of the current mealtime advice mats. It aimed to use the information to plan improvements to the mats themselves or their provision. Methods: This service evaluation of a NHS Learning Disability team was granted approval by the local audit and development committee and registered so with City, University of London in partial fulfilment of an MSc in SLT. Consenting participants (42: 21 paid support staff, 21 MDT professionals) answered specifically created questionnaires. Areas explored included; frequency of mat use, adherence with mat guidelines, knowledge of the potential consequences of dysphagia and the format and design of the mats. The results were analysed using descriptive statistics and review of the free text comments. Results: Results indicated high levels of awareness of mealtime mats and reported use by support staff. The MDT had less awareness and reported reduced use of the mats by themselves and support staff. Support and MDT staff shared differing facilitators and barriers for adherence to mealtime mat guidelines. The current format was viewed positively with differing views on potential improvements e.g. increased picture recommended by MDT but not support staff. There was general awareness of many consequences of dysphagia but not all, with the MDT less aware. Conclusion: This study’s findings contribute to the limited literature on dysphagia recommendations for people with LD. Implications for service development, improvements to mats and future research avenues are discussed
Lewis Coastal Chapel-Sites Survey: Topographic Survey 2005
This report describes the results of topographic surveys undertaken for the second year of
the Lewis Coastal Chapel-sites Survey (LCCS) on four chapel-sites on the Isle of Lewis in
2005. Desktop study undertaken in the first year (2004) of the LCCS identified thirty-seven
recorded and five potential chapel-sites in Lewis and its outlying islands, and this was
followed up with walkover survey of sixteen sites and plane table survey of three sites.
However, further, more detailed topographic survey was recommended for eight sites, and
this prompted the work in 2005. In February detailed topographic survey of three sites was
undertaken: Teampall Pheadair, Suainebost (Site no 4), Teampall Mhealastadh, Uig (Site no
20) and Tigh na Cailleachan Dubha, Uig (Site no 21). In May - June 2005 topographic
survey of the chapel-site of St Mary’s on Eilean an Tighe, Shiant Islands (formerly known as
Eilean na Cille) on the Shiant Islands (Site no 32) was also undertaken with joint funding
from the Shiants Island Project (SHIP)
Resolved Imaging of the HD191089 Debris Disc
Two thirds of the F star members of the 12 Myr old Beta Pictoris Moving Group
(BPMG) show significant excess emission in the mid-infrared, several million
years after the expected dispersal of the protoplanetary disc. Theoretical
models of planet formation suggest that this peak in the mid-infrared emission
could be due to the formation of Pluto-sized bodies in the disc, which ignite
the collisional cascade and enhance the production of small dust. Here we
present resolved mid-infrared imaging of the disc of HD191089 (F5V in the BPMG)
and consider its implications for the state of planet formation in this system.
HD191089 was observed at 18.3 microns using T-ReCS on Gemini South and the
images were compared to models of the disc to constrain the radial distribution
of the dust. The emission observed at 18.3 microns is shown to be significantly
extended beyond the PSF at a position angle of 80 degrees. This is the first
time dust emission has been resolved around HD191089. Modelling indicates that
the emission arises from a dust belt from 28-90 AU, inclined at 35 degrees from
edge on with very little emission from the inner 28AU of the disc, indicating
the presence of an inner cavity. The steep slope of the inner edge is more
consistent with truncation by a planet than with ongoing stirring. A tentative
brightness asymmetry F(W)/F(E)=0.80+/-0.12 (1.8 sigma) between the two sides of
the disc could be evidence for perturbations from a massive body on an
eccentric orbit in the system.Comment: 11 Pages Accepted to MNRA
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