232,885 research outputs found
Reading Intellectual Property Reform Through the Lens of Constitutional Equality
Reviewing Bill D. Herman, The Fight Over Digital Rights: The Politics of Copyright and Technology; Aram Sinnreich, The Piracy Crusade: How the Music Industry’s War on Sharing Destroys Markets and Erodes Civil Liberties; and Robert Spoo, Without Copyrights: Piracy, Publishing, and the Public Domain
Reading Intellectual Property Reform Through the Lens of Constitutional Equality
Reviewing Bill D. Herman, The Fight Over Digital Rights: The Politics of Copyright and Technology; Aram Sinnreich, The Piracy Crusade: How the Music Industry’s War on Sharing Destroys Markets and Erodes Civil Liberties; and Robert Spoo, Without Copyrights: Piracy, Publishing, and the Public Domain
The Suffolk Law Reporter, Spring 1960
Founded in 1960 as the official newspaper of the Suffolk University Law School Student Bar Association. Faculty Advisor: Professor David J. Sargent, Esq. Address: Suffolk Law Reporter, Beacon Hill, Boston. Board of Editors: Louis M. Bell, Bruce K. Carpenter, Armen Der Marderosian, James G. Jung, Jr., James L. Lalime Contributors: Michael Breen, Alexander Cella, Robert Cox, Ron D\u27 Avolio, Joseph Hachey, Herman Hemingway, Russell Mahoney, Jordan Ring, Richard Smith, James Troddenhttps://dc.suffolk.edu/altstudentpapers/1016/thumbnail.jp
Friends of Musselman Library Newsletter Fall 2013
Table of Contents: From the Director: Honoring Memories (Robin Wagner); Civil War Flag Unfurls Adams County’s History (Richard Ogden); Video Goes Behind the Scenes: Meet the Musselman Interns and Musselman Library Internship Experience (Linnea Goebel ’13, Mary Wooton); Fund Assists Purchase of Civil War Materials; Music at Musselman; Focus on Philanthropy (Bruce Stefany ’71); A Drummer Boy’s Legacy Makes its Way to Gettysburg (Charlotte Smedley); Class of 1963 Comes Home Again (Ron Couchman ’63); New Archivist Has Her Own History with the College (Amy Lucadamo ’00, Timothy Shannon); GettDigital- The Albert Chance Archive (Barbara Chance Hall); Snow Cones, Sasparilla and Rebel Red: Documenting the 150th; Service and Dedication: One Boy Scout’s Memories (Bob Kuhn); Exhibit Chronicles Experiences of a Student Soldier (Pvt. Herman S. Cook Class of 1866, Kristen M. Trout ’15, M. Patrick McCrary); Bookshelf- Archivist Publishes Fonda Biography (Devin McKinney); General Patton Relatives Donate Civil War Revolver (James D. Patton ’13, Robert and Victoria Patton); Summer Internship Draws Intense Competition (Diane Werley Smith ’73, Dori Gorczyca ’15); Civil War Artifacts Enhance Collection (Bill Cleary P’15); Catching Fire (Stephanie Bowen
Philosophy, Sociology and the Theory of Social Welfare: A Conceptual Starting Point
In this paper I want to explore and 2begin to elucidate a fundamental problem in social welfare theory. The problem centers on the conception of the relation between individuals and social structure. Before proceeding with this task, it is important to note the senses in which the term social welfare will be used. The term has two basic senses, deriving from two more or less distinct intellectual traditions. In one sense the term refers to the provision of goods and services to needy individuals, either through government transfers or private philanthropy. In this comparatively narrow sense social welfare is a characteristic of industrialized societies (see Wilensky, 1975, for an empirical investigation of the determinants of welfare spending) and has to do with social workers, welfare institutions and the poor. In the second, broader, sense social welfare has to do with all the members and institutions of a society. This sense derives from the concerns of moral and political philosophers about the structure of society and the production and distribution of basic values (such as wealth, power, liberty, equality and happiness). Moralpolitical philosophy asks what values are desirable and how can they be justified, and, given a set of values, what kind of society and what kind of individual is most likely to lead to the fullest realization of those values
Anti-Poverty Policies and Evaluation: A Critique of the Pluralist Conception of Politics and Evaluation
Excerpt from the full-text article:
The beginnings of U.S. federal evaluation research can, in descriptive historical terms, be located in McNamara\u27s Department of Defense and the later requirement that all federal government agencies adopt a Planning, Programming, Budgeting System. While the formal PPB system was discontinued in 1971, the analytical or policy evaluation activities it required, still live on, especially in agencies dealing with human resource development and/or social welfare programs (Schick, 1973, Wholey, et al, 1970). Given the recent advocacy of increasing and improving federal evaluation efforts, I think it important to examine some of the assumptions and consequences of those assumptions of the general evaluation research model, particularly in regard to anti-poverty policies
Social Action Organization Participation and Personal Change in the Poor: Part II
In Part I (Herman, 1982) evidence bearing on the hypothesis that participation by the poor in social action organizations results in personal change was reviewed and found to be inconsistent and open to diverse Interpretations. In Part I It was observed that not all socizi action organizations are al ike and, thus, that participation is also of varied kinds and extents and may have different consequences for personal change. A typology of social action organizations forms (developed in Part I ) is used here to comparatively classify information on organizational characteristics and personal change drawn from eleven case studIes. The comparatIve review leads to three principal implications. First, it offers more support for the situational than for the sub-cultural perspective. Second, the review implies that the emphasis of both perspectives on the necessity of personality change may be inappropriate. Third, the review suggests personal change In the poor, either dispositionally or behaviorally, but especially the latter, Is much more likely in those organizations in which the poor are highly included and are sponsored by groups or Institutions with relatively few resources. Finally, the paper concludes with a few observations on the meaning and significance of social action organizations of the poor
Farm & Home Science Vol. 17 No. 1, March 1956
Juices and purees, by Joan Barber 2
An experimental garden, by Otto Riethmann 5
Chlorosis, by Herman Wiebe 6
Chelates offer promise in control of chlorosis, by R. L. Smith and David D. Neher 8
Hybridization, next big step in turkey breeding, by J. David Carson 11
Out-of-state shipment of Utah cattle, by Lynn H. Davis 12
A better potato variety for Utah, by DeVere R. McAllister and Rex F. Nielson 14
Best strawberries for freezing, by Robert A. Norton 17
Will agricultural chemicals destroy the fertility of your soils? by L. W. Jones 18
Stilbestrol increases rate of gain and feed utilization in lambs, by M. A. Madsen, R. J. Raleigh, and L. E. Harris 20
Cooperative important in the agriculture of Utah, by W. Preston Thomas 21
Spotted alfalfa aphids invade Utah, by George F. Knowlton 2
W88 0042. Englund, Harold N. (1923- ). Papers, 1960-2013. 1.50 linear ft.
Western Theological Seminary class of 1950; RCA minister, 1950‑1962; acting president of Western Theological Seminary, 1960‑1962. Sermons, correspondence and papers of his presidency. Correspondents include: John W. Beardslee III, Louis H. Benes, A. G. Bossenbroek, Donald J. Bruggink, Donald E. Buteyn, Bernard Brunsting, Bert Brower, S. Barton Babbage, Andrew Blackwood, John E. Buteyn, Theodore Brinckerhoff, William Brownson, Oscar Cullmann, John R. De Witt, Donald De Young, Clarence P. Dame, Marion de Velder, C. A. De Bruin, Jerome De Jong, Gordon Girod, Howard G. Hageman, Eugene P. Heideman, I. John Hesselink, Jr., James E. Hoffman, Joseph C. Holbrook, Jr., Edwin N. Luidens, Bernard M. Luben, Arend D. Lubbers, John H. Ludlum, Bernard J. Mulder, Calvin Malefyt, Richard C. Oudersluys, Russell J. Redeker, Herman J. Ridder, Robert Schuller, Preston J. Stegenga, Gerrit ten Zythoff, Charles L. Taylor, Justin Vander Kolk, and Jesse H. Ziegler
Herald of Holiness Volume 68 Number 12 (1979)
Cover Photo: by H. Armstrong Roberts 2 FATHER DESERVES A DAY by Charles H. Strickland 3 DON’T DESTROY YOUR SON by Morris Chalfant 4 DAD BELIEVED by Mary E. Latham 6 WHAT IS TELEVISION DOING TO US? by Robert E. Maner 8 MY GRANDFATHER’S KNEE by Jacqueline Giles 9 NOT DRUDGERY—JOY by Betty Martin 10 LATE TODDLERHOOD by James Dobson 11 LET MY LIFE SING by Kay Herman 12 “THIS TOO WILL PASS!” by Alice Hansche Mortenson 12 FROM PAIN TO PARDON TO PEACE by Dorothy Pickett 13 PORTRAIT OF OUR FATHER by Dallas Baggett 14 HOW TO HAVE A HAPPY HOME by C. D. Hansen 15 ONE WITH GOD by Lyle P. Flintier 16 HOW DID THE EARLY CHURCH DO IT? by R. William Nelson 17 BEYOND THE ISTHMUS, ACROSS THE TIDE by Charles Hastings Smith 18 THE EDITOR’S STANDPOINT by W. E. MeCumber 20 DON’T GO BY THE LAST GUIDEPOST! by Don J. Gibson 21 IN THE NEWS 30 NEWS OF RELIGION 31 ANSWER CORNER 34 BY ALL MEANS by Terry Curtishttps://digitalcommons.olivet.edu/cotn_hoh/1357/thumbnail.jp
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