161 research outputs found

    John F. Sonnett Memorial Lecture Series: The Compleat Advocate: Continuing the Dialogue on the Making of the Trial Lawyer

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    Lecture by Lord Widgery, Lord Chief Justice John Widgery of England and Wales (1971-1980), regarding the beneficial aspects of medical knowledge to lawyers working as client advocates. Includes speaker introduction.https://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/events_programs_sonnet_lectures/1009/thumbnail.jp

    The Compleat Advocate

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    Predicting citizen satisfaction with the quality of urban life: A mathematical model for assisting urban decision makers

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    In the fall of 1977 and winter of 1978, nearly 7000 citizens living in the Greater Flint Area (Michgan, U.S.A.). were interviewed in depth to assess the community's quality of life. This survey was sponsored by The Charles Stewart Mott Foundation for the purpose of developing an information system usable to grassroots and community-wide decision-making groups. The data were analyzed for each of 42 neighborhoods, as well as for the total area.The purpose of this paper is to explain a predictive model developed by using multiple linear regression techniques. Thirty-eight factors were regressed against two dependent variables : 1. (1) Citizen satisfaction with the quality of life in the Flint area.2. (2) Citizen satisfaction with the quality of life in the neighborhood.The 38 independent factors used in the modeling represented various social and psychological aspects of community life. It is believed that a knowledge of how these human dimensions contribute to citizens satisfaction with the quality of community life will sensitize leaders to the likely outcomes of their community development policies.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/24519/1/0000798.pd

    The enduring culture and limits of political song

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    The connection between song and politics is well documented, but in recent years is said to be severed. This is not the case. The relationship between politics and song endures, reflecting and revivifying a culture of political struggle. In this essay, I survey political song, outlining how it is approached, before arguing for a tighter definition after working through the claim that all song is political. In doing so, I build a platform for discussion of songs by English singer-songwriter Leon Rosselson. For over 50 years, Rosselson’s songwriting has illuminated historical and topical events from a left-wing perspective, but he is also clear a song converts noone and changes nothing. To think otherwise misunderstands that songs are neither mobilisers or opiates, but an idiom for people to express their everyday lives and struggles. The essay concludes by assessing Rosselson’s insights on the power and limits of song

    Effect of Cu addition on microstructure and impact toughness in the simulated coarse-grained heat-affected zone of high-strength low-alloy steels

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    The effects of Cu content on microstructure and impact toughness in the simulated coarse-grained heat-affected zone (CGHAZ) of high-strength low-alloy steels were investigated. It has been observed that the microstructure in the simulated CGHAZ of Cu-free steel is dominated by a small proportion of acicular ferrite and predominantly bainite with martensite–austenite constituent. Whereas, in the 0.45 and 1.01% Cu-containing steels, the acicular ferrite increased significantly due to the effective nucleation on intragranular inclusions with outer layer of MnS and CuS. The formation of acicular ferrite is attributed to superior high heat-affected zone impact toughness in the 0.45% Cu-containing steel. Furthermore, the increasing martensite–austenite constituent and ε-Cu precipitates in the simulated CGHAZ of 1.01% Cu-containing steel caused degradation in impact toughness

    Dwelling in Strangeness: accounts of the Kingsley Hall Community, London (1965-1970)

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    This article explores archival accounts of the experimental community, Kingsley Hall (1965-70), established by R. D. Laing, the radical Scottish psychiatrist. The paper contributes to renewed interest in Kingsley Hall, R. D. Laing's radical psychiatry and UK counterculture. Archival sources enable not only the further exploration of already known figures but also let us hear previously unheard voices. Following a discussion of archival materials, the Hall is analyzed thematically and historically as (i) an inner spaceship; (ii) an embattled middle-class countercultural plantation; (iii) a site of spiritual renewal and development; (iv) a single-building arts colony; and (v) a countercultural experiment. Finally, it is argued that with re-evaluation of 1960s and 1970s counterculture now underway on the Left, the Hall’s experiment in Laingian countercultural psychiatry—as we may fittingly call it—may yet inform future radical projects (in mental health and beyond)

    ‘Connectivity’: Seeking conditions and connections for radical discourses and praxes in health, mental health and social work

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    This paper begins with reflections on the development and spread of the ideas, discourse and praxis of radical social work in the 1970s and the cross-fertilisation of these discourses and praxes with discourses and praxes within radical health and mental health initiatives. During these years, for many in the fields of health, mental health and social work, their work and their lives were characterised by active involvement in a range of campaigns focused upon health, mental health and social work issues, together with shared values of more transparent and supportive work with users of health, mental health and social work services and a commitment to greater understanding through social and political theorising. This analysis is compared with the present where workplace cultures in health and social work emphasise meeting delivery and performance targets. It is argued that workers currently in health, mental health and social work with children and with adults share many similar experiences. Hegemonic discourses and praxes appear immoveable, but dissatisfaction with the status quo can become a disinhibiting factor. Building from experiences and analysis, exploration is begun into what conditions and connections might be needed now to develop radical discourses and praxes in health, mental health and social work

    'I Wanna See Some History': Recent Writing on British Punk

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    © 2016 Cambridge University Press. Tucked away on the b-side of the Sex Pistols' third single, 'Pretty Vacant' (1977), is a cover version of The Stooges' 'No Fun'. The song had long been a staple of the Pistols' live set; on record, however, Johnny Rotten chose to open the track with a diatribe against those attempting to imbue the punk culture he helped instigate with broader socio-economic, cultural or political implications. 'Here we go now', he snarled, 'a sociology lecture, with a bit of psychology, a bit of neurology, a bit of fuckology'
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