310 research outputs found
The Elegant Simplicity of Family Preservation Practice Legecies and Lessons
An earlier version of this manuscript was prepared for the Chapin Hall invitational seminar on family preservation, The Chapin Hall Center for Children at the University of Chicago, September 16 & 17, 1999. The author wishes to acknowledge the comments and helpful suggestions of seminar participants-Jacqueline McCroskey, Martha Shirk, Fran Jacobs, John Schuerman, Lee Schorr, Charlotte Booth, Kristi Nelson, Susan Kelly, Frank Farrow, and Susan Notkin. These comments, as indeed many of their prior contributions, have had a seminal effect on my thinking about family preservation services over the years. Clark Peters and other Chapin Hall staff deserve special thanks for creating the conditions necessary to produce a lively and productive discussion. As always, Harold Richman, Executive Director of Chapin Hall, and Hermon Dunlap, Smith Professor at the School of Social Service Administration of the University of Chicago, as seminar convenor combined perfectly the skills of gracious host and incisive critic. We in the child welfare field are in his debt for continually raising the level of discourse in our field. In the end, as it should be, the thoughts and opinions in the following paper are wholly my own
Support Networks of Primary Caregivers Receiving Family Preservation Services: An Exploratory Study
Copyright 1994 Families International, Inc.The authors describe network characteristics and support resources from a clinical sample of 40
families. Data were obtained by family workers during the first two weeks of intervention. Case vignettes illustrate
the multiple uses to which this information was put. Implications for future research and practice are discussed
Increasing subsequences and the hard-to-soft edge transition in matrix ensembles
Our interest is in the cumulative probabilities Pr(L(t) \le l) for the
maximum length of increasing subsequences in Poissonized ensembles of random
permutations, random fixed point free involutions and reversed random fixed
point free involutions. It is shown that these probabilities are equal to the
hard edge gap probability for matrix ensembles with unitary, orthogonal and
symplectic symmetry respectively. The gap probabilities can be written as a sum
over correlations for certain determinantal point processes. From these
expressions a proof can be given that the limiting form of Pr(L(t) \le l) in
the three cases is equal to the soft edge gap probability for matrix ensembles
with unitary, orthogonal and symplectic symmetry respectively, thereby
reclaiming theorems due to Baik-Deift-Johansson and Baik-Rains.Comment: LaTeX, 19 page
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Wheat acreage response to changes in prices and government programs in Oregon and Washington
Published April 1980. Facts and recommendations in this publication may no longer be valid. Please look for up-to-date information in the OSU Extension Catalog: http://extension.oregonstate.edu/catalo
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The constancy of the U.S. wheat acreage supply elasticity
Published May 1979. Facts and recommendations in this publication may no longer be valid. Please look for up-to-date information in the OSU Extension Catalog: http://extension.oregonstate.edu/catalo
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Conserved community structure and simultaneous divergence events in the fig wasps associated with Ficus benjamina in Australia and China
Localised patterns of species diversity can be influenced by many factors, including regional species pools, biogeographic features and interspecific interactions. Despite recognition of these issues, we still know surprisingly little about how invertebrate biodiversity is structured across geographic scales. In particular, there have been few studies of how insect communities vary geographically while using the same plant host. We compared the composition (species, genera) and functional structure (guilds) of the chalcid wasp communities associated with the widespread fig tree, Ficus benjamina, towards the northern (Hainan province, China) and southern (Queensland, Australia) edges of its natural range. Sequence data were generated for nuclear and mtDNA markers and used to delimit species, and Bayesian divergence analyses were used to test patterns of community cohesion through evolutionary time. Both communities host at least 14 fig wasp species, but no species are shared across continents. Community composition is similar at the genus level, with six genera shared although some differ in species diversity between China and Australia; a further three genera occur in only China or Australia. Community functional structure remains very similar in terms of numbers of species in each ecological guild despite community composition differing a little (genera) or a lot (species), depending on taxonomic level. Bayesian clustering analyses favour a single community divergence event across continents over multiple events for different ecological guilds. Molecular dating estimates of lineage splits between nearest inter-continental species pairs are broadly consistent with a scenario of synchronous community divergence from a shared "ancestral community". Fig wasp community structure and genus-level composition are largely conserved in a wide geographic comparison between China and Australia. Moreover, dating analyses suggest that the functional community structure has remained stable for long periods during historic range expansions. This suggests that ecological interactions between species may play a persistent role in shaping these communities, in contrast to findings in some comparable temperate systems
'Another World is Possible': A Study of Participants at Australian Alter-Globalisation Social Forums
The past decade has seen the emergence of a mass 'alter-globalisation' movement in many regions of the world. One element in this movement has been the World Social Forum and its continental, regional, national and local spin-offs. In the first half of this article, I provide a critical analysis of the social forum experience, particularly the World Social Forum, and outline both those aspects of the experience that are commonly agreed as successes as well as those that are frequently held to be their failings or limitations. In the second half of the article, I report on a survey of the participants at two Australian social forums in 2004 which details their backgrounds, motivations, attitudes, experience, and ambitions. Comparison is made with their closest parallels - the activists from the new social movements of the 1970s and 1980s previously examined by Offe, Touraine, Melucci and others
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