2,224 research outputs found
[Review of] H. Henrietta Stockel. Women of the Apache Nation: Voices of Truth
At a time when books about Native American women need to provide the reader with unromanticized images of strong women in their own right, Stockel’s book, Women of the Apache Nation, succeeds only partially. The sixty-two page historical introduction and the two shorter introductions to the Mescalero (New Mexico) and Fort Sill (Oklahoma) Apache, while important to situating the women’s narratives that follow, are flawed by inaccuracies, overly dependent on secondary sources, and replete with unnecessary references to historical male figures and male relatives. Stockel, for example, incorrectly uses the term ”Western pache” which does not include Mescalero or Fort Sill (cf. Keith Basso, “Western Apache,” in Handbook of North American Indians. Vol 10. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, 1983, 462-488). The photos enhance the narrative; a map would have been helpful. The writing is personal, but for this reviewer, overly sentimental
Managing chronic widespread pain in primary care : a qualitative study of patient perspectives and implications for treatment delivery
Funding The MUSICIAN trial was supported by an award from Arthritis Research UK, Chesterfield, UK. Grant number: 17292. The funding body approved the design of the study. They played no role in the collection, analysis, and interpretation of data or the writing of the manuscript.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
[Review of] Bunny McBride. Women of the Dawn
McBride\u27s book explores the disastrous effects of colonization on four courageous and idiosyncratic American Indian women of the Wabanaki tribes of the North Atlantic coast that include Abenaki, Maliseet, Mi\u27kmaq, Passamaquoddy, and Penobscot. The women considered are unrelated except by place, circumstance, and first name -- all are named Molly. Their brief biographies span four centuries
Alien Registration- Mcbeth, Jonathan (Millinocket, Penobscot County)
https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/8013/thumbnail.jp
Native American Oral History and Cultural Interpretation in Rocky Mountain National Park
From the document: The original design of this project was as an oral history. Indeed, in my proposal I stated that “Native Americans who retain the stories, recollections, and remembered traditions of their individual tribes and cultures are rapidly disappearing.” And while I thought I might discover existing memories or stories about the region, it was clear from the beginning that recollections specific to locales within the Park and surrounding area did not exist. Indigenous peoples were separated from these homelands by the 1870s and the last recorded date of hunting and/or camping in and around the Park area was 1875
Twenty-Second Annual Student-Faculty Symposium of Contemporary Music
This is the program for the twenty-second annual student-faculty symposium of contemporary music held on April 15, 1986, in the Mabee Fine Arts Center Recital Hall. Various students and faculty performed original pieces composed for the recital
A Study of the Molecular Basis of Microvariants at the FGA and D21S11 Loci Used in Forensic DNA Testing
Microvariant alleles, defined as alleles that contain an incomplete repeat unit, often complicate the process of DNA analysis. Understanding the molecular basis of microvariants would help to catalogue results and improve upon the analytical process involved in DNA testing. The first step is to determine the sequence/cause of a microvariant. This was done by sequencing samples that were determined to have a microvariant at the FGA or D21S11 loci. The results indicate that a .2 microvariant at the D21S11 locus is caused by a -TA- dinucleotide partial repeat before the last full TCTA repeat. The .2 microvariant at the FGA locus is caused by a -TT- dinucleotide partial repeat after the fifth full repeat and before the variable CTTT repeat motif. There are several possibilities for the reason the .2 microvariants are all the same at a locus, each of which carry implications on the forensic community. The first possibility is that the microvariants are identical by descent, which means that the microvariant is an old allele that has been passed down through the generations. The second possibility is that the microvariants are identical by state, which would mean that there is a mechanism selecting for these microvariants. Future research studying the flanking regions of these microvariants is proposed to determine which of these possibilities is the actual cause and to learn more about the molecular basis of microvariants
Crushed by an Anvil: A Case Study on Responsibility for Human Rights in the Extractive Sector
In October 2004, Congolese troops conducted violent reprisals for a minor
uprising in the small town of Kilwa, engaging in summary executions,
rape, torture, pillaging, and other human rights atrocities. Allegations
that a multinational corporation, Anvil Mining, provided logistical
assistance for the military\u27s actions led to calls for the company and its
employees to face legal responsibility. This article examines the
deployment of the multitude of legal and quasi-legal accountability
mechanisms available in the Anvil case, including civil and criminal
avenues in the home and host states, the application of international
criminal law and the use of international soft law mechanisms. In
examining the way those avenues were used in the Anvil case, this article
attempts to illustrate the practical relationship between the multiple
avenues theoretically available for imposing human rights accountability
on multinational corporations, including a consideration of non-legal
factors affecting decisions on whether and how to assert jurisdiction
within a given avenue. It concludes that the incoherence of a fragmented,
ad hoc system, and the central importance of political will in invoking a
given avenue, present serious problems for the effective enforcement of
human rights responsibility for multinational corporations
- …