3,749 research outputs found

    2010 Anchorage Underage Drinking Survey: A Look at Adult Attitudes, Perceptions, and Norms

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    The Anchorage Underage Drinking Survey (AUDS) was conducted to assess adults’ recent exposure to Communities Mobilizing for Change on Alcohol media campaign about underage drinking, as well as adult attitudes, norms, and perceptions regarding the underage drinking problem in Anchorage. Our interest was in understanding community perceptions regarding the extent of the underage drinking problem, underage access to alcohol through social and retail outlets, consequences of underage drinking, and laws and policies designed to reduce underage drinking and the consequences stemming from it. The survey contained six major sections: (1) underage drinking problem, (2) adult influences on underage drinking, (3) alcohol consumption, (4) responses to underage drinking, (5) public service advertisements, and (6) respondent background information.Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. Grant No. 1U79SP013910-01Index of Tables and Figures / Acknowledgments / Section I: Executive Summary / Section II: Methods / Section III: Community Demographic Data / Section IV: Underage Drinking Problem / Section V: Adult Influences on Underage Drinking / Section VI: Alcohol Consumption / Section VII: Responses to Underage Drinking / Section VIII: Public Service Advertisements / References / Appendix: Community Resident Survey Instrumen

    Youth Alcohol Access, Consumption, and Consequences in Anchorage, Alaska: 2012 Update

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    Updates prior report, Youth Alcohol Access, Consumption, and Consequences in Anchorage, Alaska: Identification of Indicators by Marny Rivera and Jennifer McMullen. Report prepared for the Volunteers of America CMCA Project. Anchorage, AK: Justice Center, University of Alaska Anchorage, 15 Dec 2010. (JC 1010.01). (https://scholarworks.alaska.edu/handle/11122/3760).This report identifies indicators of underage drinking in Anchorage, Alaska, which can be used in assessing changes brought about by strategies designed to reduce underage access to alcohol and consequences associated with underage drinking. Indicators are addressed under the categories of underage access to alcohol, social norms and perceptions associated with underage drinking, alcohol consumption patterns, and consequences of underage drinking. Consequences examined include school-related consequences, risky behavior, and legal consequences of underage drinking. Alcohol abuse by people under 21 years of age requiring substance abuse treatment, health and safety consequences of underage drinking, and economic consequences of underage drinking are also discussed.Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. Grant No. 1U79SP013910-01Acknowledgements / Executive Summary / Introduction / Youth Access to Alcohol / Compliance Checks / Social Norms and Perceptions / Consequences (School-Related Consequences; Risky Behavior and Underage Drinking; Underage Drinking and Driving: Traffic Tickets, Crashes, Injuries and Fatalities; Legal Consequences of Underage Drinking; Alcohol Abuse Requiring Treatment; Health and Safety Consequences of Underage Drinking; Economic Consequences of Underage Drinking) / Data Gap Analysis / References / Appendix - Annotated Bibliography of Survey Source

    Draft Genome Sequences of Antibiotic-Resistant Commensal Escherichia coli

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    Antimicrobial resistance is a significant public health issue. We report here the draft genome sequences of three drug-resistant strains of commensal Escherichia coli isolated from a single healthy college student. Each strain has a distinct genome, but two of the three contain an identical large plasmid with multiple resistance genes

    Ten polymorphic microsatellite primers in the tropical tree caimito, Chrysophyllum cainito (Sapotaceae).

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    UnlabelledPremise of the studyWe developed microsatellite primers for the tropical tree Chrysophyllum cainito (Sapotaceae) to determine the native range of the species, investigate the origin of cultivated populations, and examine the partitioning of genetic diversity in wild and cultivated populations. •Methods and resultsWe developed 10 polymorphic primers from C. cainito genomic DNA libraries enriched for di-, tri-, and tetranucleotide repeat motifs. The loci amplified were polymorphic in samples collected from Jamaica and Panama. The number of alleles per locus ranged from two to 10 and three to 12, while observed heterozygosities ranged from 0.074 to 0.704 and 0.407 to 0.852 in Jamaica and Panama, respectively. •ConclusionsThe microsatellite primers will be useful in future population genetic studies as well as those aimed at understanding the geographic origin(s) of wild and cultivated populations

    Different Names for the Same Thing: Domestic Homicides and Dowry Deaths in the Western Media

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    Domestic violence is a global phenomenon that knows no geographic or cultural bounds. Whether they are shot, poisoned, stabbed, or burned, women across the world are dying at the hands of their male partners. Nevertheless, the Western media\u27s portrayal of dowry deaths in India illustrates American society\u27s failure to, or refusal to, connect dowry deaths to the parallel domestic homicides committed in the United States every day. From a postcolonial feminist standpoint, this Note argues that this disjunction is neither accidental nor inconsequential but rather reinforces the United States\u27 hegemonic self-perception as a society in which women\u27s liberation has been unequivocally achieved. By overemphasizing and sensationalizing the injustices against women in India, the Western media diverts attention from the same injustices against women in the United States. This Note proposes a reframing of the issue by the Western media and American society. To enable the United States\u27 continued progress in the realm of women\u27s rights, American society must abandon the us-them dichotomy; it must accurately place both domestic homicides in the United States and dowry deaths in India within the framework of domestic violence

    Emerald Ash Borer: A Threat to a Valuable Natural Resource

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    Fairbanks Gang Assessment

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    The Justice Center at University of Alaska Anchorage partnered with the Fairbanks Gang Reduction and Intervention Network (GRAIN) to perform a thorough assessment of the gang problem in Fairbanks following the protocol outlined by the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP)’s Comprehensive Gang Model. Law enforcement data show that there are at least 12 active gangs in the Fairbanks North Star Borough, with the percentage of crime reported to law enforcement attributable to gangs (2007-2009) varying from a low of 4.3% in 2007 to a high of 7.2% in 2008. The complete assessment, contained in this report, includes a review of community demographic data, law enforcement data, student and school data, and community perceptions data.Fairbanks Gang Reduction and Intervention Network Grant No. 2007-JV-FX-0331Index of Tables and Figures / Acknowledgements / Section I Fairbanks Gang Assessment: Executive Summary / Section II Fairbanks Gang Assessment: Community Demographic Data / Section III Fairbanks Gang Assessment: Law Enforcement Data / Section IV Fairbanks Gang Assessment: Student and School Data / Section V Fairbanks Gang Assessment: Community Perceptions Data / Section VI Fairbanks Gang Assessment: Community Resources Data / Section VII Fairbanks Gang Assessment Methods / References / Appendix A Community Resident Survey / Appendix B Student Survey / Appendix C Youth Serving and Law Enforcement Agency Survey / Appendix D Gang Member Interview For

    Theatre After the Fall

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    Leadership, demographics and experience in Humans versus Zombies organization

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    This thesis intended to begin filling a large gap in the Humans Versus Zombies community's knowledge: many data gathering efforts focused on the Players' experiences, neglecting the Leaders. This study sought to identify basic trends among leadership in HvZ as an impetus to helping the community understand what makes a leader, and what leaders do in organizations. It also probed certain topics for potential future use as success measures, but refrained establishing any causative relationships. Seventy-four completed surveys were analyzed, containing responses from participants in 23 of the United States and two locations in the United Kingdom. Generally, this study found that HvZ leaders are heterosexual white Christian, Atheist, or Agnostic males capable of fulfilling the time commitments of running HvZ and possessing reasonably upstanding character and social acceptance.Thesis (B.?)Honors Colleg
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