To Tara via Holyhead: The Emergence of Irish Catholic Ethinicity in Nineteenth-Century Christchurch, New Zealand
In: Journal of social history, Band 36, Heft 2, S. 431-458
ISSN: 1527-1897
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In: Journal of social history, Band 36, Heft 2, S. 431-458
ISSN: 1527-1897
Rearming Masculinity explores military masculinity in the Soviet Union after the catastrophe of the Second World War. Soldiering had to be reimagined and resold to the public, which involved writing women out and re-establishing military identity as the premier form of masculinity in Soviet society.
In: Labour: journal of Canadian labour studies = Le travail : revue d'études ouvrières Canadiennes, Band 90, S. 333-335
ISSN: 1911-4842
In: Journal of family history: studies in family, kinship and demography, Band 47, Heft 1, S. 100-104
ISSN: 1552-5473
In: Canadian Slavonic papers: an interdisciplinary journal devoted to Central and Eastern Europe, Band 59, Heft 1-2, S. 172-174
ISSN: 2375-2475
In: Action research, Band 16, Heft 2, S. 207-222
ISSN: 1741-2617
Researchers in the field of Aboriginal health generally have a keen interest in 'participating in change' to address the ongoing injustices experienced by Aboriginal peoples. Perhaps the most promoted methods for this purpose are those described as Indigenous methods and action research. Criteria of authenticity are generally used to assess the quality of research. In this essay, we reflect on how certain basic principles of action research, more notably ontological authenticity and educative authenticity can penetrate the process of knowledge exchange, creating spaces of ontological contamination and transformation. We reflect on the context of sharing 'difficult knowledge', knowledge that is encountered and shared in a post-colonial context of unequal power dynamics. We describe a trilogy of methods used for such knowledge exchange activities with three distinct audiences, and distinct goals. A commonality amongst the three described methods is the 'unfinished' and unorganised nature of what is transmitted, requiring the receptor to actively participate in the differentiation and reorganisation of information in a way that makes sense to him/her.
In: Aspasia: international yearbook of Central, Eastern, and Southeastern European women's and gender history, Band 8, Heft 1
ISSN: 1933-2890
This Article takes a closer look at the "dark and bloody ground" of City of Fircrest v. Jenson from the perspective of a legislative drafter, and discusses several flaws in the Fircrest plurality's approach. First, by focusing on the title of an "original act," the plurality's resurrection of the St. Paul analysis (under which the title of an "act" may be used to determine whether a subsequent "amendatory act" complies with the subject-in-title requirement of Article II, section 19 of the state constitution) conflicts with legislative use and implementation of Article II, section 19. Second, Fircrest and St. Paul thwart the purposes of the subject-in-title rule by undercutting the constitutional requirement of a subject matter declaration. Third, to compound the plurality's error in resurrecting St. Paul, none of the court's opinions fully understood the evolution of the statutes before the court—a review of the statutes' legislative history demonstrates that the plurality relied on thetitle of an "original act" that was not, in fact, within the challenged act's direct legislative "ancestry,"thus revealing the futility of the "original act" analysis.
BASE
In: Columbia journal of transnational law, Band 28, Heft 2, S. 583
ISSN: 0010-1931
In: Public administration: the journal of the Australian regional groups of the Royal Institute of Public Administration, Band 31, Heft 2, S. 123-138
ISSN: 1467-8500
In: Public administration: the journal of the Australian regional groups of the Royal Institute of Public Administration, Band 31, Heft 2, S. 139-147
ISSN: 1467-8500
This intermediate-level undergraduate textbook in environmental economics builds on the microeconomics courses students take in their first year. It intentionally does not survey the whole field or present every possible topic. Instead, there is a clear focus on the theory of environmental policy and its practical applications. Most of the applied parts of the book deal with the economics of environmental policy in the European Union and in the United States. The book combines basic environmental economic analysis, such as the internalization of externalities, with recent developments in this field, including induced technical change and coalition theory. Moreover, topics from daily policy debates such as global warming are put into economic perspective. This is done in an intelligible form for advanced undergraduate students of economics, business administration and related fields. Each part of the book contains a set of exercises and suggested solutions
In the formative years of Ontario's history, the law loomed large, as a profession, a preoccupation of legislators, a subject of debate and controversy, and a force that many citizens found themselves up against. Robert Fraser has drawn from the pages of the Dictionary of Canadian Biography the stories of sixty people who played a key role in the legal history of Upper Canada.Told in a readable style that has been much praised, these profiles contain information that bears the authoritative stamp of the DCB volumes from which they come. They add a valuable personal dimension to Ontario's legal history.
In: Aspasia: international yearbook of Central, Eastern, and Southeastern European women's and gender history, Band 15, Heft 1, S. 61-80
ISSN: 1933-2890
The diaries of Nikolai P. Kamanin, a well-placed official in the early Soviet space program in charge of cosmonaut selection and chaperoning, have been an important source for historians since their publication in the 1990s. This article reevaluates the diary entries from 1961 to 1965, using the framework of gossip. The diaries' salacious tales of infidelity, drinking, and other violations of communist morality provide cultural historians with as much insightful material as the parallel technological entries have done for historians of science and space engineering. The cosmonaut gossip that Kamanin records comprised a mix of knowledge production and moralizing that built and reinforced his self-fashioning among the Soviet elite. Furthermore, reading the diaries (a private text) through the lens of gossip (a public act) helps us see how socialist masculinity was forged in part through the specific hybridized private-public performances required of elite men.
In: From the Nation State to Europe, S. 29-45