THIS PAPER DESCRIBES ONE ACADEMIC ANALYST-PUBLIC AGENCY CLIENT RELATIONSHIP. IN THIS CASE, BECAUSE THE CLIENT LACKED INTEREST IN UTILIZING THE ANALYST'S FINDINGS, THE ANALYSIS BECAME A SYMBOLIC PROCESS IN WHICH "TAKING THE ISSUE SERIOUSLY" WAS, FOR THE ANALYST, AN END IN ITSELF.
LOCAL COMMUNITIES IN RECENT YEARS HAVE INCREASINGLY SOUGHT TO CURB POPULATION GROWTH THROUGH NEW ZONING TECHNIQUES. THESE EFFORTS HAVE SPARKED CHALLENGES TO THE LEGAL PERMISSIBILITY F GROWTH REGULATION. THIS ESSAY ASSES THE LEGALLY BASED OBJECTIONS AND SUGGESTS THE COURTS ARE BEST EQUIPPED TO REVIEW THE PROCESS BY WHICH SUCH SCHEMES ARE ADOPTED BUT NOT THEIR SUBSTANCE.
Introduction : the new U -- This little student went to market -- Nietzsche's niche : the University of Chicago -- Benjamin Rush's "brat" : Dickinson College -- Star wars : New York University -- The dead hand of precedent : New York Law School -- Kafka was an optimist : the University of Southern California and the University of Michigan -- Mr. Jefferson's "private" college : Darden Graduate School of Business Administration, University of Virginia -- Rebel alliance : classics departments in the Associated Colleges of the South -- The market in ideas : Columbia University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology -- The British are coming, and going : Open University -- A good deal of collaboration : the University of California, Berkeley -- The information technology gold rush : IT certification courses in Silicon Valley -- They're all business : DeVry University -- Conclusion : the corporation of learning
Compares the political response of hemophiliacs & homosexuals to acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). A political movement has arisen among hemophiliacs who claim that drug companies, doctors, & the government failed to adequately warn them that certain medical treatments carried a risk of AIDS acquisition. This movement has demanded legal justice & financial compensation for this failure. It is argued that the response of hemophiliacs to AIDS has encouraged the separation of AIDS victims into "deserving" & "undeserving" groups: those who acquired AIDS through "innocent" means, eg, blood transfusions & other medical work, were seen as deserving of compensation & assistance, while those who acquired AIDS through "immoral" means, eg, gay people & intravenous drug users, were not deserving. It is concluded that this split of AIDS sufferers has led to a divisive identity politics that places the two groups at odds. M. Nichols-Wagner