On the Republic juxtaposes the fall of the Roman Republic with the contemporary political landscape of the United States: a republic in disarray, violence and corruption thwarting the will of the people, military misadventures abroad, and rampant economic inequality diminishing a shared sense of the common good.
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Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
Introduction -- The Contours of White Supremacy -- "The White Republic Against the World": The Toxic Legacy of John H. Van Evrie -- From "Slavery" to "Servitude": Initial Patterns, 1832 to 1866 -- The Emancipationist Challenge, 1867 to 1883 -- Causes Lost and Found, 1883 to 1919 -- Educating for "Eugenicide" in the 1920s -- Lost Cause Victorious, 1920-1964 -- Renewing the Challenge -- Epilogue.
Service above self -- The "first" service above self candidates -- The "badasses" of the U.S. House of Representatives -- Lt. Colonel Duckworth goes to Washington -- Mother, soldier, conservative : Senator Joni Ernst -- Martha McSally, the "longshot" candidate -- Tulsi Gabbard and the "true cost of war" -- Conclusion: digging the well.
Intro -- Contents -- About the Authors -- Part I: Introduction and Background -- Introduction: Community Psychiatry on the Move -- How the Book Is Organized -- Part I: Introduction and Background -- Part II: The Basics: Central Pillars of Community Psychiatry -- Part III: Core Competencies for Community Psychiatrists -- Part IV: Effective and Established Interventions -- Part V: Creating Healthy Communities -- Part VI: Supportive Services for Community Living -- Part VII: Special Populations -- Part VIII: The Development and Administration of Services -- Part IX: Shaping the Future -- References -- History of Community Psychiatry -- Introduction -- References -- Part II: The Basics: The Pillars of Community Psychiatry -- Recovery and Person-Centered Care: Empowerment, Collaboration, and Integration -- Introduction -- Brief Historical Perspective -- The Elements of Recovery -- The Aims of a Recovery Process -- Change -- Growth -- Autonomy and Resilience -- Purpose and Meaning -- Development of Enabling Qualities -- Acceptance and Responsibility -- Desire and Determination -- Hope and Faith -- Courage, Diligence, and Tolerance -- Integrity, Honesty, and Trust -- Tolerance, Humility, and Forgiveness -- Characteristics of a Mature Recovery -- Resiliency and Recovery -- Universal Aspects of Recovery -- The Value of the Recovery Paradigm -- Developing Person-Centered, Recovery-Oriented Services -- Implementation and System Transformation -- Evidence, Quality, and Recovery-Oriented Services -- References -- Population Health, Prevention, and Community Psychiatry -- Introduction -- Population Mental Health -- Social Determinants of Mental Health -- Mental Illness Prevention -- Mental Health Promotion -- Supporting a Shift Toward Population Health -- Training -- Culture and Identity -- Reimbursement -- Conclusion: Relevance to Community Psychiatry.
Zugriffsoptionen:
Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
The primacy of value -- Law theories through the lens of value -- Self-determination v. efficiency, Buck v. Bell -- Human being v. degraded being, Yo Wick v. Hopkins -- Security of free speech v. wartime national security, Abrams v. United States -- Partial personhood v. property, Dred Scott v. Sandford -- Integration as a means of securing personal liberty for all v. segregation as a means of securing white supremacy and limiting personal freedom, Plessy v. Ferguson -- Liberty over paternalism v. judicious state intervention over exploitative liberty, Lochner v. New York -- The value of interdependence v. value of a private and independent economic sphere, Wickard v. Filburn -- The sacred value of privacy in marriage v. traditionalism, Griswold v. Connecticut -- Malicious free speech v. libel of a government official, New York Times Co. v. Sullivan -- The subjective turn of the Fourteenth Amendment vs. separate but equal, Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka -- Collective safety net v. individualistic self-defense, District of Columbia v. Heller -- The absolute value of the establishment clause of the First Amendment v. value of spiritual heritage, Engel v. Vitale --The value of privacy in the bedroom vs. the value of social stability, Lawrence v. Texas -- Weaponized words v. fruition of conscience in action, Brandenburg v. Ohio -- Invidious discrimination v. the purity of white supremacy, Loving v. Virginia -- Health v liberty, National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius -- Venerated objects v. Freedom of Speech, Texas v. Johnson -- Functional judiciary v. national security, United States v. Nixon -- The First Amendment as a means to secure corporate dominance v. First Amendment as a means to secure democracy, Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission -- Conclusion : one hundred eleven mic drop takeaways, conversation starters & stuff that can startle the stymied into writing creatively.
"The events surrounding September 11 did not look the same to everyone involved. Readers can step back in time and into the shoes of a New York Muslim student, a NYFD firefighter, and a Midwestern student as readers act out scenes that took place in the midst of this historic event. Written with simplified, considerate text to help struggling readers, books in this series are made to build confidence as readers engage and read aloud. Includes a table of contents, glossary, index, author biography, sidebars, and timeline"--