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Significance Injury: A Military-Induced Injury of Meaning
In: Military behavioral health, Band 6, Heft 4, S. 334-337
ISSN: 2163-5803
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Drug Injury Advertising
In: Yale Journal of Health Policy, Law, and Ethics, Forthcoming
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Nonsuicidal Self-Injury
In: Crisis: the journal of crisis intervention and suicide prevention, Band 33, Heft 3, S. 182-182
ISSN: 2151-2396
Injury and Injustice
In: Annual Review of Law and Social Science, Band 16, S. 241-256
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Exploring Moral Injury
In: Military behavioral health, Band 6, Heft 2, S. 119-120
ISSN: 2163-5803
Injury and Measurement
In: Social analysis: journal of cultural and social practice, Band 61, Heft 4
ISSN: 1558-5727
An Injury to One
In: Labor: studies in working-class history of the Americas, Band 2, Heft 1, S. 143-144
ISSN: 1558-1454
Self-Injury in Cyberworld
In: Contexts / American Sociological Association: understanding people in their social worlds, Band 11, Heft 1, S. 59-61
ISSN: 1537-6052
Cyber communities have facilitated new forms of identity and self-regulation for people engaging in self-harm practices. The authors explore the online worlds of self-injurers and how they offer ways for people to develop new kinds of social order.
Injury and Value
In: History of the present: a journal of critical history, Band 14, Heft 1, S. 138-155
ISSN: 2159-9793
Abstract
This essay explores two historical subjects, Catharina, an enslaved woman living and working in eighteenth-century New Orleans, and Ruth, a free field laborer in post-emancipation Barbados. Through a careful reading of their different but overlapping legal petitions against the planters who worked to control their labor, this essay seeks to distill a shared battle around Black mothering and to reconsider what it means to mother in the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Atlantic world, respectively. In so doing, this essay contributes to scholarship that analyzes reproductive racial slavery's afterlife, particularly how slavery's matrilineal principle shaped the meaning of Black motherhood in bondage and in freedom. Exploring violent confrontations with empire in moments of profound change, the stories of Catharina and Ruth each offer new definitions of labor and value and hint at how Black women theorized a world beyond racial capitalism.
Constitutional Injury and Tangibility
In: 59 WM. & MARY L. REV. 2285 (2018)
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Who is More Injury‐Prone? Prediction and Assessment of Injury Risk
In: Decision sciences, Band 50, Heft 2, S. 374-409
ISSN: 1540-5915
ABSTRACTInjuries are the primary determinant of an individual's mobility, which affect not just their workplace productivity in intensive environments such as manufacturing, but also their decision‐making ability and quality of life. Managers typically assign workers to projects or tasks without having knowledge about their functional capabilities or current state of injury risk as injuries remain highly underreported at workplaces for fear of reprisal and other reasons. Therefore, high‐quality research on injury prevention is nearly nonexistent. Procedures that we use in this study for developing a prediction model for identification of college football players at an elevated injury risk could also be used to quantify injury risk in various occupational settings. Using a number of measurements and models, we arrive at an estimate of an individual's injury likelihood. Our measures include ratings of movement efficiency through physical performance tests, acceleration using Internet of Things (IoT) devices, functional role classifications, and recorded exposures to high‐risk conditions. Findings prescribe several approaches and decision rules for prediction of injury risk and suggest that training programs need to consider an individual's injury risk rather than offer a 'one‐size‐fits‐all' approach. The analytics models derived from a combination of injury risk screening and surveillance data can be used for making decisions about targeting employee‐centric risk‐reduction interventions, improved matching of tasks to individuals, or deciding job rotation for improved performance, all while enhancing the quality of life of individuals and reducing the escalating costs of work‐related injuries borne by employers. These models can also be developed for smartphones.
Book: An Injury Law Constitution
In: Marshall Shapo, AN INJURY LAW CONSTITUTION, Oxford University Press, 2012
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