Recent progress in assessing the readiness and sustainability of combat forces
In: [Report] R-3475-AF
77 results
Sort by:
In: [Report] R-3475-AF
In: [Report] R-3113/1-AF
In: Rand Library collection
In: Journal of race, ethnicity and politics: JREP, Volume 3, Issue 2, p. 454-456
ISSN: 2056-6085
In: University of Pennsylvania Law Review, Forthcoming
SSRN
In: Elon University Law Legal Studies Research Paper 2013-01
SSRN
Working paper
In: American University Law Review, Forthcoming
SSRN
In: Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy, Forthcoming
SSRN
In: Elon University Law Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2010-11
SSRN
In: American behavioral scientist: ABS, Volume 48, Issue 2, p. 165-188
ISSN: 1552-3381
Video Intervention/Prevention Assessment (VIA) builds on the innate comfort that children and adolescents have with audiovisual media to give them control of an important information stream about their own health and well-being. Clinicians provide video camcorders to young people who have chronic medical conditions and ask them to teach the clinicians about their experiences and needs by making visual illness narratives. Their visual narratives are unexpected, insightful, and extremely useful for developing a reality-based clinician-patient partnership in health. VIA visual narratives function as important research, education, policy-making, and advocacy tools to deliver more realistic, more humane, and ultimately more effective medical care. Most important, by providing key information about the context in which they live with illness, young patients can attain a position of equal authority in the inherently unbalanced clinician-patient power differential.
In: American behavioral scientist: ABS, Volume 48, Issue 2, p. 165-188
ISSN: 0002-7642
In: Narrative inquiry: a forum for theoretical, empirical, and methodological work on narrative, Volume 12, Issue 2, p. 405-412
ISSN: 1569-9935
In: Princeton Legacy Library
Do federal, state, and local governments differ in their responsiveness to the needs of the poorest citizens? Are policy outcomes different when federal officials have greater influence regarding the use of federal program funds? To answer such questions, Michael Rich examines to what extent benefits of federal programs actually reach needy people, focusing on the relationship between federal decision-making systems and the distributional impacts of public policies. His extensive analysis of the Community Development Block Grant Program (CDBG), the principal federal program for aiding cities
In: Princeton Legacy Library
Do federal, state, and local governments differ in their responsiveness to the needs of the poorest citizens? Are policy outcomes different when federal officials have greater influence regarding the use of federal program funds? To answer such questions, Michael Rich examines to what extent benefits of federal programs actually reach needy people, focusing on the relationship between federal decision-making systems and the distributional impacts of public policies. His extensive analysis of the Community Development Block Grant Program (CDBG), the principal federal program for aiding citie.
In: A Rand note. The Rand Corporation N-1797-AF