This article adopts a reflexive stance as the authors look back on their doctoral research projects; the first author exploring young people's relationships with community radio, and the second author studying young people's alcohol consumption practices and experiences, both in the North West of England, UK. The authors discuss the methods of data collection they employed, which enabled young people the opportunity to participate in meaningful ways. However, drawing on snapshots from their PhD theses, the authors question whether decisions made when writing up related to protecting anonymity, (re)presenting speech characteristics, and editing, independently of participants, potentially undid some of the hard work exerted in creating an equitable space for young people's contributions, resultantly perpetuating the regulation of young people and keeping them "in their place". The authors propose some recommendations for facilitating the inclusion of young people in the writing up of participatory research.
Mortgage interest tax relief is unjustified, say Professor Roy Wilkinson, of the Sheffield University School of Management, and Margaret Wilkinson. They argue that it should be phased out.
Criticisms of mortgage tax relief have come from several quarters in recent years but they have been rejected by successive governments. We present here estimates of the distribution of this subsidy to owner-occupation and show, contrary to the claims of the Housing Consultative Document (1977), that it has some tendency to be regressive. The justification for continuing this policy, including that advanced in the Green Paper, is then critically examined in light of an economic analysis of effects. It is concluded that the gradual withdrawal of the subsidy would increase equity and efficiency in housing policy.
Cover -- Advance praise for Treaty Justice: The Northwest Tribes, the Boldt Decision, and the Recognition of Fishing Rights -- About the Author -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Preface -- 1. Fury on the Puyallup River: The police "were all up on the bridge, with rifles, and we could see their rifles kicking, and you could feel the bullets going by -- there was nowhere you could go. -- 2. The Salmon People: "Those Fraser River salmon are like the blood in your veins. It's part of you. -- 3. Natives and Europeans Collide: "In this bottle I hold the smallpox safely corked up -- I have but to draw the cork and let loose the pestilence to sweep man, woman, and child from the face of the earth. -- 4. Young Man in a Hurry: "It is almost impossible to do anything without extinguishing [Indian] title and placing them on reservations where they can be cared for and attended to. -- 5. Treaty Time: "This paper secures your fish. -- 6. The Long Suppression: "All the Indian there is in the race should be dead. Kill the Indian and save the man. -- 7. The Tribes Come Forward: "We better win this one or there won't be another one. -- 8. The Buildup to the Boldt Decision: "Tribal fishermen were 'in dire need of a case to end all cases.' -- 9. The Trial: "Today the Indian fishing right is very much alive, but it is in chains, and we ask this Court to emancipate those fishing rights. . . ." -- 10. The Boldt Decision: "That judge, he made a decision, he interpreted the treaty, and he gave us a tool to help save the salmon. -- 11. Rebellion: "It was like a city out there. -- 12. The Supreme Court Acts: "Except for some desegregation cases, the District Court has faced the most concerted public and private efforts to frustrate a decree of a federal court ever witnessed in this century.
Zugriffsoptionen:
Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
Introduces a way to study ecosystems that is resonant with current thinking in the fields of earth system science, geobiology, and planetology, providing an alternative process-based approach and proposing a truly planetary view of ecological science.
Zugriffsoptionen:
Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext: