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In: Routledge advances in sociology
This book focuses on twentieth-century Australian leprosaria to explore the lives of indigenous patients and the Catholic women missionaries who nursed them. Distinguished from previous historical studies of leprosy, the book examines the care and management of the incarcerated, enabling a broader understanding of their experience, beyond a singular trope of banishment, oppression and death. From the 1930s until the 1980s, respective governments appointed the trained sisters to four leprosaria across remote northern Australia, where almost two thousand people had been removed from their homes and detained under law for years - sometimes decades. The book traces the sisters' holistic nursing from early efforts of amelioration and palliation to their part in the successful treatment of leprosy after World War II. It reveals the ways the sisters stepped out of their assigned roles and attempted to shape the institutions as places of health and hygiene, of European culture and education, and of Christianity. Making use of accounts from patients, doctors; bureaucrats; missionary men; and Indigenous families and communities, the book offers fresh perspectives on two important strands of history. First, its attention to the day-to-day work of the Australian sisters helps to demystify leprosy healthcare by female missionaries, generally. Secondly, with the sisters specifically caring for Indigenous people, this book exposes the institutional practices and goals specific to race relations of both the Australian government and Catholic missionaries. An important and timely read for anyone interested in Indigenous history, medical history and the connections between race, religion and healthcare, this book contextualizes the twentieth-century leprosy epidemic within Australia's broader colonial history
In: Routledge revivals
In: Routledge Revivals Ser.
First published in 1966, Local Government in Crisis presents a comprehensive overview of the challenges and limitations of the local government in Britain. William A. Robson discusses major themes like loss of municipal functions and public utilities; transfer of powers from county districts to county councils; increased central control and dependence on central finance; attitude of local authorities to municipal reforms; the Local Government Act, 1958; and work of the Local Government Commission, to showcase the demand for far reaching substantial changes in a) the structure and finance of local government, b) the relations of local authorities with central departments and c) the power entrusted to local councils. This book is an essential read for scholars and researchersof public administration, political science, and public policy.
Tramps, lazy, cheaters. Expressions like these were widely used by several masters in view of the multiple forms of transgressions committed by slaves. This type of (dis) qualification gained an even stronger contour in properties controlled by religious orders, which tried to impose moralizing measures on the enslaved population. In this book, the reader will come across a peculiar form of management, highly centralized and commanded by one of the most important religious corporations in Brazil: the Order of Saint Benedict. The Institutional Paternalism built by this institution throughout the 18th and 19th centuries was able to stimulate, among the enslaved, the yearning for freedom and autonomy, 'prizes' granted only to those who fit the Benedictines' moral expectation, based on obedience, discipline and punishment. The "incorrigible" should be sold while the "meek" would be rewarded. The monks then became large slaveholders, recognized nationally as great managers. However behind this success, they had to learn to deal with the stubborn resistance of those who refused to peacefully surrender their bodies and minds, resulting in negotiations and concessions that caused disturbances, moments of instability and internal disputes.
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Note on Transliteration -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 Palestinian Christian Elites from the Late Ottoman Era to the British Mandate -- Chapter 2 Reinventing the Millet System: British Imperial Policy and the Making of Communal Politics -- Chapter 3 The Arab Orthodox Movement -- Chapter 4 Appropriating Sectarianism: The Brief Emergence of Pan- Christian Communalism, 1929–1936 -- Chapter 5 Palestinian Arab Episcopalians under Mandate -- Epilogue: The Consequences of Sectarianism -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index
In: Queer singularities: LGBTQ histories, cultures, and identities in education
Part 1: Remembering -- Memory -- Beyond recognition -- Fishing for difference -- Part II: Recognizing -- Resistance and motivated forgetting -- Collectivity -- Writing about painful topics -- Part II: Revising -- Truth -- Revision -- Feedback -- Part IV: Representing -- Show. Don't tell -- Modes of representation -- The ethics of working through.
In: A history of the Royal Navy series
In: Zones of Violence Ser.
Laura Robson examines the interactions between international and regional political economies of oil and water, and the increasingly explicit colonial and postcolonial politics of ethno-national identity centered around the question of Palestine, arguing that the Middle East's emergence as a 'zone of violence' only developed over the past century.
In: Queer Singularities Takes an Intersectional Approach to Exploring How Normative and Non-Normative Experiences of Gender, Race, Class and Sexuality Are Taught and Learned Within Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgendered, and Queer Histories, Cultures and Ident
In: Heritage
Although John Stuart Mill is generally and properly known as a philosopher and political economist, his writings actually cover a wide variety of subjects. In this book Professor Robson brings together the most important strands of Mill's thought in an attempt to show that it contains a basic unity of approach, at the heart of which is his ethical system. Mill's ethical position depends on his understanding of the relation between practice and theory, and reflects his own experience, especially his "metal crisis," his appreciation of poetry, and his friendship with Harriet Taylor (who later became his wife). The study brings out the importance of the three phases in Mill's life: his early period of adherence to the ideas of James Mill and Bentham; his period of assimilation of the influences of Coleridge, Carlyle, Comte, and de Toequeville; and finally his period of mature fame, when he published his System of Logic, Principles of Political Government, Utilitarianism, and other works still central in the British liberal tradition and still used as university texts. Mill's eminence makes his thought important to anyone interested in recent political, social, economic, and philosophical trends; and his life, as his Autobiography demonstrates, has its own fascination for the general reader as well as for the student of the nineteenth century
Ancient Knowledge Networks is a book about how knowledge travels, in minds and bodies as well as in writings. It explores the forms knowledge takes and the meanings it accrues, and how these meanings are shaped by the peoples who use it.
Addressing the relationships between political power, family ties, religious commitments and literate scholarship in the ancient Middle East of the first millennium BC, Eleanor Robson focuses on two regions where cuneiform script was the predominant writing medium: Assyria in the north of modern-day Syria and Iraq, and Babylonia to the south of modern-day Baghdad. She investigates how networks of knowledge enabled cuneiform intellectual culture to endure and adapt over the course of five world empires until its eventual demise in the mid-first century BC. In doing so, she also studies Assyriological and historical method, both now and over the past two centuries, asking how the field has shaped and been shaped by the academic concerns and fashions of the day. Above all, Ancient Knowledge Networks is an experiment in writing about 'Mesopotamian science', as it has often been known, using geographical and social approaches to bring new insights into the intellectual history of the world's first empires.
In: Routledge Library Editions: Urban Studies
"Cover page" -- "Halftitle page" -- "Title page" -- "Copyright page" -- "Title page" -- "Copyright page" -- "Contents" -- "Introduction" -- "1 The Enduring City: a Perspective on Decline" -- "2 Urban Policy: Art not Science?" -- "3 Glasgow: Policy for the Post-industrial City" -- "4 High Technology Industry, Regional Development and Defence Manufacturing: a Case Study in the UK Sunbelt" -- "5 Advanced Telecommunications and Regional Economic Development" -- "6 Housing Reinvestment and Neighbourhood Revitalisation: Economic Perspectives" -- "7 The Social Consequences of Housing Design" -- "8 Land Prices and Land Availability in Inner City Redevelopment" -- "9 The Development Plan: Vision or Vacuum?" -- "10 Counter-urbanisation and the Rural Periphery: Some Evidence from North Devon" -- "11 The Policy Framework" -- "Contributors