865 resultados para Hill, David B. (David Bennett), 1843-1910.


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herausgegeben von Dr. K. Kohler

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We are delighted to have the opportunity to talk with Tony about how his work touches on issues of imitation and contagion—a loaded term unpacked within his 2013 book.

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David Harvey es uno de los investigadores de la ciudad capitalista más renombrados de la actualidad. Geógrafo de formación, Harvey ha desarrollado el grueso de su carrera profesional en Estados Unidos, donde actualmente enseña Geografía y Estudios Urbanos en City University of New York tras haber sido durante más de treinta años profesor en la Johns Hopkins University de Baltimore. El principal e indiscutido mérito de la obra de Harvey reside en su fructífera fusión de geografía y marxismo con la que ha logrado ampliar, profundizar y enriquecer al mismo tiempo ambas disciplinas. En los últimos tiempos su atención se ha centrado en el estudio espacial de las nuevas formas de imperialismo.

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Este presente trabalho pretende estabelecer uma crítica as apropriações que o geógrafo inglês David Harvey faz da sociobiologia. Para tanto, opta-se por uma análise comparativa entre as propostas apresentadas pelo geógrafo e as resoluções apontadas por Marx sobre as especificidades do ser social. Em seu livro Espaço de Esperança (2004), Harvey expressa a importância de produção de uma base epistemológica que concilie o físico com o social, recorrendo a sociobiologia, de Edward Wilson, como modelo, muito controverso, para conceber uma “ciência única”. Para balizar os fundamentos e pressupostos de sua análise, Harvey estabelece um dialogo entre Wilson e Marx com a finalidade de demonstrar certos traços de evolucionismo no filosofo alemão. Nesse intuito, Harvey recai numa certa naturalização de relações, especificamente, sociais, obnubilando o salto ontológico entre o ser orgânico, da natureza, e o ser social. O geógrafo aposta, portanto, no caminho reverso do de Marx, que pretende demonstrar, ao longo de toda sua extensa obra, as especificidades do humano e do modo de produção e reprodução capitalista.

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Este presente trabalho pretende estabelecer uma crítica as apropriações que o geógrafo inglês David Harvey faz da sociobiologia. Para tanto, opta-se por uma análise comparativa entre as propostas apresentadas pelo geógrafo e as resoluções apontadas por Marx sobre as especificidades do ser social. Em seu livro Espaço de Esperança (2004), Harvey expressa a importância de produção de uma base epistemológica que concilie o físico com o social, recorrendo a sociobiologia, de Edward Wilson, como modelo, muito controverso, para conceber uma “ciência única”. Para balizar os fundamentos e pressupostos de sua análise, Harvey estabelece um dialogo entre Wilson e Marx com a finalidade de demonstrar certos traços de evolucionismo no filosofo alemão. Nesse intuito, Harvey recai numa certa naturalização de relações, especificamente, sociais, obnubilando o salto ontológico entre o ser orgânico, da natureza, e o ser social. O geógrafo aposta, portanto, no caminho reverso do de Marx, que pretende demonstrar, ao longo de toda sua extensa obra, as especificidades do humano e do modo de produção e reprodução capitalista.

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Competency in language and literacy are central to contemporary debates about education in Anglophone nations around the world. This paper suggests that such debates are informing not just educational policy but children’s literature itself as can be seen in Almond and McKean’s The Savage. This hybrid text combines prose and graphic narrative and narration in order to tell the story of Blue, a young British boy negotiating his identity in the aftermath of his father's death. While foregrounding a narrative of ideal masculinity, The Savage enacts and privileges a formal and thematic ideal of literacy as index of individual agency and development. Almond and McKean produce a politicised understanding of language and literacy that simultaneously positions The Savage in a textual tradition of socio-culturally disenfranchised youth, and intervenes in that tradition to (perhaps ironically) affirm the very conditions previously critiqued by that very tradition. Where earlier authors such as Barry Hines sought to challenge normative accounts of language and literacy in order to indict educational policy and praxes, Almond and McKean work to naturalise the very logics of education and agency by which their protagonist has been disenfranchised. In doing so, The Savage exemplifies current approaches to education which claim to value social and cultural diversity while imposing national standardised testing predicated on assumptions about the legitimacy of uniform standards and definitions of literacy.

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Teaching The Global Dimension (2007) is intended for primary and secondary teachers, pre-service teachers and educators interested in fostering global concerns in the education system. It aims at linking theory and practice and is structured as follows. Part 1, the global dimension, proposes an educational framework for understanding global concerns. Individual chapters in this section deal with some educational responses to global issues and the ways in which young people might become, in Hick’s terms, more “world-minded”. In the first two chapters, Hicks presents first, some educational responses to global issues that have emerged in recent decades, and second, an outline of the evolution of global education as a specific field. As with all the chapters in this book, most of the examples are drawn from the United Kingdom. Young people’s concerns, student teachers’ views and the teaching of controversial issues, comprise the other chapters in this section. Taken collectively, the chapters in Part 2 articulate the conceptual framework for developing, teaching and evaluating a global dimension across the curriculum. Individual chapters in this section, written by a range of authors, explore eight key concepts considered necessary to underpin appropriate learning experiences in the classroom. These are conflict, social justice, values and perceptions, sustainability, interdependence, human rights, diversity and citizenship. These chapters are engaging and well structured. Their common format consists of a succinct introduction, reference to positive action for change, and examples of recent effective classroom practice. Two chapters comprise the final section of this book and suggest different ways in which the global dimension can be achieved in the primary and the secondary classroom.

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David Held is the Graham Wallace Chair in Political Science, and co-director of LSE Global Governance, at the London School of Economics. He is the author of many works, such as Cosmopolitanism: Ideals and Realities (2010); The Cosmopolitanism Reader (2010), with Garrett Brown; Globalisation/AntiGlobalisation (2007), Models of Democracy (2006), Global Covenant (2004) and Global Transformations: Politics, Economics and Culture (1999). Professor Held is also the co-founder, alongside Lord Professor Anthony Giddens, of Polity Press. Professor Held is widely known for his work concerning cosmopolitan theory, democracy, and social, political and economic global improvement. His Global Policy Journal endeavours to marry academic developments with practitioner realities, and contributes to the understanding and improvement of our governing systems.

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For almost a half century David F. Treafust has been an exemplary science educator who has contributed through his dedication and commitments to students, curriculum development and collaboration with teachers, and cutting edge research in science education that has impacted the field globally, nationally and locally. A hallmark of his outstanding career is his collaborative style that inspires others to produce their best work.

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David Almond and Dave McKean's The Savage is a hybrid prose and graphic novel which tells the story of one young man’s maturation through literacy. The protagonist learns to deal with the death of his father and his own 'savage' self by writing a graphic novel. This article reads The Savage in the context of earlier, 'Northern' literacy narrative - particularly Tony Harrison's poem "Them & [uz]" and Barry Hines' Kes — through the discourse of neoliberalism and the notion of the reluctant boy reader. It is suggested that Almond and McKean are influenced by currently dominant ideologies of gender and literacy.

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Two representations have dominated public perceptions of the largest living marsupial carnivore, the Tasmanian devil. One is the voracious, hurricane-like innocent savage Taz of Looney Tunes cartoon fame. The other, familiar in nineteenth- and twentieth-century rural Tasmania, is the ferocious predator and scavenger that wantonly kills livestock — and perhaps even people, should they become immobilized in the wilderness at night. Devils can take prey nearly three times their size and eat more than a third of their body weight in a sitting. Even so, it is hard to imagine how this species, being only slightly larger than a fox terrier, could be so maligned in name and image...

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This article discusses David M. Thomas' 2012 exhibition at Boxcopy. Thomas' exhibition conflates the space of the studio with that of the gallery. In doing so, he draws out complex relationships between production and presentation, subjectivity and sociality. This article focuses on these aspects of Thomas' creative exploration of identity and its mutability through art making.

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THE UVI working group acknowledges the contribution of Vitamin D to bone health as stated in our paper. However, we concluded that an optimal level of Vitamin D for humans has not yet been established with any certainty...

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An updated version, this excellent text is a timely addition to the library of any nurse researching in oncology or other settings where individuals’ quality of life must be understood. Health-related quality of life should be a central aspect of studies concerned with health and illness. Indeed, considerable evidence has recently emerged in oncology and other research settings that selfreported quality of life is of great prognostic significance and may be the most reliable predictor of subsequent morbidity and mortality. From a nursing perspective, it is also gratifying to note that novel therapy and other oncology studies increasingly recognize the importance of understanding patients’ subjective experiences of an intervention over time and to ascertain whether patients perceive that a new intervention makes a difference to their quality of life and treatment outcomes. Measurements of quality of life are now routine in clinical trials of chemotherapy drugs and are often considered the prime outcome of interest in the cost/benefit analyses of these treatments. The authors have extensive experience in qualityof- life assessment in cancer clinical trials, where most of the pioneering work into quality of life has been conducted. That said, many of the health-related qualityof- life issues discussed are common to many illnesses, and researchers outside of cancer should find the book equally helpful.