999 resultados para Grady, Henry Woodfin, 1850-1889.
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Part 1 of 3 for Henry County's Transition Partners Resource Directory specific to youth with disabilities transitioning from high school to employment, post-secondary education, or adult services.
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Part 2 of 3 for Henry County's Transition Partners Resource Directory specific to youth with disabilities transitioning from high school to employment, post-secondary education, or adult services.
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Part 3 of 3 for Henry County's Transition Partners Resource Directory specific to youth with disabilities transitioning from high school to employment, post-secondary education, or adult services.
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General information on the Henry County Transition Partners community prototype under Improving Transition Outcomes with Iowa Vocational Rehabilitation Services.
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Henry County's Transition Partners' youth focus group interview invitation.
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Henry County's Transition Partners' focus group invitation specifically for teachers.
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Interview questions used by Henry County Transition Partners during focus groups and individual interviews.
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Este estudo que ora se apresenta tem como finalidade mais ampla dar continuidade ao processo de expansão da pesquisa sobre o fenómeno associativo no Brasil, especialmente no Rio de Janeiro da segunda metade do século XIX. O trabalho analisa, em particular, as associações beneficentes de imigrantes portugueses na corte imperial, tendo como base documental os registros de criação ou reformulação dos estatutos das associações beneficentes de imigrantes criadas na cidade do Rio de Janeiro. A ênfase recaiu no tratamento das associações beneficentes (de ajuda mútua, socorros mútuos), entendidas como manifestações de solidariedades horizontais, características do período de crise dos mecanismos culturais e políticos de dominação senhorial
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This article aims to analyse the reasons for the intensive use of childlabour in the 19th century and its subsequent decline in the first thirdof the 20th century in the context of an economy with a highly flexiblelabour supply like that of Catalonia. During the second half of the 19thcentury,factors relating to family economies, such as numerous familiesand low wages for adults, along with the technologies of the time thatrequired manual labour resources, would appear to explain the intensiveuse of child labour to the detriment of schooling. The technologicalchanges that occurred during the first third of the 20th century, thedemographic transition and adult wage increase (for both men and women)explain the schooling of children up to the age of 15 and theconsequent practical abolition of child labour in that new era ofeconomic modernisation.
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This paper deals whit the dynamics of the Catalan textile labour market (theSpanish region that concentrated most of the industrial and factory activity duringthe 19 Century) and offers hypotheses and results on the impact it had on livingstandards and fertility levels. We observe the formation of an uneven labourmarket in which male supply for labour (excluding women and children) grewmuch faster than the demand. We stress the fact that labour supply is verydependant on institutional factors liked to the transmition of household propertybetween generations. Instead the slow path of growth of adult males demand forlabour is witnessing the limits of this industry to expand and to compete ininternational markets. The strategy of working class families to adapt to scarceopportunities of employment we document here is the diminution of legitimatefertility levels. Fertility control is the direct instrument we think workers have tocontrol their number in a situation that was likely to create labour surpluses in theshort and mid run.
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This paper uses the ability to recall one s age correctly as an indicator of numeracy.We show that low levels of nutrition impaired numeracy in industrializing England, 1780-1850.Numeracy declined markedly among those born during the war years, especially where wheatwas dear. England s nascent welfare state mitigated the negative effect of high food prices oncognitive skills. Nutrition during early development mattered for labor market outcomes:individuals born in periods or countries with high age heaping were more likely to sort intooccupations with limited intellectual requirements.