294 research outputs found

    Mary Ware Dennett letter to Lucile Atcherson, April 13, 1914

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    On April 13, 1914, Mary Ware Dennett, a women's rights activist, wrote this letter to Lucile Atcherson, a suffragist in central Ohio who served as executive secretary of the Franklin County Woman Suffrage Association. In the letter, Dennett is answering a request from Atcherson for a list of female Labor movement speakers who could have come to Ohio to campaign for women's suffrage. Dennett listed several speakers who could have been available to come to Ohio. The Franklin County Woman Suffrage Association was formed in 1912, after the Ohio Constitutional Convention elected to bring to a vote the question of removing the words "white male" from the state constitution with regard to voting rights. Headquartered in the Chamber of Commerce building in Columbus, Ohio, the organization put out regular publications, organized public speeches and meetings, distributed literature and held parades in support of the suffrage movement. Women's suffrage in Ohio was defeated in a special election in 1912 and again in 1914 and 1916 before a resolution narrowly passed in 1917 allowing municipal voting by women in Columbus. In 1920, the 19th Amendment passed, extending the vote to women and prohibiting state and federal government from denying suffrage on the basis of sex

    Our vulnerable high streets – death by permitted development?

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    Ben Clifford, Adam Dennett, Bin Chi and Daniel Slade outline some of the key findings of research on the likely impacts of the latest expansion of permitted development rights

    sj-docx-1-sph-10.1177_19417381221147524 – Supplemental material for Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction Return-to-Sport Decision-Making: A Scoping Review

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-sph-10.1177_19417381221147524 for Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction Return-to-Sport Decision-Making: A Scoping Review by Eric Golberg, Mark Sommerfeldt, Adam Pinkoski, Liz Dennett and Lauren Beaupre in Sports Health: A Multidisciplinary Approach</p

    Evidence from three real-world geodesign studies.

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    This contribution aims at presenting in comparison three applications of geodesign in strategic planning and design at the metropolitan, inter-municipal, and local scale. The case studies were undertaken in Sardinia, Italy between 2019 and 2023, and each involved a different range of stakeholders from the respective communities. While all the three multi-sessions geodesign workshops were fully digitally supported, two geodesign workshops were held live in person, while the third one was held online. The comparison aims at analysing both the processes and their results, and the potential and limitations of geodesign for strategic adaptive spatial planning practice

    sj-pdf-1-epb-10.1177_2399808320951212 - Supplemental material for Shedding new light on residential property price variation in England: A multi-scale exploration

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    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-epb-10.1177_2399808320951212 for Shedding new light on residential property price variation in England: A multi-scale exploration by Bin Chi, Adam Dennett, Thomas Oléron-Evans and Robin Morphet in Environment and Planning B: Urban Analytics and City Science</p

    Dennett e Chalmers: argumentos e intuição Dennett and Chalmers: arguments and intuition

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    Chalmers e Dennett se encontram em lados opostos da discussão do problema da consciência. Para Chalmers, ela é um dado indubitável que não pode ser explicada em termos de outra coisa. Para Dennett, o que existe verdadeiramente são múltiplos julgamentos sobre nossa consciência. Cada um acusa o outro de circularidade. Isto só é possível porque a diferença entre estas duas teorias é verdadeiramente uma diferença de princípios. A mesma oposição que encontramos no aparato teórico encontramos também em suas pressuposições mais básicas e fundamentais. Este fato torna extremamente difícil escolher entre as duas ao mesmo tempo em que radicaliza a diferença entre elas. De um lado temos que argumentos podem refutar intuições, de outro temos que é preciso primeiro sondar nossas intuições para depois criar argumentos a partir delas. Entre um extremo e outro nos encontramos com o velho dilema de "o que vem primeiro?". No entanto, mais importante do que escolher lados é mostrar o quanto é difícil escolher.Chalmers and Dennett are at opposite sides of the debate on the problem of conciousness. For Chalmres, conciousness is an unquestionable fact that cannot be explained by something else. For Dennett, what exists is really multiple judgements about our conciousness. Each author accuses the other of circularity. This is only possible because the difference between the two theories is actually a difference of principles. The same opposition that we find in their theoretical apparatus we also find on their more fundamental and basic premises. This feature .makes it very difficult to choose one of the two theories, while it also radicalizes the difference bewteen them. On one side we have arguments that can refute intuitions, on the other we find that that one must first scrutinize our intuitions to then create arguments based on them. Between the two extreems we meet with the old dilemma of "what came first?". However, more important than to choose sides is to show how difficult the choice is

    Appendix - Supplemental material for Pharmacological Interventions for Primary Psychodermatologic Disorders: An Evidence Mapping and Appraisal of Randomized Controlled Trials

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    Supplemental material, Appendix, for Pharmacological Interventions for Primary Psychodermatologic Disorders: An Evidence Mapping and Appraisal of Randomized Controlled Trials by Tarek Turk, Chaocheng Liu, Esther Fujiwara, Sebastian Straube, Reidar Hagtvedt, Liz Dennett, Adam Abba-Aji and Marlene Dytoc in Journal of Cutaneous Medicine and Surgery</p

    Table S1 - Supplemental material for Pharmacological Interventions for Primary Psychodermatologic Disorders: An Evidence Mapping and Appraisal of Randomized Controlled Trials

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    Supplemental material, Table S1, for Pharmacological Interventions for Primary Psychodermatologic Disorders: An Evidence Mapping and Appraisal of Randomized Controlled Trials by Tarek Turk, Chaocheng Liu, Esther Fujiwara, Sebastian Straube, Reidar Hagtvedt, Liz Dennett, Adam Abba-Aji and Marlene Dytoc in Journal of Cutaneous Medicine and Surgery</p

    Alan Wilson - Contributions to Research on Population and Migration

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    This article reviews Alan Wilson's research on population and migration in the 1970s and the 2010s, which supplements his principal contribution - mathematical modelling of urban and regional systems. In the 1970s, drawing on input-output models of economies and working with Philip Rees, Wilson established the accounting basis for Andrei Rogers' multi-regional projection model, adding international migration. Innovative methods were developed to complete demographic accounts, where there were data gaps. In the 2010s, working with Adam Dennett, Wilson systematized methods for estimating migration flows between regions in Europe, employing his family of spatial interaction models. The key aim of both research strands was to ensure that no information was ignored to ensure consistency in population and migration models. The influence of Wilson's contributions to research on population and migration is traced through a survey of subsequent research
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