502 research outputs found

    Cardozo AELJ Author Interview Series: Caitlin Muraca

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    The Cardozo AELJ Author Interview Series seeks to give our readers further insight into the Articles and Notes published in the Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal. In this interview, Caitlin Muraca discusses her Note, Combating False Election Information in a Section 230 Protected World: to Moderate or Not to Moderate, which was published in Volume 41, Issue 2. This post was originally published on the Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal website on April 27, 2023. The original post can be accessed via the Archived Link button above

    Cardozo AELJ Author Interview Series: Caitlin Muraca

    No full text
    The Cardozo AELJ Author Interview Series seeks to give our readers further insight into the Articles and Notes published in the Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal. In this interview, Caitlin Muraca discusses her Note, Combating False Election Information in a Section 230 Protected World: to Moderate or Not to Moderate, which was published in Volume 41, Issue 2. This post was originally published on the Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal website on April 27, 2023. The original post can be accessed via the Archived Link button above

    Generative Repair and Graceful Decay: Interview with Caitlin DeSilvey

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    Professor Caitlin DeSilvey works as a cultural geographer and lecturer at the University of Exeter. Her work explores the ways in which built environments change through aging, including processes of repair, decay, and wasting. She collaborates with photographers, architects, designers, repairers, heritage practitioners, and with students in her teaching. DeSilvey fosters sensibilities of how to collaborate with the buildings and structures that ‘tell us what they need’, and with the living ecologies that contribute to the transformation of these decaying matters, ‘to allow them space in the future’ of these environments. Caitlin DeSilvey is the author of Curated Decay: Heritage Beyond Saving (University of Minnesota Press, 2017); a co-author of Heritage Futures: Comparative Approaches to Natural and Cultural Heritage Practices (UCL Press, 2020); and a co-editor of After Discourse: Things, Affects, Ethics (Routledge, 2020)

    Generative Repair and Graceful Decay: Interview with Caitlin DeSilvey

    No full text
    Professor Caitlin DeSilvey works as a cultural geographer and lecturer at the University of Exeter. Her work explores the ways in which built environments change through aging, including processes of repair, decay, and wasting. She collaborates with photographers, architects, designers, repairers, heritage practitioners, and with students in her teaching. DeSilvey fosters sensibilities of how to collaborate with the buildings and structures that ‘tell us what they need’, and with the living ecologies that contribute to the transformation of these decaying matters, ‘to allow them space in the future’ of these environments. Caitlin DeSilvey is the author of Curated Decay: Heritage Beyond Saving (University of Minnesota Press, 2017); a co-author of Heritage Futures: Comparative Approaches to Natural and Cultural Heritage Practices (UCL Press, 2020); and a co-editor of After Discourse: Things, Affects, Ethics (Routledge, 2020)

    Generative Repair and Graceful Decay: Interview with Caitlin DeSilvey

    No full text
    Professor Caitlin DeSilvey works as a cultural geographer and lecturer at the University of Exeter. Her work explores the ways in which built environments change through aging, including processes of repair, decay, and wasting. She collaborates with photographers, architects, designers, repairers, heritage practitioners, and with students in her teaching. DeSilvey fosters sensibilities of how to collaborate with the buildings and structures that ‘tell us what they need’, and with the living ecologies that contribute to the transformation of these decaying matters, ‘to allow them space in the future’ of these environments. Caitlin DeSilvey is the author of Curated Decay: Heritage Beyond Saving (University of Minnesota Press, 2017); a co-author of Heritage Futures: Comparative Approaches to Natural and Cultural Heritage Practices (UCL Press, 2020); and a co-editor of After Discourse: Things, Affects, Ethics (Routledge, 2020)

    Where you belong: stories

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    Ten stories submitted for fulfillment of the Rutgers - Newark MFA program in Fiction.M.F.A.by Caitlin Corriga

    Float School: Pedagogical Experiments and Social Actions

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    Float School is the catalyst and culmination of many embodied, affective, and improvisational experiences that create the opportunity to ask, “what can school be?” We find ourselves asking this question, as artists and educators, because we are often drawn to imagining how else we could learn together, and under what other terms, feelings and environments learning could occur. Float School is at once a site, a time, a collective endeavour, and a school. (Justin Langlois and Holly Schmidt)Part 1: Duration/Reflection — When Did You Eat? / Annie Canto — Forests, Fantasy and the Knowledge Industry / Caitlin Chaisson and Liljana Mead Martin — Pulp, Synthesis / Caitlin Chaisson and Liljana Mead Martin — Gratitude Exercise / Rebecca Bair — bargain bin / Rob Budde — Part 2: Immersion/Precipitation — Walking on Snow / Holly Schmidt — Sinking/Floating / Caitlin Chaisson and Holly Schmidt / Float Adrift on Memory Bliss of Dew / Ben Lee — Scent Walk / Holly Schmidt — Empathy Walk / Rebecca Bair — Part 3: Uncertainty/Discomfort — Under Her Eyelids / Romane Bladou — Canoeing Negotiation / Justin Langlois — Line of Site Walk / Justin Langlois — Bone Tapping / Annie Canto — Healing with Water / Reyhan Yazdani — Part 4: Space/Environment — Sound Score Choreography / Annie Canto — Quiet Spaces Erupted in Sound / Justin Langlois — Making Connections with Moss / Twyla Exner —Site Drawings with Metal and Sunscreen / Caitlin Chaisson and Liljana Mead Martin — Portrait of Prince George/Lheidli / Rob Budde — Part 5: Orientation/Coordination — Unexpected Electric Boogie / Annie Canto — Story Ropes / Laura Kozak, Charlotte Falk and Jean Chisholm — Sites of Care and Concern / Laura Kozak, Charlotte Falk and Jean Chisholm — Collaboration in Orientation / A conversation with Holly Schmidt, Justin Langlois, Annie Canto, Laura Kozak, Charlotte Falk and Jean Chisholm — Compass for Uncoordinates / Annie Canto — Technicity / Rob Budde — Closing/Opening — Learning with Float School / Justin Langlois — Float School Timeline — Contributor

    The Student Movement Volume 108 Issue 9: Perfect Landing: Acrofest Comes to Andrews University

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    HUMANS Blessings Outnumbering The Autumn Leaves, Savannah Tyler The James White Library Archives, Grace No ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving!, Lexie Dunham Art: Reclaiming the Narrative, Madison Vath A Trip to Detroit Through Nandi Comer\u27s Eyes, Ameilia Stefanescu NEWS Taking Flight at Acrofest, Nate Miller Andrews Celebrates Veterans, Andrew Francis Instruments of His Peace in a Broken World, Anna Rybachek IDEAS Are Aliens Real?, Katie Davis Stay Vaccinated for the Sassy Man Epidemic, Charisse Lapuebla The Thanksgiving Debate, Ruben Colón PULSE Artificial Intelligence: Are We Playing God?, Alyssa Caruthers How Mission Work Impacts the Missionary: Advice for SMs, Caitlin Adap Moral Conflict Part 2, Katie Davis, The Illusion of Romantic Love, Nicole Compton-Gray LAST WORD The Joys of Journaling, Ian Freemanhttps://digitalcommons.andrews.edu/sm-108/1008/thumbnail.jp

    Expanding Mental Health Occupational Therapy to Emerging Settings: Provider Perspectives

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    Abstract Date Presented 3/31/2017 Occupational therapy consultation for homeless adults with mental health conditions was explored. Results reveal the value of assessment in authentic contexts and use of standardized instruments to inform care decisions of complex clients, particularly those with traumatic brain injury. Primary Author and Speaker: MaryBeth Merryman Additional Authors and Speakers: Caitlin Synovec</jats:p
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