2,722 research outputs found

    Interview: Karen Stevens on characterisation, class and ‘Brilliant Blue'

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    Joe Bedford interview series 'Writers on Research'. Author Karen Stevens discusses the research process behind her short story collection Brilliant Blue (Barbican Press, 2025)

    John Stevens Wade Correspondence

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    Entries include a typed letter presenting the book Gallery for the Maine Author Collection and a lengthy typed biographical sketch of the author C.J. Stevens, contributed as John Stevens Wade, his pseudonym

    Recovery through contradiction?

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    With this new drug strategy, the circle has turned. It was a Conservative government that introduced the first drug strategy, Tackling Drugs Together, in 1995. This aimed to reduce drug related crime, protect young people and reduce health harms by discouraging drug use. It was criticised at the time for having unrealistic, intangible aims and for not providing the necessary funding. New Labour’s strategies introduced increasingly specific targets and massively expanded the funding of treatment. This new Coalition strategy has no targets and provides no new funding

    Gwendolyne Stevens

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    "Gwendolyne Daphne was born on 7 June 1908 at Quorn, South Australia, daughter of Hugo Albert Valentine Healey, painter and later publican, and his wife Jessie Gwendolyne, n?e Napier, both South Australian born. Gwendolyne attended several rural schools, including Innamincka Public, before proceeding to St Peter's Collegiate Girls' School, Adelaide. Miss Healey trained at Burra public and (Royal) Adelaide hospitals, and was registered as a nurse on 11 July 1929. She then moved to Parkside Mental Hospital where she gained a certificate in psychiatric nursing in 1931 and became sister-in-charge. In 1934 she bought a large house at Payneham that had been built by James Marshall, converted it into a private psychiatric hospital and named it St Margarets. As its owner and matron for eighteen years, she cared for patients suffering the early stages of nervous disorders, and provided them with a secure and restful setting, with aviaries amid beautiful gardens. That she took on such a task during the depression, and succeeded in it, testified to her business acumen, organizing ability and compassion for those in need. At the chapel of the Collegiate School of St Peter, Adelaide, on 12 April 1940, she married George Dempster Stevens, a clerk employed by Dalgety & Co. Ltd. They were to have two daughters. Pursuing her interest in community health, Mrs Stevens was founding president (1944-50) and a committee-member (until 1961) of the Payneham branch of the Mothers' and Babies' Health Association. After she sold her hospital in 1952, she set up Sterling Downs, a Poll Dorset stud on 2200 acres (890 ha) at Currency Creek, in 1957. She employed a manager to supervise the stud and visited it each week. In the 1960s she sold part of the land and moved the stud to Sterling Park, McLaren Vale. The stud was later sold and its sheep replaced with cattle. Having noticed particular outcrops of rock at Sterling Park, Stevens arranged for drilling to be conducted, as a result of which she opened a quarry and sold building sands to the local council. In 1968 she became interested in the mining potential of the Northern Territory. She studied maps, obtained advice from geologists and concentrated on an area near Oenpelli, Arnhem Land. She received permission to prospect on 1282 sq. miles (3320 km?) of Aboriginal reserve and negotiated an exploration programme with Queensland Mines Ltd. In 1970 that company discovered what was then described as the richest body of uranium ore in the world, at a site known to local Aborigines as Nabarlek. Newspapers referred to Stevens as 'probably the first woman in the world with a right to mine uranium'. She visited the area twice during the early stages of exploration and was staggered by the size of the find. In August 1971, however, Queensland Mines downgraded the ore reserves to about one-sixth of those announced a year earlier. Intending to use some of the proceeds of her investment to benefit the health of the Aborigines, she transferred the exploration licences to Queensland Mines in May 1973 and negotiated a royalty agreement. Mining at Nabarlek began in 1979. Mrs Stevens both created and took advantage of opportunities in the areas of mental health, sheep-breeding and mining. Suffering from hypertension, she died of a cerebral haemorrhage on 3 March 1974 in her Kensington Park home and was cremated. She was survived by her husband and their daughters. Her estate was sworn for probate at $416,266." [author Tony Bott].NurseSheep BreederMining EntrepreneurHospital Proprieto

    Jane Perham Stevens Correspondence

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    Entries are two, practically indistinguishable copies of a letter written by Thayer of the Maine State Library thanking Stevens for her 1972 book gift of Maine\u27s Treasure Chest: Gems and Minerals of Oxford County to the Maine Author Collection

    Replication Data for: How can social branding mitigate racism among fans in sports? A Q-sort analysis on the value of social branding campaigns as vehicles for reducing racism among soccer fans.

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    These are the tables of the analyses of the study of Stevens and Cremers (2021) in the Journal of Public Administration and Governance with the title: How can social branding reduce racism among fans in sport? An explorative study on the value of social branding campaigns as vehicles for banning racism from soccer stadiums. Feel free to contact the author for information about the analysis

    Lead (update)

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    Prepared by Syracuse Research Corporation under contract no. 200-2004-09793 ; prepared for U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry.Chemical manager(s)/author(s): Henry Abadin, Annette Ashizawa, Yee-Wan Stevens, ATSDR, Division of Toxicology and Environmental Medicine; Fernando Llados, Gary Diamond,.Gloria Sage,.Mario Citra,.Antonio Quinones, Stephen J. Bosch, Steven G. Swarts,.Syracuse Research Corporation.A Toxicological Profile for Lead, Draft for Public Comment was released in September 2005. This edition supersedes any previously released draft or final profile.Includes bibliographical references (p. 415-522) and index.200-2004-0979

    Joseph Stevens, Ben Giliberto, Bill Hickman, Doris Pierson, John and Annette Dalgesso, Louise Ciconte, Josephine George, Dilalda DiBonaventura, and Marie Moletteire

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    A group photograph of (left to right, standing) Joseph Stevens, Ben Giliberto, Bill Hickman, Doris Pierson, John and Annette Dalgesso, (left to right, Seating) Louise Ciconte, Josephine George, Dilalda DiBonaventura, and Marie Moletteire at a table at a class reunion

    Joseph Stevens, Ben Giliberto, Bill Hickman, Doris Pierson, John and Annette Dalgesso, Louise Ciconte, Josephine George, Dilalda DiBonaventura, and Marie Moletteire

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    A group photograph of (left to right, standing) Joseph Stevens, Ben Giliberto, Bill Hickman, Doris Pierson, John and Annette Dalgesso, (left to right, Seating) Louise Ciconte, Josephine George, Dilalda DiBonaventura, and Marie Moletteire at a table at a class reunion

    How best to mobilise social support to improve children and young people’s loneliness

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    Social support is a well-recognised protective factor for children’s mental health. Whilst many interventions exist that seek to mobilise social support to improve children’s mental health, not much is known about how to best do this. Annette Bauer, Madeleine Stevens, Martin Knapp, and Sara Evans-Lacko report key findings of a systematic review of the literature on approaches for preventing and reducing mental health problems among children and young adults
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