4,784 research outputs found

    Oral history interview of Dr. Angela Banks by Ayana Tasby

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    This oral history of Dr. Angela Banks, RN, PhD, and Full Professor and former Chair of the Undergraduate Nursing Department in the School of Nursing and Health Professions, was conducted by Christy-Ann Pierre (USF nursing student) in 2025 as part of the Black Scholars Class of 2025 digital archive enhancement project

    Read Poster Featuring Angela Banks

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    Read poster featuring Angela Banks and her book: Laboratory Tests and Diagnostic Procedures with Nursing Diagnoseshttps://repository.usfca.edu/read_gallery/1035/thumbnail.jp

    Professor Angela Shannon

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    Angela Shannon shares her poetry with the Taylor community. Angela Shannon is the author of Singing the Bones Together, a 2004 Minnesota Book Awards Finalist. She teaches English at Bethel University. Her work has been published in journals, textbooks, and anthologies, including TriQuarterly, Ploughshares, Where One Ends Another Begins: 150 Years of Minnesota Poetry, and Beyond the Frontier: African American Poetry for the 21st Century. Her choreopoem Root Woman premiered at the Fleetwood-Jourdain Theater in Evanston, Ill

    Dataset for 'Potential for biomethanisation of CO2 from anaerobic digestion of organic wastes in the UK'

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    This dataset contains the literature data and supporting calculations used to generate Tables S1-S4 in the associated publication: AUTHORS Bywater, A., Heaven, S., Zhang, Y., Banks, C.J. TITLE Potential for Biomethanisation of CO2 from Anaerobic Digestion of Organic Wastes in the United Kingdom JOURNAL Processes PAPER DOI 10.3390/pr10061202</span

    Angela Shanté : 2022 Irma Black Award Silver Medal Acceptance Speech

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    Author Angela Shanté gives an acceptance speech for When My Cousins Come to Town, illustrated by Keisha Morris (West Margin Press)https://educate.bankstreet.edu/irma_black_awards/1004/thumbnail.jp

    The Family History of Angela Ruth Weidert

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    Angela Ruth Weidert authored this family history as part of the course requirements for HIST 550/700 Your Family in History offered online in Spring 2018 and was submitted to the Pittsburg State University Digital Commons. Please contact the author directly with any questions or comments: [email protected]

    Regulation and bank stability: Canada and the United States, 1870-1980

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    Canada and the United States are probably as similar as any two countries in the world, but they have always had very different banking systems. First, the United States has had a unit banking system due to the restrictions on branch banking, which created many small banks. Canada, however, has always had unlimited branching, which led to the emergence of a few large nationwide banks. The author contends that, if one system performs better (in terms of stability and efficiency), this is due to their different regulatory system. Indeed, the two countries are different in terms of: 1) reserve requirements; 2) capital ratios; and 3) requirements to opening a new bank. When the United States has eliminated the barriers to interstate branching, U.S. banking will follow a route similar to that taken earlier by Canada and earlier yet by the United Kingdom. However, since problems may arise during the merger, the monetary authorities must protect the payment system at large as well as small depositors. Canada's banking system may be both more stable and more efficient than the U.S. banking system, but the United States has compensated by developing more open and deep capital markets.Financial Intermediation,Banks&Banking Reform,Payment Systems&Infrastructure,Financial Crisis Management&Restructuring,Decentralization,Housing Finance,Banks&Banking Reform,Financial Intermediation,Financial Crisis Management&Restructuring,Municipal Financial Management

    DOES BANK INSTITUTIONAL SETTING AFFECT BOARD EFFECTIVENESS? EVIDENCE FROM COOPERATIVE VS. JOINT STOCK BANKS.

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    Manuscript Type: Empirical Research Question/Issue: The recent financial crisis revealed major critical issues at joint stock banks’ boards and governance while co-operative banks showed higher resilience. Do co-operative banks suffer from board deficiencies less than joint stock banks?. To answer this question, we analyse banks operating in Italy during the time span 2006-2012 to verify whether the governing bodies of co-operative banks are less effective in carrying out their duties than those of joint stock banks. Deficiencies of governing body are measured by sanctions imposed by the Supervisory Authority. Research Findings/Insights: Findings revealed that the board of directors (BoDs) of cooperative banks were sanctioned more compared to BoDs of joint stock banks. Furthermore it emerged that board turnover mediate the relationship between cooperative model and board deficiencies. Theoretical/Academic Implications: This study provides empirical evidence in support of theories that emphasize the weakness of corporate governance in co-operative banks. Methodologically, the novelty of our approach is the adoption of a measure of board effectiveness/deficiency based on a third-party independent perspective (regulatory body), which is not biased by the different objective function as well the different incentive structure of the two types of banks. Practitioner/Policy Implications: The findings have several policy and managerial implications. We contribute to the on-going debate on the proposal for flexible regulation on corporate governance for cooperative banks and underline that policy-makers and regulators have to rethink the corporate governance structures of co-operative banks. In addition, the study focuses on specific intervention that can be undertaken at bank level to reduce board deficiencies

    Materia-autore = Author-Matter

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    The etymology of the word author refers to an act of creation, an act of augmentation, from the Latin verb augere. Author instantiates creation, the expansion of the pre-existing. In 1967 Roland Barthes declared the death of the author in his famous essay to state once more that the crisis is that of the author as a single subjectivity and as a term that condenses prestige, undermined by the de-subjectivation strategies of automatism, fortuity and fragmentation of the historical avant-gardes, as well as by the machinic act and by the reproducibility of the second avant-gardes. Fifty years after Barthes’ paradigmatic formula, this lack of authorship appears to be a successful brand. The ten- sions between the anomie of matter, the law that establishes authorship and the economy that makes the work pos- sible, invoke discordant perspectives. Artists make the self-destruction of their work the real work, and appeal is made for the demolition of architectures, whether by a recognised author or not, in order to re-design, or better still, re-claim the territory. Artificial intelligence consolidates its logics and its design by progressively shedding human ingenuity. The space of criticism becomes, finally, increasingly ephemeral. However, there is an acceptation of criti- cism that is, rather than an individual ‘signature’, an exploration and explanation of how design makes theory. The binomial author-matter seeks to mark these tensions and contradictions: the featured term author is main- tained to underline the persistence of that prestigious subjectivity, at the very moment when the rhetoric of “mat- ter as an author” promises other forms of authorship

    Giussani Sansoni, Angela

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    La scheda ricostruisce la vita e l'apporto della scrittrice Angela Giussani Sansoni alla letteratura per l'infanzia.The headword explains the biography and the contribution of the author Angela Giussani Sansoni to the children's literature
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