57,942 research outputs found

    Referendum in Australia [picture] /

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    Part of the Stan Cross Archive of cartoons and drawings, 1912-1974.; Inscription: "Ben Strange"--In ink, lower right.; Title devised by cataloguer.; Also available online at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4305971

    A warning to others [picture] /

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    Part of the Stan Cross Archive of cartoons and drawings, 1912-1974.; Inscription: "Ben Strange"--In ink, lower left. "A warning to others"--In pencil, lower margin.; Also available online at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4305972

    Ben Wilson

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    Photograph: Portrait of Blue Cross board member Ben Wilson. No date given.https://digitalcommons.unf.edu/flablue_images/2856/thumbnail.jp

    Cross-Cultural Meta-Analyses

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    In the enormous collection of cross-cultural data that have been published during the last few decades it is difficult to perceive patterns. There is a clear need for systematizing the vast amount of cross-cultural studies and for developing models that explain cross-cultural differences in psychology. Two methods of cross-cultural meta-analysis can be distinguished. First, the instrument-based method of comparing data for one instrument across countries is suitable for instruments which have been administered in many countries. Second, a domain-based meta-analysis used a thematic domain from which culture-comparative studies are sampled instead of one specific instrument or method

    Replication Data for: Imagine All the People: Literature, Society, and Cross-National Variation in Education Systems

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    Scripts, source code, and data for the replication of results found in "Imagine All the People: Literature, Society, and Cross-National Variation in Education Systems," by Cathie Jo Martin. The author thanks the Boston University Hariri Institute for Computing for its support (under Hariri Research Award #2016-03-008), and Ben Getchell, Andrei Lapets, and Frederick Jansen for their superb programming skills. Reproducibility instructions are detailed in the file README.txt

    Replication Data for: Imagine All the People: Literature, Society, and Cross-National Variation in Education Systems

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    Scripts, source code, and data for the replication of results found in "Imagine All the People: Literature, Society, and Cross-National Variation in Education Systems," by Cathie Jo Martin. The author thanks the Boston University Hariri Institute for Computing for its support (under Hariri Research Award #2016-03-008), and Ben Getchell, Andrei Lapets, and Frederick Jansen for their superb programming skills. Reproducibility instructions are detailed in the file README.txt

    Attitudes toward sexuality in the Book of Ben Sira

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    The fact that Ben Sira seemingly has a negative attitude towards women or femininity can easily lead to the assumption that the work has a negative attitude toward sexuality. However, this thesis will seek to demonstrate that the author's view on sexuality is complex, subtle, and depends on the context of the individual sayings. First of all we have to make a distinction between the attitudes of the writer of the original Hebrew text of the book and that of the Greek translator. The two texts, produced in different social settings, circumstances, times and places, differ substantially at times in regard to sexuality. Therefore it is essential to treat them separately and to compare them. In addition, the Book of Ben Sira, the longest Jewish wisdom book, is a complex combination of carefully composed wisdom poems that structure the whole work, and of teachings on everyday issues including marriage, family life, self-control, desires and passions, and sexual promiscuity. The openness about issues of eroticism that characterizes some of the poems concerning personified female wisdom is unprecedented in the wisdom writings of Second Temple Judaism. Similarly, the sage dedicates a greater number of passages than other wisdom books, to the discussion of social relations especially in regard to family. In so doing his regular point of departure seems to be what benefits or damages these relations mean, and whether they bring disgrace to a person, especially through sexuality. These all have bearings on the author’s and translator’s views of sexuality, including the position a person or situation under discussion might have in the sage’s social value system. Therefore the thesis examines the wisdom poems, and all sayings that concern sexuality found in discussions of passions, relations with parents, daughters and sons, wives and husbands, and warnings against sexual wrongdoing, including prostitution and adultery. All this is done with a special regard to the differences between the Hebrew original text and the Greek translation

    Travel-based learning and cross-cultural disorienting dilemmas with Ben Walta

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    In this episode Ben Habib is joined in conversation by Ben Walta, program coordinator at the Taungurung Land & Waters Council, social entrepreneur, and global adventurer, who for nearly ten years managed CERES Global, providing short education travel programs in sustainability and international development. In this conversation, the two Bens reflect on their collaboration co-leading environment and sustainability-themed study tours to China, South Korea and India with CERES Global. They also explore the educational value of international travel, cross-cultural interaction and people-to-people engagement, and global citizenship vs localisation in an era of COVID and climate change

    sj-docx-1-psw-10.1177_14789299211060745 – Supplemental material for Climate Change and the Politics of Apocalyptic Redirection

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-psw-10.1177_14789299211060745 for Climate Change and the Politics of Apocalyptic Redirection by Ben Cross in Political Studies Review</p

    Cross-Border Cooperation: Subverting Sovereignty?

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    Work on European spatial planning has led me to criticise what I call territorialism.It conceives of the world in terms of a seamless cover of sovereign stateslooking after its territory each as if it were its property. In the European Unionthough, states are enveloped by a superstructure. Does this mean that there is aEuropean territory and, if so, how does it relate to the territories of its MemberStates? The issue becomes manifest in such efforts, as there have been undertaken,to arrive at a form of European spatial planning.Spatial Planning and Strateg
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