3,042 research outputs found
Habitat for a satellite town
Thesis (M. Arch.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Architecture, 1955.Includes bibliographical references (leaf iv).Colin H. Davidson, with the group of CIAM.M.Arch
Menopause discrimination in the workplace: do the protected characteristics of sex, age and disability provide sufficient protection?
Annapurna Waughray, Professor of Human Rights Law, Manchester Metropolitan University, Colin Davidson, Head of Employment Law, Edwards Duthie Shamash, specialising in employment and discrimination law, and Declan O’Dempsey, barrister, Cloisters Chambers, review protection for menopause discrimination in the workplace under the Equality Act 2010. They conclude that this is inadequate and argue that a new protected characteristic of menopause should be created. The authors are members of the DLA executive committee which is currently co-chaired by Annapurna Waughray and Colin Davidson. This article draws on the DLA’s submission to the Women and Equalities Committee Menopause and the Workplace Inquiry (2021- 22) drafted by Declan O’Dempse
Virtual Book Launch: Russ Davidson author of: Joaquín Ortega: Forging Pan-Americanism at the University of New Mexico
Russ Davidson, author of Joaquín Ortega: Forging Pan-Americanism at the University of New Mexico In conversation with Felipe Gonzales and Christine Sierra
Russ Davidson served as a curator of Latin American and Iberian collections and was a professor of librarianship at the University of New Mexico from 1979 to 2004.
Phillip b. (Felipe) Gonzales is a professor emeritus of sociology at the University of New Mexico. As a historical sociologist, his research has primarily focused on the Nuevomexicano Hispanic group of New Mexico. He is the author, co-author, or editor of four books and numerous articles on Nuevomexicano identity, politics, and economic status.
Christine Marie Sierra is a professor emerita of political science at the University of New Mexico and a former director of the Southwest Hispanic Research Institute. Her teaching career at UNM spanned twenty-eight years, and her research has focused on the study of race, ethnicity, and gender in US politics, Mexican American activism on immigration policy, and Hispanic politics in New Mexico.https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/laii_events/1091/thumbnail.jp
Q & A - Eric Davidson
Eric Davidson graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1954 and received his PhD from Rockefeller University in 1963. He remained at Rockefeller until 1971 when he moved to Caltech in Pasadena, California. He was elected to the U.S. National Academy of Sciences in 1985, and is at present Norman Chandler Professor of Cell Biology in the Division of Biology, Caltech. He is the author of 5 books and over 400 papers on developmental gene regulation and evolution of genomic programs for development. For the last decade his work has focused on theory and operation of developmental gene regulatory networks
Frege and Davidson on Predication
Davidson's conception of predication is examined and critically discussed with reference to Frege's functional conception of concept and first-and higher order predication. The author argues that Frege's account of predication for all its difficulties, included the ones pointed aout by Davidson, is still the best at our disposal
Il principio di carità in Donald Davidson. Tra analisi concettuale e interpretazioni storiche
Questa tesi cerca di ricostruire come il principio di carità e l'interpretazione radicale di Donald Davidson siano stati interpretati a partire dagli anni Ottanta. Analizzo la discriminazione forte di Jack Crumley (1989) nel quadro dei due filoni interpretativi della carità: quella olistica, di Davidson, Jeff Malps e in tempi recenti di Kathrin Glüer e Peter Pagin, o quella “epistemica” di Ernst Lepore e Kirk Ludwig. Per via dell'influenza su Crumley di Colin McGinn (1986), con le sue critiche epistemiche alla carità di Davidon, la discriminazione forte è più vicina al filone epistemico.
In finale mi occupo di vedere se e come il problema del disaccordo tra pari epistemici tocchi le varie versioni dell'interpretazione radicale e della carità.
This thesis aims to go trough the main interpretations of Donald Davidson's Principle of Charity and Radical Interpretation since the Eighties.
I analyze Jack Crumley's Strong Discrimination Principle (1989) trying to
frame it in one of the two main interpretations: the holistic one, by Davidson,
Jeff Malpas, Kathrin Glüer and Peter Pagin, or the epistemic one, by Ernst
Lepore and Kirk Ludwig. Since Crumley's main source on Charity is Colin
McGinn (1986) and his epistemic critiques to Davidson, the Strong
Discrimination Principle seems to be on the epistemic side. At last I try to test if the peer disagreement could be a problem for either versions of Charity and Radical Interpretation.ope
Gertrude M. Davidson telegram to Franklin County Woman Suffrage Association, October 22, 1914
This telegram was sent on October 22, 1914, to the Woman Suffrage Headquarters in Franklin County, Ohio. Gertrude M. Davidson, a member of the Scioto County Association for women's suffrage, sent the telegram to request fliers in support of women's suffrage. Davidson said she needed the fliers by her organization's Saturday afternoon meeting. She requested the flier titled "Women in the Home," but stated that if there weren't enough of those to send the best fliers they had on hand.
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
Base composition of RNA obtained from motor neurons in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
PT: J; CR: DANEHOLT B, 1966, J NEUROCHEM, V13, P913 DAVIDSON TJ, J NEUROPATHOL EXP NE DAVIDSON TJ, 1981, J NEUROPATH EXP NEUR, V40, P32 EDSTROM JE, 1964, METHODS CELL PHYSL, V1, P417 HARTMANN HA, 1968, ACTA NEUROPATH BERL, V11, P275 KOENIG H, 1969, MOTOR NEURON DISEASE, P347 RINGBORG U, 1966, BRAIN RES, V2, P296 SLAGEL DE, 1966, J NEUROPATH EXP NEUR, V25, P244; NR: 8; TC: 16; J9: J NEUROPATHOL EXP NEUROL; PG: 6; GA: LF726Source type: Electronic(1
The Author\u27s Series: Writing 101, Publishing and Marketing
The Author\u27s Series: Writing 101, Publishing and Marketing
Featured Author: Damion J. Walker, Empowering Underserved Communities: Social Equity Through Collective Action & Founder of Cognitive Justice Intl.
Guest Author: Travis Davidson, Overcoming the Odds , Gospel Hip Hop Artis-TX3
Book Signin
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