9,232 research outputs found
Daniel Sullivan Interview, November 24, 2019
Marine Corps Master Sergeant Daniel Sullivan describes his decision to join the Marine Corps, where he served 21 years, playing clarinet and other instruments in Marine Corps bands. Sullivan talks about auditioning to become a member of the band, the role of the band to provide musical support to the troops, and traveling to different places to participate in parades and educate citizens about what the military does. He notes that the military bands in which he played would also teach master classes to high school and college students as a way of connecting with them and letting them know that the military provides musicians an opportunity to work in their field. Sullivan describes the different places he was stationed, including Japan, Hawaii, California, and Parris Island, South Carolina, specifically recalling his time at Parris Island where he was the acting band leader. He discusses why he chose to retire after serving 21 years, the lack of camaraderie that he felt after leaving the military, and the difficulty of reintegrating into civilian life. He details his struggles finding a civilian job because many employers don’t understand the breadth of military experience. He briefly mentions why he chose to return to the University of Montana to pursue a degree in computer science.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/veteransexperience_oralhistory/1006/thumbnail.jp
Toddler Behavior Questionnaire
This questionnaire is a research instrument designed to obtain maternal reports on the anger and tantrum behavior of young children. The target age for the questionnaire is from approximately 10 to 24 months. At this age, typically developing children are in the process of becoming bipedal and most can stand and walk with support, if not independently, at this age. The questions reflect common, everyday situations likely to be experienced by children. The tool was used in studies supported by NIMH grant 17205 (M. W. Sullivan, PI). Two published studies report data from this and an earlier version of the scale and provide basic information on its development and preliminary psychometrics (Sullivan & Lewis, 2012; Sullivan, 2018). The author gives permission for research use of the scale without modification and requests copies of reports of studies including it at a measurement tool. The author may be contacted at [email protected].
Sullivan, M. W. & Lewis, M. (2012). Relations of early goal blockage response and gender to subsequent temper tantrums. Infancy, 17(2), 159-178. NIHMS283965 PMID22408573. PMC 3293480. Online: 9 MAY 2011 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-7078.2011.0007
Sullivan, M. W. & Carmody, D. (2018). Approach-related emotion, toddlers’ persistence and negative reactions to failure. Social Development, In press.Copyright Rutgers University and M.W. Sullivan
Sullivan, Daniel
Daniel Sullivan - Assistant Professor of Mathematics.https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/univ_photos/3608/thumbnail.jp
Daniel R. Sullivan
Black and white portrait photograph of Daniel R. Sullivan, Instructor, Library, 1968-1970.https://thekeep.eiu.edu/archives_faculty_sz/1158/thumbnail.jp
Review of \u3cem\u3eCultural-Existential Psychology: The Role of Culture in Suffering and Threat\u3c/em\u3e. Daniel Sullivan. Reviewed by Daniel Liechty.
Daniel Sullivan, Cultural-Existential Psychology: The Role of Culture in Suffering and Threat. Cambridge University Press (2016), 295 pages, $110 (hardcover)
Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)
Letter from Daniel W. Kempner to M. J. Sullivan requesting for him to return furniture to be refinished
Map of Sullivan County, Indiana
1 atlas : maps (some col.), ports. ; 45 cm.Named for Daniel Sullivan, a Revolutionary War hero killed while carrying messages from Vincennes to Louisville, Sullivan County was organized in 1816 from part of Knox County. Once an oil producer, it is primarily known for agriculture and coal
Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)
Letter from Maurice J. Sullivan to Daniel W. Kempner updating him on various happenings regarding Kempner properties in Galveston
Conservation is sexy! What makes this so, and what does this make? An engagement with celebrity and the environment
This essay offers an engagement with Daniel Brockington’s (2009) recent book Celebrity and the environment. I highlight the book’s contribution to debate regarding processes of human displacement arising through biodiversity
conservation under conditions of neoliberal capitalism. I fi rst situate the book in relation to contemporary
perspectives on displacement, justice, and human rights, using examples to illustrate complex and dynamic patterns
of conservation inclusions and exclusions globally. This is followed by a summary of Brockington’s typology of
conservation celebrities, and of the ways in which celebrities assist with the amassing of conservation finance. I proceed to consider the roles of a celebrity-saturated mass media (and mediated) ‘spectacle of conservation’ in structuring social and consumptive engagements with the ‘non-human’ world globally. I draw attention to how diverse peoples in conservation landscapes might become part of the spectacle of conservation by reconfiguring themselves as cultural objects of touristic consumerism in a script not necessarily of their choosing. By way of acknowledging the significance of social networks and alliances in infl uencing conservation perspectives and
practice, I close with a disclaimer regarding my own long-term collaborations with the author of Celebrity and
the environment
- …
