9,782 research outputs found

    Cunningham Street, Sydney

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/324481Interior view of Fletcher Jones store in Cunningham Street, Sydney. Inscribed on reverse: Typical new small Branch Sydney. Inscribed on reverse: Cunningham St175614 Sub-item: [2012.0031.01210] "Cunningham Street, Sydney

    Recall this Book 49: The Capitol Insurrection and Asymmetrical Policing: A Conversation with David Cunningham

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    We first heard from the sociologist of American racism David Cunningham in Episode 36 Policing and White Power. Less than a week after the horrors of January 6th, he came back for an extended conversation about "asymmetrical policing" of the political right and left-and of White and Black Americans. His very first book (There's Something Happening Here, 2004) studied the contrast between the FBI's work in the 1960's to wipe out left-wing and Black protests and its efforts to control and tame right-wing and white supremacist movements. That gives him a valuable perspective on the run-up to January 6th-and what may happen next

    Letter from John T. Cunningham to Mary M. Hanratty, 1935-07-25

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    Typed letter from John T. Cunningham in Clarksville, Tennessee to Mary M. Hanratty in Denver, Colorado. Cunningham has forwarded an email on Hanratty's behalf to David C. Hunter. He also offers advice regarding the settlement of Sarah A. Hanratty's estate

    Oral History Interview with David Hughes

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    The National Museum of the Pacific War presents an oral interview with David Hughes. Hughes joined the Navy in February 1941 and was assigned to the USS Northampton (CA-26)as a coxswain. He went ashore at Pearl Harbor two weeks before the attack, while the Northampton traveled on to Wake Island. On the morning of the attack, he was in a whaleboat at Battleship Row. He went ashore and hid behind a tree until the attack ended, at which time he began transporting officers and wounded personnel in his whaleboat. On one of his trips, he carried men with acetylene torches to the USS Oklahoma (BB-37) and overheard an engineer warn them about the danger of depleting oxygen, which ultimately killed several men. Hughes spent a short time aboard the USS Hornet (CV-8) and describes the sea conditions during the Doolittle Raid launch. He was back aboard the Northampton for the Battle of Tassafaronga and abandoned ship when it was torpedoed. He returned to the States as an aviation machinist’s mate and towed targets for VJ-2, VJ-7, and VJ-12 utility squadrons on the West Coast. He did the same at Henderson Field, where he also served as George Burns' personal driver during his USO tour. Hughes returned home and was discharged at the end of the war

    The Weight of the Past: Engaging Legacies of White Supremacy and Racial Injustice

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    Washington University sociologist David Cunningham will explore the dimensions of division and dialogue, place and space in relation to historical and contemporary racial violence. With an eye on ongoing struggles over the memorialization of the racialized past through monuments and the commemorative landscape in America, Dr. Cunningham will discuss how the legacies of racial injustice continue to invade and inform our spaces, discourses, and worldviews

    Knowledge and Cultural Capital

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    About this book:\ud This fascinating Handbook defines how knowledge contributes to social and economic life, and vice versa. It considers the five areas critical to acquiring a comprehensive understanding of the knowledge economy: the nature of the knowledge economy; social, cooperative, cultural, creative, ethical and intellectual capital; knowledge and innovation systems; policy analysis for knowledge-based economies; and knowledge management.\ud \ud In presenting the outcomes of an important body of research, the Handbook enables knowledge policy and management practitioners to be more systematically guided in their thinking and actions. The contributors cover a wide disciplinary spectrum in an accessible way, presenting concise, to-the-point discussions of critical concepts and practices that will enable practitioners to make effective research, managerial and policy decisions. They also highlight important new areas of concern to knowledge economies such as wisdom, ethics, language and creative economies that are largely overlooked. \ud --------------------------------------------------------\ud Contents\ud : 1. Knowledge: Concepts, Policy, Implementation\ud David Rooney, Greg Hearn and Abraham Ninan\ud 2. A Model of the Tacit, Explicit and Social Character of Knowledge\ud David Rooney and Ursula Schneider\ud 3. Wisdom, Ethics and the Postmodern Organisation\ud Bernard McKenna\ud 4. Risk and Knowledge\ud Joost van Loon\ud 5. Social Epistemology: Preserving the Integrity of Knowledge About Knowledge\ud Steve Fuller\ud 6. Knowledge and Social Capital\ud Hitendra Pillay\ud 7. Knowledge and Cultural Capital\ud Stuart Cunningham\ud 8. The Organisation of Creativity in Knowledge Economics: Exploring Strategic Issues\ud Paul Jeffcutt\ud 9. Language and Analysing the Analysts Values\ud Phil Graham\ud 10. Clusters, Knowledge, Innovation and Policy in the Knowledge Economy\ud Abraham Ninan\ud 11. Intellectual Property Rights in the Knowledge Economy\ud Peter Drahos\ud 12. Information Sharing\ud Don Lamberton\ud 13. Collaboration and the Network Form of Organisation in the New Knowledge Based Economy\ud Thomas Mandeville\ud 14. Exploring the Information Space: A Strategic Perspective on Information Systems\ud Max Boisot\ud 15. ‘Tacit Knowledge’ Versus ‘Explicit Knowledge’ Approaches to Knowledge Management Practice\ud Ron Sanchez\ud 16. Knowledge and Social Identity\ud Thomas Keenan\ud 17. Managing Creativity in the Knowledge Economy\ud Mark Banks\ud 18. Inexperience and Inefficiency in Information Transactions: Making the Most of Management Consultants\ud Stuart Macdonald\ud 19. The Knowledge Worker: A Metaphor in Search of a Meaning?\ud Richard Joseph \ud 20. How to be Productive in the Knowledge Economy: The Case of ICTs\ud Greg Hearn and Thomas Mandeville\ud 21. Digital Rights Management: Managing Digital Rights for Open Access\ud Brian Fitzgerald and Jason Rei

    Lisa A. Cunningham, 29, and her boyfiend, David N. Wallace, 25, will be arraigne

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    Lisa A. Cunningham, 29, and her boyfiend, David N. Wallace, 25, will be arraigned on in Wiscasset District Court on July 20 for having chained Cunningham\u27s 11-year-old son in the basement of their Nobleboro home on several occasions while they went off to work. They are charged with endangering the welfare of a child

    Lisa A. Cunningham, 29, and her boyfiend, David N. Wallace, 25, will be arraigne

    No full text
    Lisa A. Cunningham, 29, and her boyfiend, David N. Wallace, 25, will be arraigned on in Wiscasset District Court on July 20 for having chained Cunningham\u27s 11-year-old son in the basement of their Nobleboro home on several occasions while they went off to work. They are charged with endangering the welfare of a child
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