36,226 research outputs found

    Episode 115: Dignity and Respect for Animals with John Hadley

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    This episode of Knowing Animals features Dr. John Hadley. John is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Western Sydney. We discuss John’s paper ‘From Welfare to Rights without Changing the Subject’ which appear in the journal Ethical Theory and Moral Practice in 2017

    Interview with Neil Hadley

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    Interview with Dr. Neil Hadley, Biology professor and former Dean of the Graduate School and Research at the University of North Carolina Wilmington

    375: Dr Leonard Leigh Hadley (Military Cross)

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    Doctor Leonard Leigh Hadley was a Doctor in the Army Medical Corps throughout the whole of the First World War. He served mainly in France but also spent time in Greece. Dr Hadley won a Military Cross for attending the wounded under enemy fire. He served in France and in Greece all throughout the war, reaching the rank of Captain. </p

    Dr. Richard T. Hadley- 1976-1989

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    Dr. Richard T. Hadley served as choir director from 1976-1989. During his tenure he established a success Choir Clinic program that was also used in Florida, Georgia, and Iowa. A graduate of Fort Valley State College, he received his master’s degree at Indiana State University and his Ph.D. from the University of Iowa.https://digitalcommons.uncfsu.edu/choir100_directors/1003/thumbnail.jp

    A Conversation with Elizabeth Hadley

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    Dr. Elizabeth Hadley talks to us about responsive interactions with young children through the academic and social language in preschools. Liz is known for her work in the areas of oral language development and vocabulary in preschool classrooms, and she works to understand the connections between oral language in early childhood and later reading comprehension skills. Dr. Hadley is an Assistant Professor of Literacy Studies at the University of South Florida

    Dr Robert King author

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    Dr. Robert King is pictured at the medical office on display at the Bishop Museum. King was the author of "A history of the practice of medicine in Manatee County, Florida", published in 1985. He was also a past president of the Manatee Historical Society

    Single-electron switching on chips: The nanoscale circuit has become reality

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    Very little distinguishes the first transistor presented by Bell Telephone Labs researchers Bardeen, Shockley, and Brattain in 1947 from the Single Electron Transistor (set) developed by tu delft physicist Pieter Heij. The set,which switches using single electrons, can only be observed with the aid of an electron microscope. Over the past four years, Heij has worked at the Quantum Transport group of professor Dr. Ir. Hans Mooij and Dr. Peter Hadley to develop techniques for joining sets into larger units that can be used for logical operations. This involved the extremely accurate positioning of successive layers of atoms, some of which were only just thick enough to enable electrons to tunnel through. The current models still require extremely low temperatures to work

    Dr. Glendon Swarthout

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    Hosted by Roger M. Busfield, MSU Assistant Professor of Speech and Theater, Meet the Author is designed to introduce a general audience to a contemporary author and their work through in-depth interviews. This episode features a conversation between Dr. Glendon Swarthout, prolific author and English professor at MSU, and assistant professors Sam S. Baskett and Theodore B. Strandness

    The last avant-garde?: Disability arts and (rethinking) mobility

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    Taking as its starting point a remark by Turner Prize nominee Yinka Shonibare that disability arts is “the last avant garde”, this panel focuses on the role of aesthetic experimentation in disability arts and the possible rethinking of the relationship between avant-garde aesthetic strategies and inclusive arts. Points of connection between the avant-garde and disability arts include a rejection of traditional aesthetic forms, the development of aesthetic strategies appropriate to non-normative bodies, politics and populations and the implications of these ideas for the conference themes.\ud This panel is intended as a facilitated discussion involving researchers and artists undertaking work in this area. The panel will begin with some brief provocations reflecting on the implication of Shonibare’s comment. For example, Gerard Goggin will discuss three projects by Antoni Abad with artists and activists with disability in Barcelona, Geneva and Montreal as part of Abad’s Megaphone project, a decade-long, global digital art project. Bree Hadley will speak on performative interventions in public space, performance art, live art, activism and culture hacking by artists with disabilities, such as pwd's online performances, and artist’s performative responses to the austerity agenda in the US, UK, and Australasia. Eddie, Lachlan and Sarah will discuss ideas arising from their work on the project Beyond Access: The Creative Case for Inclusive Arts, which involved research with six Melbourne-based artists/artistic companies with disability, supported by Arts Access Victoria.\ud Chair: Dr Eddie Paterson (School of Culture and Communication, Faculty of Arts, University of Melbourne)\ud Dr Bree Hadley (Creative Industries, QUT) \ud Professor Gerard Goggin (Professor of Media and Communication and ARC Future Fellow, University of Sydney)\ud Dr Lachlan MacDowall (Head, Centre for Cultural Partnerships, University of Melbourne).\ud Sarah Austin (PhD candidate, Theatre/Centre for Cultural Partnerships, VCA and MCM)\ud Artists (tbc, based on existing relationships with artists developed in the Beyond Access research)

    Aging and involuntary childlessness: does it affect men?

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    Articles and research on the effects of involuntary childlessness often focus on women. Interestingly, we seldom read or hear about childless older men's experiences and whether they feel sadness in not having children. As a Master's student, Dr. Robin Hadley sought to investigate the experiences of childless men as there was little information available. The research culminated in Dr. Hadley's PhD dissertation, Life Without Fatherhood: A Qualitative Study of Older Involuntarily Childless Men. Recently, I had the opportunity to ask Dr. Hadley some questions in his area of expertise to which he provided insightful responses
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