741 research outputs found

    What's happening in France? the settlement and social action centre. Exchange as empowerment

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    Introduction: family centres, integrating practice, and empowerment journeys, Chris Warren-Adamson; The family centre and the consolidation of integrated practice, Chris Stones; What‘s happening in France? the settlement and social action centre. Exchange as empowerment, Chris Warren-Adamson with Anne-Marie David and Jean-Paul Ducandas; Education and empowerment in family centres, Paul Montgomery and Claire Cook; Francophone centres in Québec, Canada – two case studies, Irene Kyle and Maureen Kellerman with Alla Ivask; The referral only centre – managing changing attitudes to parenting, Audrey Fessler; The office as centre. A ‘patch’ approach, supporting and protecting in two Massachusetts communities, John Zalenski and Carolyn Burns; Justice, child protection and family centres, part 1(inside), Ellen Jones and Dave Ely; Justice, child protection and family centres, part 2 (outside), Terri Fletcher and Mo Romano; Aotearoa/ New Zealand – family centered practice from a mental health perspective, Lynne Briggs; Aotearoa/ New Zealand – working differently with communities and families, Robyn Munford and Jackie Sanders, with Ann Andrew, Peter Butler, Ripeka Kaipuke, Leland Ruwhiu; Contemporary debates in centre practice in youth justice and community development, Andy Lloyd and Nick Frost; User participation in family centres in Greece, Vasso Gabrilidou, Elpida Ioannidou and Evi Hatzivarnava; Make your experience count: social work as informal education, Di Holland; The neighbourhood family centre as a base for life-long learning, Joy Adamson with members of Togher family centre, Ireland; Conclusion – lessons from family centres: the authentic site for ecological practice, Chris Warren-Adamson

    Introduction: family centres, integrating practice, and empowerment journeys

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    Contents Introduction: family centres, integrating practice, and empowerment journeys, Chris Warren-Adamson; The family centre and the consolidation of integrated practice, Chris Stones; What‘s happening in France? the settlement and social action centre. Exchange as empowerment, Chris Warren-Adamson with Anne-Marie David and Jean-Paul Ducandas; Education and empowerment in family centres, Paul Montgomery and Claire Cook; Francophone centres in Québec, Canada – two case studies, Irene Kyle and Maureen Kellerman with Alla Ivask; The referral only centre – managing changing attitudes to parenting, Audrey Fessler; The office as centre. A ‘patch’ approach, supporting and protecting in two Massachusetts communities, John Zalenski and Carolyn Burns; Justice, child protection and family centres, part 1(inside), Ellen Jones and Dave Ely; Justice, child protection and family centres, part 2 (outside), Terri Fletcher and Mo Romano; Aotearoa/ New Zealand – family centered practice from a mental health perspective, Lynne Briggs; Aotearoa/ New Zealand – working differently with communities and families, Robyn Munford and Jackie Sanders, with Ann Andrew, Peter Butler, Ripeka Kaipuke, Leland Ruwhiu; Contemporary debates in centre practice in youth justice and community development, Andy Lloyd and Nick Frost; User participation in family centres in Greece, Vasso Gabrilidou, Elpida Ioannidou and Evi Hatzivarnava; Make your experience count: social work as informal education, Di Holland; The neighbourhood family centre as a base for life-long learning, Joy Adamson with members of Togher family centre, Ireland; Conclusion – lessons from family centres: the authentic site for ecological practice, Chris Warren-Adamson

    L'élixir Adamson [Question LXXXVIII, Pharmacie Et littérature]

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    Théodoridès Jean. L'élixir Adamson [Question LXXXVIII, Pharmacie Et littérature]. In: Revue d'histoire de la pharmacie, 87ᵉ année, n°324, 1999. p. 519

    Chapman (H.H.) (avec la collaboration de Adamson Bonham, Pal- Lister et Wright) - The Iron and Steel Industries of the South.

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    Chardonnet Jean. Chapman (H.H.) (avec la collaboration de Adamson Bonham, Pal- Lister et Wright) - The Iron and Steel Industries of the South.. In: Revue économique, volume 5, n°6, 1954. p. 983

    Voice to Britons

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    (Black and White) This postcard is a reprinted recruitment poem text, from the Bolton Chronicle, Aug.2. For this piece, Adamson received appreciation from Buckingham Palace on the direction of His Majesty the King. This card is uninscribed and unposted

    Philosophy in the Islamic World: A History of Philosophy Without Any Gaps, by Peter Adamson

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    Peter Adamson, Philosophy in the Islamic World: A History of Philosophy Without Any Gaps, Oxford University Press, 2016. Peter Adamson, Professor of Philosophy at the LMU in Munich and at King's College London, is the author several books, including The Arabic Plotinus (2002) and Great Medieval Thinkers: al-Kindi (2007) and Philosophy in the Islamic World (2016), and hosts the History of Philosophy podcast

    Philosophy in the Islamic World: A History of Philosophy Without Any Gaps, by Peter Adamson

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    Peter Adamson, Philosophy in the Islamic World: A History of Philosophy Without Any Gaps, Oxford University Press, 2016. Peter Adamson, Professor of Philosophy at the LMU in Munich and at King's College London, is the author several books, including The Arabic Plotinus (2002) and Great Medieval Thinkers: al-Kindi (2007) and Philosophy in the Islamic World (2016), and hosts the History of Philosophy podcast

    The Invention of Craft

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    The Invention of Craft is the sequel to Adamson’s 2007 book Thinking Through Craft, which examined relations between fine art and craft in the 20th century. The 2013 sole-author book goes back to an earlier moment, the century from 1750 to 1850. Adamson’s core argument is that craft was ‘invented’ during this period, as the antithesis of progressive industry. Rather than seeing artisanal customs and traditions as an unmoving backdrop against which modern industry emerged, Adamson argues for an active, dialogical process in which craft played a part in the formulation of unstable modernity. The book also includes discussions of contemporary practice: if the late 18th and early 19th centuries witnessed a divergence between craft and mass production, then we are now seeing a reconvergence in which, Adamson asserts, that earlier moment serves as a key reference point. Though Britain, as a main theatre of industrialisation, is prioritised in the book, Adamson also discusses case studies in India and North America. Research for the book was carried out principally through examination of primary texts, both published and archival (including labour union records at the Bishopsgate Institute, London; documents on the lock trade at the Wolverhampton Historical Society; V&A Museum archival records; and numerous 19th-century newspapers and periodicals). Objects too were prioritised as evidence of historical change, and examined closely for the telling traces of production narratives. For the sections on contemporary practice, interviews were also an important source. Before publication, The Invention of Craft served as the topic for invited lectures given by Adamson and open to the public at the Smithsonian’s Renwick Gallery (Washington DC), Los Angeles County Museum of Art, University of California-Berkeley and other institutions

    ECONOMIC INEQUALITY AND FUTURE THOUGHT AMONG OLDER ADULTS

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    This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced version of an article accepted for publication in Innovation in Aging following peer review. The version of record Adamson, E. M., Ekerdt, D. J., & Adamson, E. M. (2019). ECONOMIC INEQUALITY AND FUTURE THOUGHT AMONG OLDER ADULTS. Innovation in Aging, 3(Suppl 1), S749–S750. https://doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igz038.2750 is available online at: doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igz038.2750 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

    God Willing: the Ash'arites, by Peter Adamson

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    Peter Adamson, Professor of Philosophy at the LMU in Munich and at King's College London, is the author several books, including The Arabic Plotinus (2002) and Great Medieval Thinkers: al-Kindi (2007) and Philosophy in the Islamic World (2016), and hosts the History of Philosophy podcast (https://www.historyofphilosophy.net/). God Willing: the Ash'arites Al-Ash'arī puts his stamp on the future of Islamic theology by emphasizing God’s untrammeled power and freedom. Further Reading M. Allar..
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