19,982 research outputs found
Letter From Charles Jenkinson to Carl Lumholtz, September 1, 1909
The document is a carbon copy of a typed letter from Charles Jenkinson to Carl Lumholtz concerning a letter of introduction provided by Jose Yves Limantour.https://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/fmhw_other/1165/thumbnail.jp
Note From Charles Jenkinson to Francis Mairs Huntington-Wilson, December 30, 1909
The document is a typed note from Charles Jenkinson to the Assistant Secretary of State regarding a visit from Senator Henry Cabot Lodge.https://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/fmhw_other/1196/thumbnail.jp
Letter From Charles Jenkinson to John Edward Jones, September 8, 1909
The document is a carbon copy of a typed letter from Charles Jenkinson to John Edward Jones concerning a leave of absence request for his Deputy Consul General.https://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/fmhw_other/1170/thumbnail.jp
Letter From Charles Jenkinson to Francis Mairs Huntington-Wilson, September 8, 1909
The document is a carbon copy of a typed letter from Charles Jenkinson to Francis Mairs Huntington-Wilson regarding personal correspondence that he has missed during his vacation.https://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/fmhw_other/1169/thumbnail.jp
Hilary Jenkinson. A Manual of Archive administration including the problems of War Archives and Archive making. Oxford, 1922.
Samaran Charles. Hilary Jenkinson. A Manual of Archive administration including the problems of War Archives and Archive making. Oxford, 1922.. In: Bibliothèque de l'école des chartes. 1924, tome 85. p. 191
Sir Charles Hilary Jenkinson. Sylwetka naukowa nestora archiwistyki brytyjskiej
This article presents the academic profile of Sir Charles Hilary Jenkinson, who in the first half of the 20th century had major influence on the development of Anglo-Saxon archival thought. The theoretical models and conceptual solutions he suggested have been a subject of academic reflection conducted in different parts of the archival world. The article contains the profile of H. Jenkinson in the context of professional experience, which found its reflection in the archival theory he presented. The text discusses the essential components of concepts and assumptions presented in the Manual of Archive Administration which remains the most famous and recognised book he authored. This article was created based on an analysis of materials which constitute the archival legacy remaining after H. Jenkinson and a review of Anglo-Saxon literature of the subject.Artykuł przedstawia sylwetkę naukową sir Charlesa Hilarego Jenkinsona, który w pierwszej połowie XX w. wywarł istotny wpływ na rozwój anglosaskiej myśli archiwalnej. Zaproponowane przez niego modele teoretyczne i rozwiązania koncepcyjne były i nadal są przedmiotem refleksji naukowej prowadzonej w różnych częściach archiwalnego świata. Artykuł zawiera biogram H. Jenkinsona ukazujący kontekst doświadczeń zawodowych, które znalazły swoje odzwierciedlenie w przedstawionej przez niego teorii archiwalnej. W tekście omówiono kluczowe elementy pojęć i założeń zaprezentowanych w książce Manual of Archive Administration, która pozostaje najbardziej znanym i cenionym dziełem jego autorstwa. Artykuł powstał w oparciu o analizę materiałów składających się na spuściznę archiwalną pozostałą po H. Jenkinsonie oraz przegląd anglojęzycznej literatury przedmiotu
RoMEO Studies 6: Rights metadata for open-archiving
This is the final study in a series of six emanating from the UK JISC-funded RoMEO Project (Rights Metadata for Open-archiving) which investigated the Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) issues relating to academic author self-archiving of research papers. It reports the results of a survey of 542 academic authors showing the level of protection required for their open-access research papers. It then describes the selection of an appropriate means of expressing those rights through metadata and the resulting choice of Creative Commons licences. Finally it outlines proposals for communicating rights metadata via the Open Archives Initiative’s Protocol for Metadata Harvesting (OAI-PMH)
The Public Philosophy Experiment
This episode of Why? is a special one–our 50th–and to celebrate we’re changing things around. Our most frequent guest Clay Jenkinson interviews host Jack Russell Weinstein. That’s right, after almost four years of asking other people about their research, it’s his turn on the hot seat. So tune in for a s spirited and spontaneous discussion.
Clay Jenkinson is the Director of The Dakota Institute through The Lewis & Clark Fort Mandan Foundation, Chief Consultant to The Theodore Roosevelt Center through Dickinson State University, Distinguished Humanities Scholar at Bismarck State College, and a columnist for the Bismarck Tribune. A cultural commentator who has devoted most of his professional career to public humanities programs, Clay is the host of public radio’s The Thomas Jefferson Hour. He has been honored by two United States presidents for his work. On November 6, 1989, he received one of the first five Charles Frankel Prizes, the National Endowment for the Humanities’ highest award (now called the National Humanities Medal), at the nomination of the NEH Chair, Lynne Cheney. Since his first work with the North Dakota Humanities Council in the late 1970s, including a pioneering first-person interpretation of Meriwether Lewis, Clay Jenkinson has made thousands of presentations throughout the United States and its territories, including Guam and the Northern Marianas. He is also the author of numerous bookshttps://commons.und.edu/why-radio-archive/1087/thumbnail.jp
Letter from Charles F. Blankenship, Medical Director, Retired, Department of Health and Human Services to Assistant Surgeon General, Leonard Bachman, Division of Hospitals and Clinics, Department of Health and Human Services, August 12, 1981
Letter from Dr. Charles F. Blankenship recounting his participation in the medical component of the forced evacuation of 120,000 Japanese nationals and Japanese Americans from the West Coast to internment camps early in 1942.In 1942, Charles Blankenship, a physician with the U. S. Public Health Service and medical consultant for the Service Command, United States Army in the San Francisco Regional Office, was given the assignment to inspect all Japanese American incarcerees from the Southern California sector for medical conditions before or as they entered the Santa Anita Racetrack Assembly Center, and later Manzanar, Gila River, and Rohwer incarceration camps
The Production and Reception of a Mandaic Incantation
Chapter from: Häberl, Charles G. (ed.) (2009). Afroasiatic Studies in Memory of Robert Hetzron: Proceedings of the 35th Annual Meeting of the North American Conference on Afroasiatic Linguistics (NACAL 35), 130-148
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