367 research outputs found

    Choosing a Better Life? Evaluating the Moving to Opportunity Social Experiment by John Goering and Judith D. Feins

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    Reviewed Work: Choosing a Better Life? Evaluating the Moving to Opportunity Social Experiment by John Goering and Judith D. Fein

    Choosing a Better Life? Evaluating the Moving to Opportunity Social Experiment by John Goering and Judith D. Feins

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    Reviewed Work: Choosing a Better Life? Evaluating the Moving to Opportunity Social Experiment by John Goering and Judith D. Fein

    Response to Review of Choosing a Better Life? Evaluating the Moving to Opportunity Social Experiment by John Goering and Judith D. Feins

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    Response to Review of Choosing a Better Life? Evaluating the Moving to Opportunity Social Experiment by John Goering and Judith D. Fein

    Response to Review of Choosing a Better Life? Evaluating the Moving to Opportunity Social Experiment by John Goering and Judith D. Feins

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    Response to Review of Choosing a Better Life? Evaluating the Moving to Opportunity Social Experiment by John Goering and Judith D. Fein

    Goering- Schmidt : ulkomaalaisia viljelyskasveja : tauluja selittävä teksti

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    Pääasiallisesti Hermann Tewes'in mukaan suomeksi toimittanut John Lindén.Kannessa: Ulkomaalaisia viljelyskasveja: selityksiä Goering-Schmidtin tauluihin.ei saavutettav

    Tolkien\u27s Lost Chaucer (2019) by John M. Bowers

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    Book review by Nelson Goering of Tolkien\u27s Lost Chaucer (2019) by John M. Bower

    The impacts of new neighborhoods on poor families: evaluating the policy implications of the moving to opportunity demonstration

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    This paper was presented at the conference "Policies to Promote Affordable Housing," cosponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and New York University's Furman Center for Real Estate and Urban Policy, February 7, 2002. It was part of Session 3: The Impact of Housing on People and Places.Housing ; Housing policy ; Poverty ; Demography

    Hurrah, die Butter ist alle!

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    INSCRIPTION: recto-(printed on page) "Hurrah, die Butter ist alle! Goering in seiner Hamburger Rede: 'Erz hat stets ein Reich stark gemacht, Butter und Schmalz haben hochstens ein Volk fett gemacht'." "Fotomontage: John Heartfield" ["Goring in his Hamburg speech: 'Iron ore has always made an empire strong, butter and lard have at most made people fat.'"]full vie

    \u3cem\u3eMoving to Opportunity: The Story of an American Experiment to Fight Ghetto Poverty.\u3c/em\u3e Xavier de Souza Briggs, Susan J. Popkin & John Goering. Reviewed by Margeurite Rosenthal.

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    Xavier de Souza Briggs, Susan J. Popkin & John Goering, Moving to Opportunity: The Story of an American Experiment to Fight Ghetto Poverty. Oxford University Press, 2010. $19.95, paperback

    John of Freiburg and the Usury Prohibition in the Late Middle Ages: A Study in the Popularization of Medieval Canon Law

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    In this dissertation I provide an edition of the treatise on usury (De usuris, bk. 2, tit. 7) contained in the Dominican friar John of Freiburg’s (d. 1314) Summa confessorum (ca. 1298) – a comprehensive encyclopedia of pastoral care that John wrote for the benefit of his fellow friar preachers and all others charged with the cure of souls. The edition is prefaced by a detailed biography of John of Freiburg, an account of the genesis of the Summa confessorum that places the work in the context of John’s other literary productions, a commentary on the contents of the treatise on usury, and a study of the influence of John’s treatise on subsequent confessors’ manuals up to the end of the fourteenth century with a special concentration on the history of the Summa confessorum on usury in England. Based on an analysis of the social function of confessors’ manuals and the reception history of John’s treatise on usury, I contend that the Summa confessorum offers us a window into what many medieval men and women of all social classes in widespread areas of Europe might have known about the medieval Church’s prohibition of taking interest in a loan. As a prominent vehicle for the popularization of medieval canon law, then, the Summa confessorum occupies a significant place in the intellectual and social history of the Late Middle Ages. Finally, I argue that John’s choices in crafting his treatise on usury were ultimately influenced to a significant extent by the clash of economic interests between the old landed aristocracy and the rising burgher class in Freiburg, where John wrote the Summa confessorum and served as lector of the Dominican convent for over thirty years.Ph
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