43,922 research outputs found

    Oral history interview with Johnny (David Jonathan) Lee and Delores Lee, November 20, 1999

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    1 electronic record(s) and derivatives. 1 audio file(s) in 2 parts (wav, mp3) 1.72 GB (1,857,975,816 bytes). 02:33:13. 3 PDF documents (3 scans, jp2). Bag approx. 2.25 GB (2,426,447,140 bytes).Oral history interview with Johnny (David Jonathan) Lee and Delores Lee, November 20, 1999. Hoboken (Ga.). Fieldworker: Laurie K. Sommers. Audio file digitized from DAT tape. Part of the Sacred Harp Series: South Georgia Folklife Project at Valdosta State University Archives and Special Collections

    Letter to the editor from Jonathan Lee, executive director of the Maine Speakout

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    Letter to the editor from Jonathan Lee, executive director of the Maine Speakout Project, rebutting a from the outside piece written by Connie Pacillo and published in the Casco Bay Weekly on Aug. 31, about the gay rights bill that voters will consider in November

    Talking together about Écoles des Sables:Alesandra Seutin and Jonathan Burrows with Lee Miller

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    An evening in early November 2021, Lee met with Alesandra and Jonathan to discuss a series of workshops undertaken at École des Sables, Senegal. What emerged from this conversation was a discussion of the need to interrogate how things are done in an attempt to effect change

    Lee Moore Wash Basin management study

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    abstract: This study identifies the drainage and flooding hazards within the watershed and develops alternatives to address those hazards. It is a comprehensive study that estimates flood and erosion potential, maps watercourses, identifies existing and potential problems and develops preliminary solutions and standards for sound floodplain and stormwater management.Special study (Pima County Regional Flood Control District (Ariz.)) ; 10This study replaces the previous Special Study 10 (12/2//88) entitled: Lee Moore Wash Watershed / Jonathan Fuller, principal investigator

    Jonathan Gabe, Lee F. Monaghan, Key Concepts in Medical Sociology

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    Compte-renduCompte rendu de l'ouvrage : Jonathan Gabe, Lee F. Monaghan (dir.), Key Concepts in Medical Sociology, Sage, coll. " Key Concepts ", 2013, 229 p., deuxième éd., EAN : 9780857024787.Maël Dieudonné, " Jonathan Gabe, Lee F. Monaghan, Key Concepts in Medical Sociology ", Lectures [En ligne], Les comptes rendus, 2013, mis en ligne le 06 septembre 2013. URL : http://lectures.revues.org/1204

    Jonathan Gabe, Lee F. Monaghan, Key Concepts in Medical Sociology

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    Compte-renduCompte rendu de l'ouvrage : Jonathan Gabe, Lee F. Monaghan (dir.), Key Concepts in Medical Sociology, Sage, coll. " Key Concepts ", 2013, 229 p., deuxième éd., EAN : 9780857024787.Maël Dieudonné, " Jonathan Gabe, Lee F. Monaghan, Key Concepts in Medical Sociology ", Lectures [En ligne], Les comptes rendus, 2013, mis en ligne le 06 septembre 2013. URL : http://lectures.revues.org/1204

    Jonathan Gabe, Lee F. Monaghan, Key Concepts in Medical Sociology

    No full text
    Compte-renduCompte rendu de l'ouvrage : Jonathan Gabe, Lee F. Monaghan (dir.), Key Concepts in Medical Sociology, Sage, coll. " Key Concepts ", 2013, 229 p., deuxième éd., EAN : 9780857024787.Maël Dieudonné, " Jonathan Gabe, Lee F. Monaghan, Key Concepts in Medical Sociology ", Lectures [En ligne], Les comptes rendus, 2013, mis en ligne le 06 septembre 2013. URL : http://lectures.revues.org/1204

    jonathan-30-jun-2022-demo

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    jonathan-30-jun-2022-demo</p

    Citizen participation in news

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    The process of producing news has changed significantly due to the advent of the Web, which has enabled the increasing involvement of citizens in news production. This trend has been given many names, including participatory journalism, produsage, and crowd-sourced journalism, but these terms are ambiguous and have been applied inconsistently, making comparison of news systems difficult. In particular, it is problematic to distinguish the levels of citizen involvement, and therefore the extent to which news production has genuinely been opened up. In this paper we perform an analysis of 32 online news systems, comparing them in terms of how much power they give to citizens at each stage of the news production process. Our analysis reveals a diverse landscape of news systems and shows that they defy simplistic categorisation, but it also provides the means to compare different approaches in a systematic and meaningful way. We combine this with four case studies of individual stories to explore the ways that news stories can move and evolve across this landscape. Our conclusions are that online news systems are complex and interdependent, and that most do not involve citizens to the extent that the terms used to describe them imply
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