2,764 research outputs found

    Book review : War and gender by Joshua S. Goldstein

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    Review of: Joshua S. Goldstein. War and gender. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 200

    Joshua S. Goldstein, Long Cycles. Prosperity and War in the Modern Age

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    Grenier Jean-Yves. Joshua S. Goldstein, Long Cycles. Prosperity and War in the Modern Age. In: Annales. Economies, sociétés, civilisations. 44ᵉ année, N. 5, 1989. pp. 1175-1178

    Formal Relationships: Introduction and Orientation

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    In 2009, Demographic Research will be publishing short reports on mathematical relationships in formal demography in a new Special Collection called "Formal Relationships". This first publication outlines the goals and procedures for publications in the collection. The guest editors of the collection are Joshua R. Goldstein and James W. Vaupel.

    Diagnosis and Management of Acute Intracerebral Hemorrhage

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    Intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is the deadliest type of stroke and up to half of patients die in hospital. Blood pressure management, coagulopathy reversal, and intracranial pressure control are the mainstays of acute ICH treatment. Prevention of hematoma expansion and minimally invasive hematoma evacuation are promising therapeutic strategies under investigation. This article provides an updated review on ICH diagnosis and management in the emergency department

    Waste is "wicked" when we try to solve it. Author's response to Joshua Goldstein's comments

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    This is the author's response to Dr. Goldstein's response to our recent article The rise and fall of a Waste cityin the construction of an urban circular economic systenif The changing landscape of waste in Beijingin the February 2016 issue of this publication. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.SCI(E)REVIEW175-17611

    Formal Relationships: Introduction and Orientation

    No full text
    In 2009, Demographic Research will be publishing short reports on mathematical relationships in formal demography in a new Special Collection called "Formal Relationships". This first publication outlines the goals and procedures for publications in the collection. The guest editors of the collection are Joshua R. Goldstein and James W. Vaupel

    The Carbon Footprint of Household Energy Use in the United States

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    Supporting data and python scripts for the article, "The Carbon Footprint of Household Energy Use in the United States" by Benjamin Goldstein, Dimitrios Gounaridis, and Joshua P. Newel

    Interview with Joseph Goldstein

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    Resume of the life, business and social activities of Mr Samuel Goldstein

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    The Burnett Archive of Working Class Autobiographies was gathered together by John Burnett, David Vincent and David Mayall whilst compiling their three volumes annotated bibliography, "The Autobiography of the Working Class" (Harvester Press, 1984-1989). This book includes descriptions of unpublished autobiographies and indicates their locations. Excerpts from some of the autobiographies have been published in "Destiny obscure: autobiographies of childhood, education, and family from the1820s to the 1920s", edited by John Burnett (Routledge 1994 and A. Lane, 1982). The authors "sought to identify not only the large numbers of printed works scattered in various local history libraries and record offices, but also extant private memoirs, many of which remain hidden in family attics, known only to the author and a handful of relatives" (Introduction to vol.1, p. xxix). The criteria for inclusion were: the writers were working class for at least part of their lives; they wrote in English; and they lived for some time in England, Scotland or Wales between 1790 and 1945. John Burnett was professor of social history at Brunel University from 1972 to 1990.Brief memoirs of Samuel Goldstein (born Warsaw, Poland 1889). Goldstein outlines his early life and experience working in textiles in London and the United States. Describes periods of unemployment and ill health before setting up a successful business with his brother

    Tribute to Joseph Goldstein

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    Let me begin by quoting from a recently discovered letter that my dad wrote to his father, while serving as a lieutenant in the army in occupied Japan. It was 1946 and he was twenty-two years old. Here, already, he is refusing to acquiesce to social conventions-as if they were somehow eternal truths. I quote: "There are so many things that I want to do, so many important things I want to read. I want to work with and for minority groups that must be educated to demand what are their natural rights. I might find that working up within the ranks of a labor union might be my method. One thing I do knowthat I enjoy myself most when I am working to better the lot of people that haven't found our democracy real.... You may feel that this so called idealism will wear off. Honestly I don't think it ever will or can for each day I realize how much there is that must be done." Later in the letter, he goes on to urge his father, who is in real estate, to "build some comfortable low cost housing units, with the proviso that Negro families and white will be able to participate as tenants.
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