4,636 research outputs found
Season 4, Episode 2: Transition Administration w/ Professors Michael Herz & Kate Shaw
Runtime 32:54The guests for this episode are Professors Michael Herz and Kate Shaw, Professors of Law at Cardozo School of Law in New York, New York. Professors Herz and Shaw join the pod to chat about their Article, “Transition Administration,” which discusses the complexities of presidential transitions and suggests possible reforms to presidential transitions following the difficulties of the 2020 presidential transition.Silberberg, Lee; Herz, Michael; Shaw, Kate. (2022). Season 4, Episode 2: Transition Administration w/ Professors Michael Herz & Kate Shaw. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/258989
Just the block
Catalogue of an exhibition held at 200 Gertrude Street, Fitzroy, Vic., 7 - 29 July 1995.Artists: Kate Shaw, Natasha Johns-Messenger
Professor Kate Shaw Comments on ABC News About Impeachment Trial
Professor Kate Shaw analyzed the impeachment trial with George Stephanopoulos on ABC News.https://larc.cardozo.yu.edu/cardozo-news-2020/1007/thumbnail.jp
Lost Light, Kayla Shaw, Spring 2020
Kayla Shaw was the first �freshman� to enroll in SIS Seminar. She is a pre�med major from Birmingham, Alabama
The Forgotten, Kayla Shaw, Spring 2020
Kayla Shaw was the first �freshman� to enroll in SIS Seminar. She is a pre�med major from Birmingham, Alabama
Absented Women’s Voices: Problematising Masculinity in Jim Crace’s Fiction
Absented Women’s Voices: Problematising Masculinity in Jim Crace’s Fiction Kate Aughterson (University of Brighton) Kristeva’s formulation of Semiotic - the silent rhythmic undercurrents and disruptions to the dominant Symbolic order which dislocate narrative and (gendered) subjects - act as an intertext to Crace’s narratives. Narrative dis-location is central to Crace’s work. Kristeva’s poetics offer a way of seeing how Crace’s narrative gaps and silences function as self-conscious rhetorical and narratorial strategies to offer up spaces for ‘other’ identities. Through narrative sleigh-of-hand, partial focalisations, lacunae, slippery semantics and shifting grammatical tenses Crace disturbs the microcosmic worlds his (male) narrators create. The absence of female voices (dead wives, desired woman, the young girl violated) is key to Crace’s cumulatively semiotic rhetorical technique: a blank space - an ‘other’ – a rich silence on which the reader writes alternative histories and stories
ATLAS News: Q&A with EPS Outreach Award-Winner 2015 Kate Shaw
Photos supporting the ATLAS News article "Q&A with EPS Outreach Award-Winner Kate Shaw
Why austerity may be making a post-COVID-19 comeback in Britain
Is austerity coming back? Or has our thinking changed since the aftermath of the global financial crisis? Kate Alexander Shaw identifies key narratives which suggest that austerity still exerts a powerful pull on policy discourse in the UK
Why austerity may be making a post-COVID comeback – in Britain, at least
Is austerity coming back? Or has our thinking changed since the aftermath of the global financial crisis? Kate Alexander Shaw (LSE) identifies key narratives which suggest that austerity still exerts a powerful pull on policy discourse in the UK
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