15,133 research outputs found

    Lay School of Theology 1968

    No full text
    Digitized copy of a black and white photograph of the Lay School of Theology. 1 TIFF

    Lay School of Theology 1966

    No full text
    Digitized copy of a black and white photograph of the Lay School of Theology. 1 TIFF

    Lay School of Theology 1960.

    No full text
    Digitized Copies of Four photographs of the Lay School of Theology. 4 TIFF

    Photographs of the First Lay School of Theology.

    No full text
    A digitized copy of a black and white photograph. members of the Lay School of Theology class members. 2 TiffPhotograph 1 students standing on the steps of the Lark Building.Photograph 2 a selection of the students in class

    Drawing the Line: An Exploration of How Lay People Construct Child Neglect

    No full text
    This thesis uses a Foucauldian approach to explore how lay people construct child neglect in England. The concept of child neglect developed after the Industrial Revolution in conjunction with the construction of ‘normal’ childhood. Both depend on developmental models of childhood produced by psy-complex discourse. However, the knowledge producing the ‘normal’ family and the disciplinary institutions producing and protecting the ‘normal’ childhood have been challenged by late modernity, with a potential impact on what can be considered ‘abnormal’ and therefore neglectful. Recent years have seen an increasing professional and political focus on both the importance of child neglect, and the role of lay people in child protection – ‘everybody’s business’. It is unclear how lay people construct child neglect, a category that properly results from political and moral choices made by society. To analyse how lay people construct child neglect, data was collected from focus group discussions between 46 self-defined ‘lay’ people. Children were constructed as having developmental needs during childhood, which, if unmet, could cause long term problems for child and society. Four clusters of needs were identified: physical, emotional, training and supervisory. If these needs were unmet, children could be seen as Deprived, Unloved, Uncontrolled or Escaping. However, this did not mean they were positioned as neglected. Neglect required some abnormal adult/parent behaviour. The normal parent was non-neglectful although sometimes temporarily Overburdened, the abnormal parent was neglectful, categorised as Clueless, Underinvested or Unsuitable. Lay people were constructed as having a responsibility to support parents and families within their midst. However the forces of late modernity, particularly globalisation, challenged the normal/abnormal family binary, leaving lay people unclear about where society and/or child protection professionals draw the line between normal and neglectful childhoods. The implications of these constructions for children, parents, state, professionals and lay people are examined and recommendations made

    Unprecedented staining of polar lipids by a luminescent rhenium complex revealed by FTIR microspectroscopy in adipocytes

    No full text
    Data source: Supplementary information, http://www.rsc.org/suppdata/c6/mb/c6mb00242k/c6mb00242k1.pdfFourier transform infrared (FTIR) microspectroscopy and confocal imaging have been used to demonstrate that the neutral rhenium(i) tricarbonyl 1,10-phenanthroline complex bound to 4-cyanophenyltetrazolate as the ancillary ligand is able to localise in regions with high concentrations of polar lipids such as phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), sphingomyelin, sphingosphine and lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) in mammalian adipocytes.C. A. Bader, E. A. Carter, A. Safitri, P. V. Simpson, P. Wright, S. Stagni, M. Massi, P. A. Lay, D. A. Brooksa and S. E. Plus

    Report on professional attachment with Learning Vision International Pte Ltd.

    No full text
    This PA report provides the reader with a good understanding of the background of the PA company to which I was attached. A thorough description fo two stimulating projects that I was responsible for can be found in Chapter Three of the report. During the 8 weeks, I wrote a business plan for a Book Club for LVI and carried out a test marketing. i also assist in the setting up a new child care centre at Nanyang Polytechnic. On the whole, it had been a very enriching and rewarding experience which I believed had better prepared me for working life

    South African responses to Open Access publishing: a survey of the research community

    No full text
    Open access publishing offers wide benefits to the scholarly community and may also afford relief to financially embattled academic libraries. The progress of the open access model rests upon the acceptance and validation of open access journals and open archives or institutional repositories by the academic mainstream, particularly by publishing researchers. To what extent are the key actors in the South African research system aware of the advantages of open access? This article reports on the findings of a recent survey undertaken to assess the current awareness, concerns and depth of support for open access amongst local researchers, research managers and policy makers in South Africa. The study focuses on issues of quality, article or author charges and the established academic reward system. It concludes that within the prevailing framework, there is little prospect that academics would choose to publish within open access journals. Recommendations for advocacy by the library community are proposed

    Assessment of the Possible Lay-Out Influence on the HCLL-TBM Nuclear Response

    No full text
    The Department of Nuclear Engineering of the University of Palermo (DIN) was involved, since several years, in the study of the nuclear response of the helium cooled lithium lead (HCLL) test blanket module (TBM) which will be tested in ITER. In this framework a research campaign was performed, at the DIN, to asses the nuclear response of the TBM in a toroidal lay-out, with the specific aim to investigate the possible lay-out influence on the module nuclear behaviour by comparing the results obtained with those presented in a similar previous work focussed on the most recent design of the poloidal HCLLTBM. A computational approach based on the Monte Carlo method was followed and a realistic 3D heterogeneous model of the HCLL-TBM in a toroidal lay-out was set-up. The main features of the HCLL-TBM nuclear response were determined, such as power deposited by neutrons and photons and tritium production rate with the spatial distributions of their volumetric densities. Structural material damage through DPA and He and H gas production rates were assessed too. The results obtained showed that, as expected, the orientation slightly influences the HCLLTBM nuclear behaviour mainly due to the different relative position of the module with respect to the D-T plasma
    corecore