803 research outputs found
The William A. Hinds American Communities Collection
This article discusses the life and contributions of William A. Hinds, who in his book American Communities, tried to document communistic societies within America, such as the Oneida Community. The article includes a list of the communities and associations that Hinds documented
Assignment of (1)H and (15)N resonances of murine Tec SH3 domain
Sharon E. Pursglove, Terrence D. Mulhern, Mark G. Hinds, Raymond S. Norton, Grant W. Booke
Private property : Charles Brockden Brown\u27s Gendered Economics of Virtue
By Elizabeth Jane Wall Hinds, College at Brockport faculty member.
Private Property explores Charles Brockden Brown\u27s novels Wieland, Ormond, Arthur Mervyn, and Edgar Huntly; his dialogue on women\u27s rights, Alcuin; and a few less well-known works such as The Man at Home series of essays and Carwin, the Biloquist, with attention to Brown\u27s differentiation of gender in economic matters. Author Elizabeth Jane Wall Hinds takes on the terms of economic positioning in these works, suggesting that Brown\u27s fictional women look nothing at all like his men within the republicanism that was growing to embrace an emerging capitalism during the American 1780s and 1790s. The new economic realities of this era contained the seeds of a changing definition of virtue, a definition suited to an economically defined and specifically capitalist male citizen operating in an increasingly large public space of activity. At the same time, an emerging cult of domesticity came to define the virtue of women within the growing U.S. capitalist economy.https://digitalcommons.brockport.edu/bookshelf/1299/thumbnail.jp
Investigating environmental identity, well-being and meaning
This document is the author deposited version. You are advised to consult the publisher's version if you wish to cite from it. Published version HINDS, Joe and SPARKS, Paul (2009). Investigating environmental identity, well-being and meaning. Ecopsychology, 1 (4), 181-186. Repository use policy Copyright © and Moral Rights for the papers on this site are retained by the individual authors and/or other copyright owners. Users may download and/or print one copy of any article(s) in SHURA to facilitate their private study or for non-commercial research. You may not engage in further distribution of the material or use it for any profit-making activities or any commercial gain
1983-1984: The Splintered Wood
Peter Silbert as Jack Sumner and Lois Holmes as Mrs. Bessie Hinds (in background)The Splintered Wood;Grayscal
Real-time groundwater monitoring of managed recharge dispersion of groundwater at Hinds, Canterbury
The Hinds Plains is underlain by a glacial outwash aquifer that has been subject to nitrate-nitrogen accumulation under intensive agriculture for at least the last 40 years. Canterbury Water and a number of associated parties are in the process of undertaking a pilot trial of managed aquifer recharge by applying up to 500 litres per second of very low nitrate content race water to an infiltration basin. The author intends to provide characterisation of the displacement and dispersion of native, high nitrate groundwater in the shallow water bearing layers down-gradient of the infiltration basin. The means of characterisation utilizes locally developed optical nitrate sensors suspended in the slotted interval of a series of monitoring bores immediately beneath the pre-trial water table. The initial time-series of high frequency nitrate measurements is capable of batch telemetry to the investigation base offices, allowing superior data-validation and capture.
Having a network of continuous and periodically sampled bores, the investigation was able to assess the effect on down-gradient groundwater nitrate concentration in the lateral and vertical planes. The influence of open framework gravels will be examined as they affect differential passage of the low nitrate concentration peak following the onset of injection. Continuous nitrate monitoring also serves to support the assessments of environmental impacts of the pilot project in the wider Hinds Plains, including domestic water bores and spring-fed creeks or drains
Hinds Junior College band
Miss Hospitality Paradehttps://egrove.olemiss.edu/gartin_photo/1041/thumbnail.jp
The politics of powerlessness: the impact of sex, race, and class on the political and economic development of black women in Hinds County and Sunflower County, Mississippi, 1984
In recent years there have been many studies which have focused on the plight of Black women in the United States. Some of these studies have focused on the issues of racism and sexism and have sought to debunk the myths and distorted pejorative images of Black women. Although the race/sex dichotomy has been investigated, few works have addressed the class question or connected it to race and sex. Even fewer studies have examined race, sex and class as contributors to the political and economic powerlessness of Black women. To achieve a better understanding of the dynamics of race, sex and class and their impact on political and economic development, it was hypothesized in this study that (1) race is viewed by Black women as the primary factor contributing to economic and political powerlessness; (2) sex and class are acknowledged as problems but not as important a force as race; and (3) problems stemming from the issues of race, sex and class will only be addressed on a superficial level within the framework of the American capitalist and patriarchal order. The focus of this study was on Black women in an urban setting (Hinds County) and a rural setting (Sunflower County) in Mississippi. Data were derived from (1) content analysis of books, periodicals, newspapers, videotapes, and manuscript collections; (2) the administration of a survey; and (3) personal interviews with Black women in the two counties. The data supported the basic premises of the study; that is, that race is viewed as the primary problem affecting the economic and political development of Black women while sex and class are of secondary import. Politically, Black women remain a negligible and unorganized force in Hinds and Sunflower Counties. Their political activities have been confined primarily to voting. Economically, they are overwhelmingly in the working/lower class and continue to be channeled into service and domestic occupations. Race, sex and class have been manipulated by those in the American capitalist and patriarchal order who wield power and influence (Whites and males) in order to maintain dominance over Blacks and women. Black women exist in both of these dominated groups; hence, they suffer from dual oppression. Their burden is tripled because of class distinctions. Thus, Black women find themselves at the bottom of the hierarchy in American society. As shown in Hinds and Sunflower Counties, integrating Black women into the American political and economic infrastructure without addressing the problems inherent in that structure has not ended their oppression or exploitation. Reasons for their continued subjugation are clearly connected to the issues of race, sex and class as they operate in capitalist patriarchy
1983-1984: The Splintered Wood
Seated, from left: Rose Pickering as Alma Cowart, Lois Holmes as Mrs. Bessie Hinds, and Ellen Lauren as Caroline James Sprowl. Standing, from left: Jack Bittner as Mr. Thomas and Eric Hill as Jared SprowlThe Splintered Wood;Grayscal
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