791 research outputs found
Jere Nash Interview with Terrell Stubbs
Interview conducted by author Jere Nash with Simpson County Mississippi legislator Terrell Stubbs in the process of writing Mississippi Politics: The Struggle for Power, 1976-2006. Topics covered include Stubbs\u27s background; Noah S. (Soggy) Sweat Jr.; Stubbs first campaign for the state legislature; discussion of his legislative colleagues, committee assignments, and learning the ropes; Cliff Finch; William Winter; education reform; reapportionment; Buddie Newman and rules changes; highway program; Stubbs chair of Oil and Gas Committee; Ray Mabus; Stubbs\u27s campaign for Congress; Stubbs\u27s family; and Tim Ford
Evolution of the Australian Military Justice System
Dale Stephens, Matthew Stubbs and Joanna Jaros
Options Paper: Corporate Directors’ Responsibility for Cyber Security
Matthew Stubbs, Beth Nosworthy, Samuel White, Elizabeth Watfor
William Stubbs (1825--1901): Victorian historian and churchman
William Stubbs was among the most learned men of the Victorian age. His life and career exemplified many of the concerns, aspirations and values of that era. He rose from poverty in Knaresborough, Yorkshire, to become a vicar, Regius Professor of Modern History at Oxford and then Bishop, successively of Chester and Oxford. Stubbs was among those Victorians who, while drawing inspiration from the past, helped to lay the foundations for the modern world. His great work and lasting achievement was the introduction of academic, medieval history, into the English universities. ^ Essentially an autodidact, Stubbs was the first professor of history in England, as that term is now understood. Inspired by the Oxford Movement and contemporary German historians, Stubbs revolutionized the curriculum at Oxford and displaced the Classics with the study of English medieval history, an endeavor made possible with his Select Charters (1870) and monumental Constitutional History (1873–1878). Stubbs\u27s other service to medieval scholarship was to edit texts for the Rolls Series. As a historian, Stubbs should be seen within the contexts of German historiography, in the manner of Leopold von Ranke and Georg Waitz, and English narrative history as represented by St. Bede, Matthew Paris, Gibbon and Macaulay. ^ Stubbs saw English history as being unique, if not Providential. He stressed its continuity, Teutonic origins, medieval representative Parliament and the significance of the Lancastrian dynasty in the growth of liberty. His political and ecclesiastical interpretations were to be challenged by F. W. Maitland. ^ The Oxford Movement, with it emphasis on pastoral work and scholarship, also inspired Stubbs\u27s work as a High Churchman. His most notable contributions to the Church were his historical defense of its history and identity, as well as his involvement in the Ritualist controversies. Stubbs died in 1901, soon after Queen Victoria herself.
Human rights obligations as a collateral limit on the powers of the Security Council
Matthew Stubb
A brief history of the judicial review of legislation under the Australian Constitution
Matthew Stubb
‘True democratic sympathy’: Charles Stubbs, Christian socialism and English labour, 1863-1912
Charles Stubbs (1845–1912) was the most senior Anglican clergyman to engage supportively with the labour movement in the decades before the Great War. From a curacy in Sheffield during the 1860s he rose to become first Dean of Ely (from 1894) and then Bishop of Truro (from 1906 until his death). The titles of some of his many books give a good flavour of their author: Village Politics: Addresses and Sermons on the Labour Question; The Land and the Labourers (five editions, 1885–1904); Christ and Economics; A Creed for Christian Socialists. An early member of the Guild of St Matthew, a small but influential Christian socialist society founded in 1877 ‘to justify God to the people’, Stubbs was a powerful influence on an important but neglected facet of Christian socialism, one that was ‘Broad Church’ rather than Anglo-Catholic. He was also widely admired in progressive liberal and trade unionist circles for his practical involvement in campaigns in support of land reform, rural renewal, and agricultural labour. This article analyses his thinking about the ‘social witness’ of Christianity, arguing it was an important bridge between the theology of the mid-Victorian socialist F.D. Maurice and post-First World War Christian socialism
sj-docx-2-cre-10.1177_02692155241230270 - Supplemental material for Spatial Neglect: An Exploration of Clinical Assessment Behaviour in Stroke Rehabilitation
Supplemental material, sj-docx-2-cre-10.1177_02692155241230270 for Spatial Neglect: An Exploration of Clinical Assessment Behaviour in Stroke Rehabilitation by Georgia Fisher, Camila Quel de Oliveira, Peter W. Stubbs, Emma Power, Matthew Checketts, Alison Porter-Armstrong and David S. Kennedy in Clinical Rehabilitation</p
sj-docx-3-cre-10.1177_02692155241230270 - Supplemental material for Spatial Neglect: An Exploration of Clinical Assessment Behaviour in Stroke Rehabilitation
Supplemental material, sj-docx-3-cre-10.1177_02692155241230270 for Spatial Neglect: An Exploration of Clinical Assessment Behaviour in Stroke Rehabilitation by Georgia Fisher, Camila Quel de Oliveira, Peter W. Stubbs, Emma Power, Matthew Checketts, Alison Porter-Armstrong and David S. Kennedy in Clinical Rehabilitation</p
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