972 research outputs found

    Beyond Inclusion: Embedding First Nations Knowledge in Sustainable Community Design

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    Join guest lecturers Teresa Cochrane and Merinda Walters as they explore the critical role of First Nations knowledge systems in shaping sustainable communities. Drawing from academic research into Country-centered conservation, alongside industry experience in environmental science and stakeholder engagement, this session will challenge students to rethink conventional planning approaches. Through real-world examples and cultural insights, the lecture will highlight how holistic, place-based engagement can lead to more resilient, inclusive, and future-focused built environments

    Women Leaders Affinity Group: Dr. Charlene Walters

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    Date: March 25, 2021 Guest: Dr. Charlene Walters, entrepreneurship coach, business and branding mentor and author The Women Leaders Affinity Group, hosted by Dr. Amanda Main and Dr. Ellen Ramsey from the College of Business and Management, presented a Zoom event with Dr. Charlene Walters, who spoke about the realities of being an entrepreneur and the keys to success. Walters is an entrepreneurship coach, business and branding mentor and author of Launch Your Inner Entrepreneur.https://spiral.lynn.edu/bus_women-leaders/1001/thumbnail.jp

    Working 'in the opposite direction': Joseph Beuys in the field

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    This paper will argue that revisiting the ideas and practice of the twentieth-century German artist Joseph Beuys is germane to contemporary discussions of place and human ecology in anthropology. Through an exploration of work undertaken by the artist and a discussion of the influence of Goethe on his practice, it will explore the way in which Beuys' approach to art was informed by a set of methodologies which saw the inner life of the human being and the outer world with which she or he engages as profoundly linked in both physical and psychic terms. Beuys' work points, the author will suggest, to the potential for a myth of fieldwork and a communication of its results that places the anthropologist within a constantly changing world of matter that she or he shapes and transforms and is, in turn, transformed by

    Your eyes see distant stories / lifting off its fragile walls. You wonder / at its faint revelations.

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    Signed by the author / illustratorIt says that Jon von Zelowitz assisted Peter KochGoudy Thirt

    Finding and losing schizophrenia

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    Author Nathan Filer discussed his latest book, The Heartland: Finding and Losing Schizophrenia. He was in conversation with Professor James Walters, deputy director at NCMH and professor of psychiatry at Cardiff University

    L-R: Katie Lee; Natalie Gignoux; Leo Walters exploring a side canyon.

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    Photo of Arizona folk singer and author Katie Lee (far left), Natalie Gignoux (center), and Leo Walters (far right) exploring a side canyon in Glen Canyon, Uta

    Trial brief, File no. 45738

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    Trial brief in the case United States of America vs. Gordon Kiyoshi Hirabayashi, submitted by Hirabayashi's attorney Frank L. Walters in the northern division of the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington.The ACLU-Northern California case file records contain legal documents and correspondence pertaining to the case Ex parte Mitsuye Endo (1944), in which the United States Supreme court unanimously ruled that the federal government could not indefinitely detain United States citizens who were loyal to the government. Files include documents related to the Gordon Hirabayashi Supreme Court case Hirabayashi v. United States

    L-R: Katie Lee; Leo Walters; Bruce Berger sitting on a boat on the Colorado River.

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    Photo of Photo of Arizona folk singer and author Katie Lee (far left), Leo Walters (center), and writer Bruce Berger (far right), sitting on a raft on the Colorado River, Glen Canyon, Uta
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