6,165 research outputs found
Hamilton, Catherine Jane [pseud. Retlaw Spring] (1841–1935), author and journalist
Hamilton, Catherine Jane [pseud. Retlaw Spring] (1841-1935), author and journalist, was born on 25 January 1841 at Kilmersdon, Somerset, where she was baptized on 12 April 1841, the younger of two daughters of Richard Hamilton (1805?-1859), vicar of Kilmersdon, and his wife Charlotte, née Cooper (1809-1882), the fifth daughter of William Cooper, of Queens County, Ireland. She was of Irish heritage on both sides. Her father belonged to a military family with roots in Strabane (county Tyrone) - his father, John Hamilton, and her father’s four older brothers were all officers in the Fifth Foot – and was a graduate of Trinity College Dublin. He had been a bright scholar with an aptitude for languages, and as a preacher was praised for his powerful sermons and his ability to bring the Bible to life for his parishioners
Dr. Jennifer Erkulwater and Dr. Catherine Bagwell – Faculty Author Interview
Featured authors are Dr. Catherine Bagwell, Associate Professor of Psychology and Dr. Jennifer Erkulwater, Associate Professor of Political Science. Dr. Rick Mayes is another co-author, but he is unable to join us today due to a research leave project in Peru. Their new book, Medicating Children: ADHD and Pediatric Mental Health, integrates analyses of the clinical, political, historical, educational, social, economic and legal aspects of ADHD and the medications and treatment surrounding the mental disorder
Interview with Catherine McCall
Interview with Dr. Catherine McCall, graduate of UNCW's MFA in Creative Writing program and author of Lifeguarding: A Memoir of Secrets, Swimming, and the South
Recensione a: Catherine Needham and Jon Glasby (eds.), Debates in Personalisation, Policy Press, 2014
“Fare un bilancio della personalizzazione”: con questa intenzione nasce il libro Debates in Personalisation di Catherine Needham e Jon Glasby, professori dell’Health Services Management Centre dell’Università di Birmingham. Un bilancio con molti scuri e alcune grandi illuminazioni. Per rendicontare quella che è stata ed è un’innovazione di welfare sono stati ingaggiati professionisti, utenti, familiari e accademici: alcuni critici della personalizzazione sin dai suoi esordi, altri suoi sostenitori e una dose mediana di agnostici. Il libro ha una sua utilità soprattutto per rintracciare i pro e i contro, i limiti e le positività della personalizzazione così come progettata e attuata in Inghilterra
From Kulim to Singapore: Catherine Lim's literary life
The publication in 1993 by Heinemann Asia of a volume of stories entitled The Best of Catherine Lim emphasised the significant contribution which this talented author has made to recent Singaporean fiction. The 1993 edition contains work from five of Catherine Lim's previously published collections, from Little Ironies (1978) to Deadline for Love (1992), and reflects the confidence which her publishers usually have in her capacity to draw a strong local reading audience. In fact, a Catherine Lim book is quite capable of attracting sales of 20,00O copies in a first edition
From Kulim to Singapore: Catherine Lim's literary life
The publication in 1993 by Heinemann Asia of a volume of stories entitled The Best of Catherine Lim emphasised the significant contribution which this talented author has made to recent Singaporean fiction. The 1993 edition
contains work from five of Catherine Lim's previously published collections, from Little Ironies (1978) to Deadline for Love (1992), and reflects the confidence which her publishers usually have in her capacity to draw a strong local reading audience. In fact, a Catherine Lim book is quite capable of attracting sales of 20,000 copies in a first edition
"On Writing with Catherine Wagner"
Includes descriptive metadata provided by producer in MP3 file: "Catherine Wagner is the author of two books of poems, 'Miss America' and 'Macular Hole,' and co-editor of 'Not for Mothers Only: Contemporary Poems on Child-Getting and Child-Rearing.'" Listen to an interview conducted by Tom Orange
The Family History of Catherine D. Lumley
Catherine Lumley authored this family history as part of the course requirements for HIST 550/770: Your Family in History. This course was offered online in Spring 2023 and was submitted to the Pittsburg State University Digital Commons. Please contact the author directly with any questions or comments: [email protected]
From the Windrush Generation to the ‘Air Jamaica generation’: local authority support for families with no recourse to public funds
Over the past year, immigration has been a continued focus of policy debates in the global north, with governments in Hungary and Italy elected on openly anti-immigration and ‘welfare chauvinist’ platforms. On the other side of the Atlantic the US federal government family separations policy has also been a source of fierce dispute. In the UK, the potential implications of Brexit for EU migrants in the UK and the treatment of the children of the ‘Windrush Generation’ under the hostile (or ‘compliant’) environment has caused particular controversy and the precipitated the resignation of the Home Secretary
Changing role of women : Mary Catherine Bateson
Host, Bill Moyers ; guest, Mary Catherine Bateson. Producer/director, Betsy McCarthy.The subject of women and their roles at home and at work is one of the major and continuing stories of the day. Mary Catherine Bateson, anthropologist and author, has written on topics ranging from the social consequences of the AIDS epidemic to life with her celebrated parents, anthropologists Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson. One of her primary areas of interest is the social consequences of the changing roles of women. In this program with Bill Moyers, she talks about how the idea of "home" as a place to give and receive nurture might become a new metaphor for the workplace. Bateson also discusses how women can create order and sense out of their conflicting commitments
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