9,873 research outputs found
Replication Data for: Who Uses the Clean Development Mechanism? An Empirical Analyis of Projects in Chinese Provinces.
Replication package for: Bayer, Patrick, Johannes Urpelainen, and Jeremy Wallace. 2013. “Who Uses the Clean Development Mechanism? An Empirical Analyis of Projects in Chinese Provinces.” Global Environmental Change 23(2): 512-521
Replication Data for: Who Uses the Clean Development Mechanism? An Empirical Analyis of Projects in Chinese Provinces.
Replication package for: Bayer, Patrick, Johannes Urpelainen, and Jeremy Wallace. 2013. “Who Uses the Clean Development Mechanism? An Empirical Analyis of Projects in Chinese Provinces.” Global Environmental Change 23(2): 512-521
Art, Biography, Sexuality: Patrick Procktor and Keith Vaughan
This critical review forms a reflection on the research published within the following publications:
Patrick Procktor: Art and Life (Unicorn Press, 2010)
Keith Vaughan: The Mature Oils 1946-1977, (Sansom & Co., 2012)
The research is on two artists, Patrick Procktor (1936-2003), and Keith Vaughan (1912-1977). The monograph on Procktor – previously one of the least documented of the generation of artists who came to prominence in London in the Sixties – positions him in a history of art from which he had been notably absent. The research on Vaughan asserts a new reading of his work, one that is both deeper and more nuanced in its analysis of the ways in which personal experience and sexuality are encoded autobiographically within his work. Crucially, in both artists biography and work are symbiotically linked; the research therefore examines the links between life and art.
Revisionary in intent, the work examines trajectories of experience of gay British (or rather, English) artists in the twentieth century, artists who sought to express themselves and forge careers within the constraints of a heteronormative society, albeit one in which attitudes to sexuality were undergoing change. As gay men, both were constrained by the social mores of their times, and each used painting as a means to affirm personal and sexual identities. A key research interest is in the ways in which sexuality and persona are reflected in critical responses to the artist’s work: in Vaughan, Procktor and other gay male artists of the period. The writing on both Procktor and Vaughan examines the relationship between their personal and professional/artistic lives, framed within a broader socio-political and art historical context. It asserts the place of biography as a means to understand and form new readings of the work. The work adds substantially to the literature and wider discourse on post-war British painting and social history
Jeremy Ruth, clarinet
Eric P. MandatScott McAllisterDavid BakerKanye West, arr. Time for Three, trans. Jeremy Rut
Krikler (Jeremy) : Revolution from Above, Rebellion from Below : The Agrarian Transwaal al the Turn of the Century
Videcoq Patrick. Krikler (Jeremy) : Revolution from Above, Rebellion from Below : The Agrarian Transwaal al the Turn of the Century. In: Revue française d'histoire d'outre-mer, tome 82, n°306, 1er trimestre 1995. pp. 117-118
Beyond Doctrine: Alternative and Critical Approaches to Law
raditionally law has been viewed as a system of rules to be analysed and applied with mechanical logic. But instead of thinking of law as a “closed” system that can only be understood through traditional legal research and analysis, it can be conceptualised as an “open” system in which insights, approaches, and influences from other disciplines can be brought to bear. Beyond Doctrine: Alternative and Critical Approaches to Law is the first comprehensive Australian resource for approaching law as something more than a system of rules.
This edited collection includes contributions from an impressive array of Australian scholars, each of whom specialises in thinking about law from a different perspective. Whether viewing law as a tool to legitimise oppression (Marxism), as a mechanism to provide the most efficient outcomes (law and economics), as an artefact of particular historical events and forces (legal history), as a method to impose and undo gender hierarchies (Queer and feminist legal theory), as the means to explain – and perhaps ameliorate – the effects of the “Age of Discovery” (decolonialisation studies), and much more, these theories ask us to think more deeply about law and what it means.
Beyond Doctrine provides an authoritative and thoughtful introduction to different legal methodologies and situates those methodologies in an Australian context. It will appeal to students of legal methodology courses and legal scholars
A survey of arguments against the constitutional recognition of Indigenous Australian peoples
In the various debates about the precise form that the recognition of indigenous persons in the Australian Constitution should take, a threshold question is often taken for granted: should there be any recognition at all? This article surveys popular, academic, and political opposition to the movement for recognition derived from recent newspaper articles, scholarly writing, submission to legislative committees, the Recognise What? movement, and more. Through categorization and synthesis, a broad typology of who opposes recognition, and why, can be constructed. Such an analysis may allow both sides to better understand the positions taken and arguments made during the debate
Jeremy Cronin: tales of struggle
The author of a collection of poems, Inside, Jeremy Patrick Cronin balanced the seemingly ethereal persona of philosopher-poet with the pragmatism of focused activism. He used his considerable intellect and talent to further the aims of the liberation struggle and the South African Communist Party (SACP), and has served as an MP and Cabinet minister. He was not afraid to speak out against the apartheid government, and he is equally not afraid to speak out against the ANC government when, guided by his intellect ethics, he feels it necessary.
Jeremy Cronin: tales of struggle
The author of a collection of poems, Inside, Jeremy Patrick Cronin balanced the seemingly ethereal persona of philosopher-poet with the pragmatism of focused activism. He used his considerable intellect and talent to further the aims of the liberation struggle and the South African Communist Party (SACP), and has served as an MP and Cabinet minister. He was not afraid to speak out against the apartheid government, and he is equally not afraid to speak out against the ANC government when, guided by his intellect ethics, he feels it necessary.
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