1,721,206 research outputs found
Price, Jesse Denise Mrs And Helen & Richard Fletcher, [No Service Number]
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/411649Surname: PRICE. Given Name(s) or Initials: JESSE DENISE MRS AND HELEN & RICHARD FLETCHER. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: [No Registration Number]. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 45287.227360
Item: [2016.0049.43913] "Price, Jesse Denise Mrs And Helen & Richard Fletcher, [No Service Number]
sj-docx-1-ejc-10.1177_02673231231189043 - Supplemental material for Comparing the platformization of news media systems: A cross-country analysis
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-ejc-10.1177_02673231231189043 for Comparing the platformization of news media systems: A cross-country analysis by Rasmus Kleis Nielsen and Richard Fletcher in European Journal of Communication</p
online_supp – Supplemental material for How Polarized Are Online and Offline News Audiences? A Comparative Analysis of Twelve Countries
Supplemental material, online_supp for How Polarized Are Online and Offline News Audiences? A Comparative Analysis of Twelve Countries by Richard Fletcher, Alessio Cornia and Rasmus Kleis Nielsen in The International Journal of Press/Politics</p
sj-docx-1-nms-10.1177_14614448221108957 – Supplemental material for The role of news media knowledge for how people use social media for news in five countries
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-nms-10.1177_14614448221108957 for The role of news media knowledge for how people use social media for news in five countries by Anne Schulz, Richard Fletcher and Rasmus Kleis Nielsen in New Media & Society</p
Father-inclusive practice and associated professional competencies
Fathers\u27 roles have changed in recent years to include more care of their children. Services are, as a result, looking for ways to recruit and involve fathers. Incorporating fathers into established family-related services, however, has not proved to be straightforward. Everything from publicity, opening hours, referral procedures and staff training has required rethinking or reviewing. This paper explores the research relating to fathers\u27 involvement with children and the evidence of effective practice for including fathers in health, education and welfare services. Factors that may influence fathers\u27 involvement with services are reported and the competence of practitioners to engage with fathers when they do come into contact with the services are discussed. Richard Fletcher is the team leader for the Engaging Fathers Research Program, Family Action Centre, Faculty of Health, University of Newcastle, NSW
sj-docx-1-hij-10.1177_19401612221112572 - Supplemental material for The Watchdog Press in the Doghouse: A Comparative Study of Attitudes about Accountability Journalism, Trust in News, and News Avoidance
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-hij-10.1177_19401612221112572 for The Watchdog Press in the Doghouse: A Comparative Study of Attitudes about Accountability Journalism, Trust in News, and News Avoidance by Antonis Kalogeropoulos, Benjamin Toff and Richard Fletcher in The International Journal of Press/Politics</p
sj-pdf-1-hij-10.1177_19401612221148981 - Supplemental material for News Can Help! The Impact of News Media and Digital Platforms on Awareness of and Belief in Misinformation
Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-hij-10.1177_19401612221148981 for News Can Help! The Impact of News Media and Digital Platforms on Awareness of and Belief in Misinformation by Sacha Altay, Rasmus Kleis Nielsen and Richard Fletcher in The International Journal of Press/Politics</p
Cross, crescent, and conversion: studies in memory of Richard Fletcher [ed. Simon Barton and Peter Linehan]
It is a testament to the legacy of the late Richard Fletcher that a Festschrift composed in his honour should feature essays by many of the leading historians of a field that he himself had helped to establish in British academe. Indeed, such is the current strength of the academic community of anglophone hispanists on both sides of the Atlantic, that it is easy to forget that it was the pioneering work of Richard Fletcher which helped to launch Spanish medieval history in Britain as a subject deemed worthy of study, as James Campbell makes clear in his warm introductory contribution, the first of the seventeen essays which comprise this book.After Campbell's cordial recollection of the myriad gifts of Fletcher as both scholar and person, the essays which follow are presented in a pleasing progression which more or less follows the chronological sweep of their respective contents. The results are impressive. We begin with Roger Collins and Judith McClure, whose co-authored piece sheds light on the process and progress of Augustine's Mission to Canterbury in 596. The authors demonstrate how to weave highly intelligent speculations, teased from the extant sources, into an engaging narrative in true Fletcheresque style. By the time we reach the last essay of the book, Ian Wood's piece on some of the most remarkable eighteenth- and nineteenth-century forays into the study of the fall of the Western Roman Empire, we have been transported across more than a thousand years of history into the cultural ferment of Enlightenment Europe. Although most of the essays in this Festschrift focus on matters medieval, this is a book of wide-ranging focus; but one which nevertheless retains a unity of composition by managing to reflect something of the breadth of Richard Fletcher's interests.</p
Cross, crescent, and conversion: studies in memory of Richard Fletcher [ed. Simon Barton and Peter Linehan]
It is a testament to the legacy of the late Richard Fletcher that a Festschrift composed in his honour should feature essays by many of the leading historians of a field that he himself had helped to establish in British academe. Indeed, such is the current strength of the academic community of anglophone hispanists on both sides of the Atlantic, that it is easy to forget that it was the pioneering work of Richard Fletcher which helped to launch Spanish medieval history in Britain as a subject deemed worthy of study, as James Campbell makes clear in his warm introductory contribution, the first of the seventeen essays which comprise this book.After Campbell's cordial recollection of the myriad gifts of Fletcher as both scholar and person, the essays which follow are presented in a pleasing progression which more or less follows the chronological sweep of their respective contents. The results are impressive. We begin with Roger Collins and Judith McClure, whose co-authored piece sheds light on the process and progress of Augustine's Mission to Canterbury in 596. The authors demonstrate how to weave highly intelligent speculations, teased from the extant sources, into an engaging narrative in true Fletcheresque style. By the time we reach the last essay of the book, Ian Wood's piece on some of the most remarkable eighteenth- and nineteenth-century forays into the study of the fall of the Western Roman Empire, we have been transported across more than a thousand years of history into the cultural ferment of Enlightenment Europe. Although most of the essays in this Festschrift focus on matters medieval, this is a book of wide-ranging focus; but one which nevertheless retains a unity of composition by managing to reflect something of the breadth of Richard Fletcher's interests.</p
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