1,142 research outputs found
The New Jersey African American history curriculum guide, grades 9 to 12. by Larry A. Greene, Lenworth Gunther.
The New Jersey African American history curriculum guide is a resource for New Jersey high school teachers who wish to incorporate African American experiences into their teaching of U.S. history. The guide provides narratives, keywords, suggested activites, and bibliographies.CONTENTS:
Foreword -- About the Authors -- Preface -- How to Use This Guide -- Acknowledgments -- Unit 1 African Beginnings -- Unit 2 Africa, Europe, and the Rise of Afro-America, 1441-1619 -- Unit 3 African American Slavery in the Colonial Era, 1619-1775 -- Unit 4 Blacks in the Revolutionary Era, 1776-1789 -- Unit 5 Slavery and Abolition in Post-Revolutionary and Antebellum America, 1790-1860 -- Unit 6 African Americans and the Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Unit 7 The Reconstruction Era, 1865-1877 -- Unit 8 The Rise of Jim Crow and The Nadir, 1878-1915 -- Unit 9 World War I and the Great Migration, 1915-1920 -- Unit 10 The Decade of the Twenties: From the Great Migration to the Great Depression -- Unit 11 The 1930s: The Great Depression -- Unit 12 World War II: The Struggle for Democracy at Home and Abroad, 1940-1945 -- Unit 13 The Immediate Postwar Years, 1945-1953 -- Unit 14 The Civil Rights and Black Power Era: Gains and Losses, 1954-1970 -- Unit 15 Beyond Civil Rights, 1970-1994
Letter to William A. Starna from Gunther Michelson, January 12, 1987
In a letter dated January 12, 1987, Gunther Michelson writes to William Starna, confirming his satisfaction with being listed as the chapter author for the word list and receiving credit for his contributions to the endnotes. Michelson requests the replacement of pages 4-6 of the endnotes with the enclosed pages, including corrections and insertions. He also mentions the challenges he faced in working on the Mohawk passage in endnotes 110. This item does not include the enclosed pages Michelson mentions in the letter
Mr. And Mrs. F. H. Gunther
Casa Manana\u27s second show this season, Most Happy Fella , drew this family. Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Gunther and their 13 year old son, Steven, arrived early enough to sit and talk before the musical began on Casa\u27s round stage. Fort Worth Star-Telegram Evening edition June 8, 1965.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1960s/2839/thumbnail.jp
Keynesian and Austrian Perspectives on Crisis, Shock Adjustment, Exchange Rate Regime and (Long-Term) Growth
The 2010 European debt crisis has revived the discussion concerning the optimum adjustment strategy in the face of asymmetric shocks. Whereas Mundell's (1961) seminal theory on optimum currency areas suggests depreciation in the face of crisis, the most recent emergence of competitive depreciations, competitive interest rate cuts or currency wars questions the exchange rate as an adjustment tool to asymmetric economic development. This paper approaches the question from a theoretical perspective by confronting exchange rate based adjustment with crisis adjustment via price and wage cuts. Econometric estimations yield a negative impact of exchange rate flexibility/ volatility on growth, which is found to be particularly strong for countries with asymmetric business cycles and during recessions. Based on these findings we support a further enlargement of the European Monetary Union and recommend more exchange rate stability for the rest of the world.Exchange rate regime, crisis, shock adjustment, theory of optimum currency areas, Mundell, Schumpeter, Hayek, competitive depreciations, currency war.
FIGURE 2 in Two new species of semiaquatic Anolis (Squamata: Dactyloidae) from Costa Rica
FIGURE 2. Principal component analysis showing as Anolis aquaticus populations segregate in three different groups based on morphology.Published as part of Chaves, Gerardo, Ryan, Mason J., Bolaños, Federico, Márquez, Cruz, Köhler, Gunther & Poe, Steven, 2023, Two new species of semiaquatic Anolis (Squamata: Dactyloidae) from Costa Rica, pp. 249-262 in Zootaxa 5319 (2) on page 252, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5319.2.6, http://zenodo.org/record/818253
Improving the Quality of Web Surveys: The Checklist for Reporting Results of Internet E-Surveys (CHERRIES) Japanese Version
CHERRIES 日本語版 (原著 [Original article] = Eysenbach G. Improving the Quality of Web Surveys: The Checklist for Reporting Results of Internet E-Surveys (CHERRIES). J Med Internet Res 2004;6(3):e34 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.6.3.e34. PMID: 15471760. PMCID: PMC1550605; Eysenbach G. Correction: Improving the Quality of Web Surveys: the Checklist for Reporting Results of Internet E-Surveys (CHERRIES). J Med Internet Res 2012;14(1):e8. DOI: 10.2196/jmir.2042. PMID: 22223031. PMCID: 4220447)[Author = 原著者] Gunther Eysenbach, [Translators = 訳者] Yoshimitsu Takahashi (高橋由光), Takeo Nakayama (中山健夫)著者向けのe調査推奨チェックリスト「CHERRIES」は、e調査 [e-survey] の方法論を完全に記載できるように、メディカル・インターネット・リサーチ誌 [Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR)] によって作られた。これは、医学文献報告の質を確保するために作成されたCONSORT 声明(ランダム化試験向け)や、QUOROM声明(システマチックレビュー向け)のような、推奨用チェックリストに準じている。CHERRIES 声明に則ったウェブベース調査の論文によって、読者は標本集団の(自己)選択 [sample (self-)selection] に関してより適切に理解することができる。そして、「代表性のある」標本集団 [representative sample] とは異なる意義のある新たな可能性に気づくことができるだろう。著者がこのチェックリストを守ることで、ウェブベース調査に関する報告の有用性が増すことが期待される
Constitutional sociology and corporations: A conversation with Gunther Teubner
Abstract The present work corresponds to a conversation held with the German sociologist Gunther Teubner. In it, the author addresses central aspects related to the sociology of constitutions and their contribution to the understanding of the negative effects of the dark side of functional differentiation. Gunther Teubner is professor emeritus of private law and sociology of law at the prestigious Goethe University. His work is widely known for his contributions to the field of the sociology of law, particularly for his theory of autopoietic law, the concept of reflexive law, and, currently, for his theory of societal constitutionalization
Combining the Best of Gunther and Sullivan
In the field of casebooks, there are few classics, but Gerald Gunther\u27s Constitutional Law has long been viewed as one of them. More than twenty years ago it was heralded in the Harvard Law Review as the Hart and Wechsler of constitutional law. After decades of solo authorship, Gunther is joined on the 13th edition by Kathleen Sullivan, who was primarily responsible for revising (among other sections) the chapters on freedom of expression. This partnership has succeeded in improving what was already perhaps the strongest section of the book. This Review examines the organization of the free expression materials, considers the selection and editing of cases, and comments on the notes and questions. But this casebook is not merely a teaching tool; it is also a scholarly work bristling with ideas. At the end of thisRreview, the author will identify and engage an overarching view that finds expression in the notes and more subtly in the organization of the free speech material
Mirhipipteryx lobata Gunther 1977
Mirhipipteryx lobata Günther 1977 designation as a nomen nudum Mirhipipteryx lobata Günther 1977 is considered here a nomen nudum. This species name was first published by Otte (1997) in the Orthoptera Species File (volume 6). The author cited Günther (1977) as the reference for the species description with the type located in “San Francisco H.” However, the paper attributed for the description (Günther 1977) does not include a description for this species. Instead the paper includes the description of Mirhipipteryx lilo granchacensis Günther 1977, with the type at the Instituto M. Lilo in Tucuman, Argentina. Subsequent species lists (Günther 1980, 1989) made by the same author, to whom this species was attributed, do not include any mention of M. lobata. Moreover, a search for the type species at the Californian Academy of Sciences (CAS) using online database did not reveal any specimen with this name. The search for type specimens at CAS resulted in the species Mirhipipteryx lilo (which is the subspecies M. lilo lilo Günther 1969) and M. disparilobata Günther 1989. Most likely, this species name came from an unintentional editing error by Otte (1997). In conclusion, this species name does not conform to Article 13 of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN) by not having a type or a written description.Published as part of Baena-Bejarano, Nathalie, Heads, Sam W. & Taylor, Steven J., 2018, Comments on the neglected nymphs of mud crickets in the genus Mirhipipteryx (Caelifera: Tridactyloidea: Ripipterygidae), pp. 180-188 in Zootaxa 4486 (2) on page 187, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4486.2.7, http://zenodo.org/record/143674
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