57,481 research outputs found
William Kirkwood Stringfellow Family Papers- Accession 559
This collection consists of photocopies of genealogical material that Mr. William Kirkwood Stringfellow (1904-1981) collected. This material includes information on the families Simonton, Adair, and Gaston, as well as, Stringfellow and include correspondence, obituaries, bible entries, wills, deeds, genealogical charts, and family narratives and anecdotes. Also included is a reminiscences of Mr. Stringfellow’s childhood in Chester, SC and a typescript copy of a reminiscence of the American Civil War by John James Stringfellow (1837-1931) from Chester, SC who served in Company F of the 6th South Carolina Infantry.https://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/manuscriptcollection_findingaids/1673/thumbnail.jp
Stringfellow St Cottage, 1948
Photograph of the Stringfellow Street Cottage (presumably beloning to the Workman family). Two men can be seen standing on the porch, while a woman waters the garden
George Stringfellow Residence, Side View
Image shows a general view of the Stringfellow residence. Five members of the Stringfellow family are standing outside the home
Family altruism and incentives
The author builds on the altruistic model of the family, to explore the strategic interaction between altruistic parents, and selfish children, when children's efforts are endogenous. If there is uncertainty about the amount of income the children will realize, and if parents have imperfect information, the children have an incentive to exert little effort, and to rely on their parent's altruistically motivated transfers. Because of this, parents face a tradeoff between the insurance that bequests implicitly provide their children, and the disincentive to work prompted by their altruism. The author shows that if parents can credibly commit to a pattern of transfers, they will choose not to compensate children in bad outcomes, as much as predicted by the standard (no uncertainty, no asymmetric information) dynastic model of the family. Alternatively, parents may choose to forgo any insurance, and offer a fixed level of bequest, to elicit greater effort from their children. The optimal transfers structure that the author derives, reconciles the predictions of the altruistic family model, with much of the existing evidence on inter-generational transfers, which suggests that parents compensate only partially, or not at all, for earnings differentials among their children. Moreover, the author shows that Ricardian equivalence holds in this setup, except when non-negativity constraints are binding.Economic Theory&Research,Environmental Economics&Policies,Health Economics&Finance,Educational Sciences,Safety Nets and Transfers
Committee for Family Forestlands (CFF) annual report
This archived document is maintained by the Oregon State Library as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Began with 2009.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
Ratze Family
Latvian Canadian family members including Rita and Juris and children15.0 Family photo
Committee for Family Forestlands (CFF) update
This archived document is maintained by the Oregon State Library as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Ceased with 2008.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
Practicing Full-Spectrum Family Medicine During the COVID-19 Pandemic
The author, a board certified family medicine physician with a fellowship in surgical and high-risk obstetrics, is working to create a COVID-19 team staffed by family medicine practitioners that will encompass prenatal, antenatal and postpartum women to streamline their care. She relates her experiences adapting to this new reality.https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/154714/1/Dakkak_DeepBlue_article.pdfDescription of Dakkak_DeepBlue_article.pdf : Main articl
ACT Family Violence Intervention Program review
This paper reports on a review of the Australian Capital Territory’s Family Violence Intervention Program, which provides an interagency response to family violence matters.
The scope of the review was to analyse the program’s activities and outcomes using 2007–08 data provided by participating agencies, supported by in-depth interviews with key stakeholders including victims whose matters had been finalised in court. After the completion of this report, additional data from 2008–09 and 2009–10 was made available by some Family Violence Intervention Program (FVIP) participating agencies. Although not within the scope of this evaluation, these data pointed to some preliminary improvements in the FVIP
Descendants of the Cureton Families - Accession 715 no. 52
Descendants of the Cureton Families of York and Chester Counties of South Carolina by Max Perry relates the family history from the mid 1700s to 2000. Family names also include Stewart, Webb, Heath, Beckham, Cunningham, Erwin, Futcher, Haile, Jordon, Kimbrell, Knox, Lanier, Massey, Spratt, Stevens, Stringfellow, Terry, Zellner and others. Please see attached Table of Contents and Index.https://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/manuscriptcollection_findingaids/2576/thumbnail.jp
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