2,868 research outputs found

    Donna Willette Video Interview

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    Donna has a love of hiking and mountaineering. She lived in Colorado until she was 12 and the family relocated to Easton. She was raised by her grandmother and started her own family right after high school. In this interview Donna talks about growing up in Easton and finishing school in Cle Elum. From the time her youngest child was five years old she was taking her three children hiking. She discusses growing up in a small community where they walked everywhere and heated with coal. In the 1970\u27s she attended Central Washington University and became an EMT2, later becoming director of ambulance services for Kittitas County. The peaks she’s summited: Mount Stuart, Bear Mountain, Mary Peak, Earl Peak. Koppen, South Engles Peak, Iron Peak, Navajo Peak, Peoh Point (three times), Silver Peak, and Miller Peak.https://digitalcommons.cwu.edu/rrcehc_interviews/1014/thumbnail.jp

    Educating to Liberate: The Contributions of Mary Astell and John Stuart Mill to a Theory of Female Emancipation

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    reservedLa tesi propone un confronto critico tra il pensiero di Mary Astell e di John Stuart Mill, in merito al ruolo della donna nella società. Attraverso l'esame in particolare delle loro riflessioni sul tema dell'educazione e del matrimonio, essa intende evidenziare come gli autori rivendichino il diritto delle donne ad un'educazione non finalizzata al compiacimento maschile ma alla realizzazione personale, e come critichino l'istituzione matrimoniale quale vincolo che priva la donna delle sue libertà, mettendo in luce convergenze e divergenze del loro contributo all'emancipazione femminile

    Letter from Donna Nakamura to George Hideo Nakamura

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    Correspondence from Donna Nakamura to "Daddy," that is, George Hideo Nakamura, during his service in the armed forces.The Japanese American Archival Collection documents the people, places, and daily life of Japanese Americans, primarily those who lived in the once thriving community of pre-war Florin in the Sacramento region, as well as the conditions in American incarceration camps during World War II. The approximately 7,000 original items include personal and official letters, photographs, diaries, arts and crafts, newsletters, textiles, camps artifacts, yearbooks and other publications

    Exploring friendships behind prison walls

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    Positive connections between men in prison are rarely thought about or discussed in academic research. Yet as Crewe (2014),1 Laws and Lieber(2020),2 and Morey and Crewe (2018) highlight,3 considerable intimacy and camaraderie exists between imprisoned men. In this paper, we utilise academic collaborative writing — taking a knowledge equity approach — to examine friendships between imprisoned men. One author with first hand lived experience of prison (Marc)writes about their experiences freely in their own words, in the first person, and creates the wider narrative together with an academic (Donna). We suggest these conditions create a more relaxed and natural position for a person with lived experience sof prison to share them, arguably encouraging openness surrounding sensitive topics like friendships during incarceration, deepening insights. Through this process of co-production, we aim to bridge some of the distance from the conventional space of ‘research participant’towards a more equitable ‘participant author

    Photograph - Conferring (from left) Professor Greg Dening. Lynne Wrout, graduate, who is the School of History’s Administrative Officer, Dr Stuart Macintyre and Dr Donna Merwick.

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    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/290069Conferring (from left) Professor Greg Dening. Lynne Wrout, graduate, who is the School of History’s Administrative Officer, Dr Stuart Macintyre and Dr Donna Merwick. 1990[?]309457 Item: [2003.0003.07132] "Photograph - Conferring (from left) Professor Greg Dening. Lynne Wrout, graduate, who is the School of History’s Administrative Officer, Dr Stuart Macintyre and Dr Donna Merwick.

    Card from Donna Nakamura to Pvt. George Hideo Nakamura, November 18, 1945

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    Birthday card from Donna Nakamura to George Hideo Nakamura during his service in the armed forces during World War II.The Japanese American Archival Collection documents the people, places, and daily life of Japanese Americans, primarily those who lived in the once thriving community of pre-war Florin in the Sacramento region, as well as the conditions in American incarceration camps during World War II. The approximately 7,000 original items include personal and official letters, photographs, diaries, arts and crafts, newsletters, textiles, camps artifacts, yearbooks and other publications

    Spaces of the Past, Histories of the Present: An Interview with Stuart Elden and Derek Gregory

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    The ontologies of space and territory, our experience of them and the techniques we use to govern them, the very conception of the socio-spatial formations that we inhabit, are all historically specific: they depend on a genealogy of practices, knowledges, discourses, regulations, performances and representations articulated in a way that is extremely complex yet nevertheless legible over time. In this interview we look at the logic and the patterns that intertwine space and time — both as objects and tools of inquiry — though a cross-disciplinary dialogue. The discussion with Stuart Elden and Derek Gregory covers the place of history in socio-spatial theory and in their own work, old and new ways of thinking about the intersection between history and territory, space and time, the implications of geography and history for thinking about contemporary politics, and the challenges now faced by critical thought and academic work in the current neo-liberal attack on public universities and the welfare stat

    Godfrey, Stuart

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    Material related to Godfrey's singing career and his involvement with a number of St. John's-based glee clubs and music festivals 1936-1956, and 1991. - This manuscript file contains material related to the performances of Stuart Godfrey. It should be of interest to those researching Godfrey's musical contribution to Newfoundland's music history, or the musical and choral history of Newfoundland in general

    Stuart R. Godfrey papers

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    Material related to Godfrey's singing career and his involvement with a number of St. John's-based glee clubs and music festivals. - This manuscript file contains material related to the performances of Stuart Godfrey. It should be of interest to those researching Godfrey's musical contribution to Newfoundland's music history, or the musical and choral history of Newfoundland in general

    Donna Riley

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    Donna Riley is Kamyar Haghighi Head of the School of Engineering Education and Professor of Engineering Education at Purdue University. Dr. Riley joined Purdue in 2017 from Virginia Tech, where she was Professor and Interim Head in the Department of Engineering Education. From 2013-2015 she served as Program Director for Engineering Education at the National Science Foundation (NSF). Riley spent thirteen years as a founding faculty member of the Picker Engineering Program at Smith College, the first engineering program at a U.S. women’s college. In 2005 she received a NSF CAREER award on implementing and assessing pedagogies of liberation in engineering classrooms. Riley is the author of two books, Engineering and Social Justice and Engineering Thermodynamics and 21st Century Energy Problems, both published by Morgan and Claypool. Riley served a two-year term as Deputy Editor of the Journal of Engineering Education (2012-2014), rotated through the leadership of the Liberal Education/Engineering and Society (LEES) Division of the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE) (2007-2011), and currently serves on the ASEE Diversity Committee. She is the recipient of the 2016 Alfred N. Goldsmith Award from the IEEE Professional Communications Society, the 2012 Sterling Olmsted Award from ASEE, the 2010 Educator of the Year award from the National Organization of Gay and Lesbian Scientists and Technical Professionals (NOGLSTP), and the 2006 Benjamin Dasher Award from Frontiers in Education. Riley earned a B.S.E. in chemical engineering from Princeton University and a Ph.D. from Carnegie Mellon University in Engineering and Public Policy. She is a fellow of the American Society for Engineering Education.https://commons.erau.edu/asee-se-bios/1000/thumbnail.jp
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