3,279 research outputs found
Sixty Years of Community: St. Olaf Catholic Parish in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, 1952-2012
This paper will explore how the parish community of St. Olaf in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, established in 1952, reflects the Roman Catholic Church, specifically at the local, state, and national levels in the United States. It will also discuss the various changes that have occurred in the past 60 years of its history in terms of the various locations of worship for the members, the growth of the community outreach programs, and the effects of the Second Vatican Council. This ecumenical council was a meeting of Catholic bishops from around the whole that brought reform to the Catholic Church and affected the relationship of the Catholic Church to the world. The parish at St. Olaf has grown from having only 125 families in 1952 to over 1,000 families in 2012
From Mansions to Towers: A History of Residence Halls at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire
The construction of the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire's residence halls has generally followed that of the national trend. The school struggled to find enough funds to build residence halls in the early years. Eventually, student housing was in needed so badly that the school had no choice but to provide housing for the students. In 1947, the Dulany mansion was purchased and remodeled by the school. This building served as the University's first resident hall. Since then, eleven resident halls have been built on campus with one more being planned. Life in these residence halls have changed dramatically over time. In the 1960's, the students protested and eventually the strict rules of in loco parentis faded away. After this, students enjoyed the freedoms of new technologies, relaxed rules, and more professional housing leaders. Today, UW-Eau Claire is a thriving university. UW-Eau Claire has been recognized by many as a top school in the Midwest. Much of the success can be attributed to the residence halls and the happiness of the students. My paper will provide UW-Eau Claire and its students with a cohesive history of the residence halls on campus and will also show how student life has evolved since the University was first established
Claire Tham (1967-)
As an author, Claire Tham has this far been less concerned to observe the canons of English literature and more concerned to explore its creative possibilities and its adaptability. She also articulates a significant viewpoint about national and personal identity, about cultural tensions in a dynamic urban centre in transition, and about the.flip-side of Singapore’s prodigious prosperity
Brave New Worlds: Transforming Museum Ethnography through Technology, special edition of Journal of Museum Ethnography
The seven main articles in this edition of the Journal of Museum Ethnography were guest edited by Helen Mears and Claire Wintle. They were originally presented at the Museum Ethnographers Group conference in 2013, co-hosted by Brighton Museum and the University of Brighton. They testify to the diverse ways in which technology is transforming museum ethnography, through new possibilities for field research and documentation, for sharing and generating collections knowledge and - through the creation of digital models or surrogates via 3D scanning - for supporting the development of collections knowledge and conservation practices. The papers hint at the potential scope of ICTs to change the way collections knowledge is generated and shared, to create new ways of understanding, preserving and conserving collections materials and to create new models of cultural ownership and new audiences. They also raise questions about the limitations of ICTs: whether these lie in the capabilities of the existing digital tools and software, staff knowledge and skills, or the time and resources acquired to properly engage with ICTs and to make them sustainable
Introduction: Reframing Cultures of Decolonisation
This introductory chapter provides the context for Cultures of Decolonisation by offering a theoretical framework for analysing the ‘end of empire’. It sets out the value of using the lens of culture, broadly understood, to explore the processes of decolonisation. Here, we argue that cultural products and sites provide a productive arena for engaging with the complexities of decolonisation as lived beyond ‘flag independence’ and constitutional reform, and that object and spatial form are active agents in the discourses of independence, nationalism, decolonisation and neo-colonialism. Diverse cultures, shaped through and contributing to ideologies of modernism, development, internationalism, reframing notions of the universal and the specific, and engaging with questions of knowledge, epistemology and expertise, were crucial in the remaking of the geopolitical landscape in the mid-twentieth century. Material culture, social spaces, and creative arenas, from the museum to the internet chat room, Royal Mint and dictionary, are highlighted as sites for commentary and reflection, activism and articulation, and the celebration and negotiation of decolonisation. Having established the importance of image, object, text and practice in thinking through decolonisation, a series of claims about the nature of decolonisation are made: first, we argue for the need to redraw Eurocentric historiographies of decolonisation and highlight the activities and agency of decolonising and newly independent nations and individuals within and alongside analyses of metropolitan cultures of decolonisation. Second, we argue for the transnational and international nature of decolonisation, highlighting movements and networks – of people, ideas and things – between places and across borders, emphasising instances of solidarity and cross-fertilisation amongst individuals and communities, and the role that the cultural realm had in facilitating these exchanges beyond the high politics of empire. The role of the individual actor (working in tandem with the designed and natural world, and political and cultural frameworks) is particularly emphasised. In acknowledging the impact of the so-called periphery on decolonisation in this way, parallel assumptions about the origins of modernism and modernity are also contested. Finally, it is argued that we must pay attention to the shifting and non-linear temporalities of decolonisation. It is in the cultures of decolonisation that we can see more clearly the pre-histories, continuing legacies, resurgences, and contradictory trajectories of this phenomenon
Claire Wheeler: Fearless Psychologist
Fearless physician/psychologist Claire is a clinical psychologist and former emergency room doctor. As a full-time instructor at PSU’s School of Community Health she teaches classes in disease physiology, mind-body medicine, nutrition and health psychology. She is the author of 10 Simple Solutions to Stress, published in 2007. She’ll reveal some of the mysteries of how negative thoughts can affect your health, and teach techniques to avoid them. Think “cognitive reframing.”https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/pdxtalks/1020/thumbnail.jp
Jurisprudence - the bystander to crime
The author raises questions about the predicament of a bystander to a serious crime who does not intervene to oppose it. Article by Claire Valier (Lecturer in Law, University of London) published in Amicus Curiae - Journal of the Society for Advanced Legal Studies. The Journal is produced by the Society for Advanced Legal Studies at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London
La Fabrique des classiques africains: écrivains d’Afrique subsaharienne francophone . Par Ducournau Claire
This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in French Studies following peer review. The version of record Claire H Griffiths (2018) La Fabrique des classiques africains : ecrivains d'Afrique subsaharienne francophone par Claire Ducournau, French Studies, Volume 72, Issue 2, 1 April 2018, Pages 318–319 is available online at: https://doi.org/10.1093/fs/kny023The review article evaluates major new scholarship on the development of the French literary system in colonial and postcolonial Africa and its impact on Francophone writing
Why hedge? Extent, nature, and determinants of derivative usage in U.S. municipalities
Using a hand-collected dataset of over 300 observations of large U.S. cities and counties, this paper investigates the extent, nature and determinants of derivatives usage in the municipal sector.Over half of our sample entities engage in derivative transactions and a vast majority of these transactions are intended to manage interest rate risk. Swaps, by far, are the most popular derivative instrument. In terms of the determinants of derivative usage,we find that the propensity to use derivatives as well as the extent of derivative usage is higher for municipalities that are larger and more financially constrained. We do not find growth to be related to municipal derivative usage. Contrary to suggestions made in the popular press, we fail to find managerial opportunism to be a significant factor in municipal derivative usage. We also find that more sophisticated managers of large municipalities and less sophisticated managers of small municipalities are more likely to engage in derivative transactions.Peer reviewe
Capital asset accounting policies under GASB Statement No. 34: Characteristics, antecedents, and implications
In this paper, we study the evolution of state and local governments’ capital asset accounting policies from the adoption of GASB Statement No. 34 through the fiscal year ending in 2016. We document substantial cross-sectional and time-series variation in the capitalization thresholds and estimated useful lives pertaining to major classes of capital assets, including buildings, equipment, improvements, and infrastructure assets. Diversity in capital asset accounting policies potentially diminishes the comparability of capital asset accounting information across governments and over time. We also discuss matters related to the implementation and ongoing use of the modified approach for reporting infrastructure assets. Our findings are useful to the GASB as well as to users of government financial reports.Peer reviewe
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