138,351 results
Search Results
152. mHealth resources for asthma and pregnancy care: Methodological issues and social media recruitment. A discussion paper.
- Author
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Williamson GR, O'Connor A, Chamberlain C, and Halpin D
- Subjects
- Feasibility Studies, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Reproducibility of Results, Surveys and Questionnaires, United Kingdom, Asthma complications, Asthma therapy, Patient Selection, Pregnancy Complications therapy, Prenatal Care organization & administration, Social Media, Telemedicine
- Abstract
Aims: A discussion of methodological issues and social media recruitment to a feasibility study to investigate mHealth resources for asthma and pregnancy care., Background: Pregnant women with asthma are reported to be poorly supported according to an international research. We sought to establish if a mHealth intervention might be feasible and acceptable to them., Design: A Phase I or modelling study., Methods: A project team designed an intervention to address UK national guidelines for the management of asthma during pregnancy, using other resources already accessible on the web. This was made available on a project website optimized for mobile phone usage. Links were Tweeted and advertised on Facebook, asking participants to access the project website, which included links to the resources and before- and after-use questionnaires to establish baseline symptom data and participant views of the resources., Results: Despite 55,700 Twitter impressions in a 76-day period over winter 2016-2017, this recruitment strategy garnered 402 engagements but only seven respondents for questionnaire 1 and zero respondents for questionnaire 2., Conclusions: We could not recruit to this study despite believing that social media recruitment would be effective and we recommend that social media recruitment be used cautiously. Apparently, we did not sufficiently address the theoretical aspects of communications theory and were not clear enough about our key messages. Publication bias may exist about the non-publication of other failed telemedicine studies using social media; this goes largely unreported in some systematic reviews and may influence researchers' decision-making about social media recruitment., (© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
153. Statistical approaches in published ophthalmic clinical science papers: a comparison to statistical practice two decades ago.
- Author
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Zhang HG and Ying GS
- Subjects
- Humans, United Kingdom, Biomedical Research statistics & numerical data, Biometry methods, Ophthalmology statistics & numerical data, Periodicals as Topic
- Abstract
The aim of this study is to evaluate the current practice of statistical analysis of eye data in clinical science papers published in British Journal of Ophthalmology ( BJO ) and to determine whether the practice of statistical analysis has improved in the past two decades. All clinical science papers (n=125) published in BJO in January-June 2017 were reviewed for their statistical analysis approaches for analysing primary ocular measure. We compared our findings to the results from a previous paper that reviewed BJO papers in 1995. Of 112 papers eligible for analysis, half of the studies analysed the data at an individual level because of the nature of observation, 16 (14%) studies analysed data from one eye only, 36 (32%) studies analysed data from both eyes at ocular level, one study (1%) analysed the overall summary of ocular finding per individual and three (3%) studies used the paired comparison. Among studies with data available from both eyes, 50 (89%) of 56 papers in 2017 did not analyse data from both eyes or ignored the intereye correlation, as compared with in 60 (90%) of 67 papers in 1995 (P=0.96). Among studies that analysed data from both eyes at an ocular level, 33 (92%) of 36 studies completely ignored the intereye correlation in 2017, as compared with in 16 (89%) of 18 studies in 1995 (P=0.40). A majority of studies did not analyse the data properly when data from both eyes were available. The practice of statistical analysis did not improve in the past two decades. Collaborative efforts should be made in the vision research community to improve the practice of statistical analysis for ocular data., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2018. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
154. Evaluating the potential impact of online assessment on students' academic performance.
- Author
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Osabutey, Ellis L.C., Senyo, P.K., and Bempong, Bernard F.
- Subjects
ACADEMIC achievement ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,ASSESSMENT of education ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,TECHNOLOGY assessment - Abstract
Purpose: With the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, online assessment has become the dominant mode of examination in higher education institutions. However, there are contradictory findings on how students perceive online assessment and its impact on their academic performance. Thus, the purpose of this study is to evaluate the potential impact of online assessment on students' academic performance. Design/methodology/approach: This study proposes a research model based on the task–technology fit theory and empirically validates the model using a survey from students in the UK. In addition, the study conducted four experiments based on paper-based and online assessments and analysed the data using paired sample t test and structural equation modelling. Findings: The findings show that the use of online assessment has a positive impact on students' academic performance. Similarly, the results from the experiment also indicate that students perform better using online assessments than paper-based assessments. Practical implications: The findings provide crucial evidence needed to shape policy towards institutionalising online assessment. In addition, the findings provide assurance to students, academics, administrators and policymakers that carefully designed online assessments can improve students' academic performance. Moreover, the study also provides important insights for curriculum redesign towards transitioning to online assessment in higher education institutions. Originality/value: This study advances research by offering a more nuanced understanding of online assessment on students' academic performance since the majority of previous studies have offered contradictory findings. In addition, the study moves beyond existing research by complementing assessment results with the views of students in evaluating the impact of online assessment on their academic performance. Second, the study develops and validates a research model that explains how the fits between technology and assessment tasks influence students' academic performance. Lastly, the study provides evidence to support the wide use of online assessment in higher education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
155. Testing a Green Paper.
- Author
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Wylie, Tom
- Subjects
YOUTH policy ,SOCIAL work with youth ,YOUTH ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Comments on the 2005 Green Paper, titled "Youth Matters," in the United States. Policy development which have shaped youth work; Foundations of good youth work; View by the author that the Green Paper will only succeed if it provides a policy and resourcing framework which enables youth work to flourish.
- Published
- 2005
156. Review of Government Green Paper — Youth Matters.
- Author
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Peake, Kim
- Subjects
YOUTH policy ,SOCIAL work with youth ,YOUTH services ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Examines the 2005 Green Paper, titled "Youth Matters," in Great Britain. Parental involvement; Reward card outlined in the Green Paper; Criticism regarding the lack of cohesion in service delivery; Possible reactions of people involved in youth work.
- Published
- 2005
157. 'PRIVATE' PAPERS: THE CASE OF SIR JOHN SIMON.
- Author
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Dutton, David
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,LETTERS ,CHARACTER ,INFORMATION retrieval ,MIND & body ,BEREAVEMENT - Abstract
The article focuses on the information gathered from personal papers for biographical purposes. The biography of Sir John Simon, Chamberlain's Contemporary is being discussed in the article. Despite of extensive collection of private papers at the Bodleian Library, there is a lack of authentically private material. Simon's occasional diary betrays a self-consciousness which suggests that it was written by Simon with at least one eye on family. Simon's mother Fanny died at the age of ninety. At the time of her death in October 1936, some of the highest offices of state were being served by Simon. When Gilbert, son of Simon, died a considerable amount of material related to Sir John was discovered by Gilbert's wife from his papers. Simon's private family letters confirm the seismic impact upon both his character and career of the early death of his first wife Ethel in 1902. Simon, at the death of his first wife, called his infant son "this child of sorrow."One of the papers so discovered revealed death of Queen Victoria in 1901 and Simon's irritation at the ritualized formality of national mourning.One of the papers so discovered revealed death of Queen Victoria in 1901 and Simon's irritation at the ritualized formality of national mourning.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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158. Research on Private Equity: A Bibliometric Analysis.
- Author
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Sachin, Singh, Shakti, and Kumar, Sanjiv
- Subjects
BIBLIOMETRICS ,PRIVATE equity ,DEVELOPED countries ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
The paper presents a bibliometric analysis of research on Private Equity (PE) and identifies the key contributors, major countries and institutions, and scope for further research. It uses scientific mapping strategy to meet its goals and employs R studio to extract pertinent data. Scopus and Web of Science—two popular databases—were used to extract the data. The study examines 1698 publications from business, management, finance and econometrics journals. The data are analyzed using descriptive statistics. The status of research on PE is represented through graphical and tabular analysis. Since PE first gained popularity in developed nations like US, UK and Japan, these countries boast a majority of studies on the subject. The PE concept is still relatively new in emerging countries, and there is still opportunity for more research. Future research should focus on issues like investment, venture and market. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
159. Nurses leading male lower urinary tract symptom (LUTS) clinics: A scoping review.
- Author
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Middleton, Claire and Dunleavy, Stephanie
- Subjects
FERTILITY clinics ,CINAHL database ,RESEARCH ,UROLOGICAL nursing ,BLADDER ,NURSING ,HEALTH services accessibility ,URINARY tract infections ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,NURSES ,QUALITY of life ,HEALTH care teams ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE ,NURSE practitioners ,SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Nurse‐led clinics are known to positively impact and benefit patients; however, there is little understanding of the role of the nurse in a nurse‐led male Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms (LUTS) clinic. LUTS affect up to 30% of males over 65 in the United Kingdom and can significantly impact the quality of life of the person experiencing them. LUTS can be managed with conservative changes, as well as with medication and surgical intervention. The aim of this scoping review is to map what is known about the role of the nurse in a nurse‐led male LUTS clinic and what research tells us regarding, the barriers and enablers in nurses leading a male LUTS clinic. This scoping review follows the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta‐Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA‐SCR) checklist and the methodological guidelines set out by the Joanna Briggs institute. A literature search was carried out over three databases (CINAHL, Medline Ovid, ProQuest health and medical collection) and systematically searched from 2000 to 2021. Grey literature was also searched, and citation chaining was undertaken. Following a systematic review of the literature, four papers met the inclusion criteria for this scoping review. The emergent themes across the four papers consisted of structure, assessment and resources, and effectiveness of the nurse‐led male LUTS clinic. There was clear agreement across the literature regarding the investigations and assessment the nurse should carry out. Ongoing practical, theoretical, and observational training and education is required to ensure the nurse is competent in running a male LUTS clinic. The papers reviewed showed the nurse provided a supportive role to the consultant. However, there is evidence indicating there is a move towards autonomous practice. There is a dearth of the current research relating to the role of the nurse in nurse‐led male LUTS clinics and the enablers and barriers in nurses leading male LUTS clinics. Further research should be considered to gain a better understanding of where nurse‐led male LUTS clinics currently take place, what the role of the nurse is in leading a LUTS clinic and what enablers and barriers exist. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
160. THE CONTRACTUAL IMPORTANCE OF COMMITTING TO PAPER.
- Author
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Martin, Harry
- Subjects
LEGAL claims ,GREETING card industry ,BREACH of contract ,ARTISTS' fees ,COPYRIGHT infringement - Abstract
The article discusses the case Deakin v. Card Rax Ltd. involving dispute in the greetings card business in Great Britain. The issues on whether a breach of contract or copyright infringement had been committed by Bees Knees Trading Co. and Cardrax UK Ltd. by failure to pay Deakin's commissions and continued use of artist's work are examined. Also noted is the decision of the court which clarifies law on claims for unpaid fees in bailment and for copyright licences.
- Published
- 2013
161. How Fiscal Policy Affects Prices: Britain's First Experience with Paper Money.
- Author
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Antipa, Pamfili M.
- Subjects
FISCAL policy ,PUBLIC debts ,HISTORY - Abstract
For almost 25 years between 1797 and 1821, the gold standard in Britain was suspended in order to finance the Napoleonic Wars, creating a paper pound or a fiat currency. Suspension was accompanied by substantial inflation and the accumulation of public debt. By identifying shifts in the spot exchange rate of paper pounds for gold, I document how contemporaries' expectations of how debt would be stabilized in the future shaped the pound's internal value. Thus, it is argued that during the “paper pound” period, fiscal prospects provided a third mechanism, beyond monetary and real factors, affecting the price level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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162. Reforming Bribery: Law Commission Consultation Paper 185 (2) Reforming the Law of Bribery (LCCP No.185): Bribery Outside England and Wales; Corporate Liability; Defences; Consent to Prosecution.
- Author
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Sullivan, G. R.
- Subjects
LAW reform ,BRIBERY ,PROSECUTION ,LEGAL procedure ,REGULATORY reform - Abstract
The article explains that bribery law reform in Great Britain is a work in progress. It presents information on the Law Commission Consultation Paper which will call for comments and response from the public. The reform proposal on bribery law covers corporate liability, defences and consent to prosecution. The Law Commission proposes that overseas bribery should fall under two offences, the general offence and the specific offence of bribery of foreign public officials.
- Published
- 2008
163. LATVIA-MANDATED PALESTINE ECONOMIC RELATIONS 1920-1940.
- Author
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Karnups, Viesturs Pauls
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL trade ,OLIVE oil ,CLASSIFICATION of fish ,MEDITERRANEAN diet ,PAPER products ,INTERWAR Period (1918-1939) - Abstract
This paper provides an overview of Latvian-Mandated Palestine economic relations in the interwar period. In the interwar period Latvian and Mandated Palestine economic relations were mainly confined to foreign trade. Latvia's foreign trade in relation to Mandated Palestine was more or less regulated by Latvia's 1923 treaty with Great Britain. Latvia's main imports from Mandated Palestine in the interwar period were fruits (including oranges, lemons, grapes, figs, pears, etc.), tobacco, and olive oil, whilst Latvia's main exports to Mandated Palestine were fish and fish conserves (including "Sprotes"), timber and timber products, paper and paper products, plywood, butter, and wooden nails and pins for footwear. In general, despite a growth in trade in the 1930s, trade and thus economic relations were of marginal significance to both countries in the interwar period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
164. Whose Green Paper is it anyway?
- Author
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Eyres, Tim
- Subjects
YOUTH policy ,YOUTH services ,SOCIAL work with youth ,POLICY sciences ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Comments on the 2005 Green Paper, titled "Youth Matters," in Great Britain. Youth service legacy; Modern concept of a youth service; Reluctance to give youth work and the youth service a statutory footing.
- Published
- 2005
165. The strength of periodic press section marks in paper.
- Author
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Dowling, Michael R., I'Anson, Stephen J., Hoyland, Richard W., and Hoole, Sharon M.
- Subjects
TEXTILES ,STRAINS & stresses (Mechanics) ,WATERMARKS ,FELT ,FELTING ,RESEARCH - Abstract
Studies the strength of periodic press section marks in paper by researchers from Great Britain. Parameters that influence the degree of felt marking; Development of new technique that can predict the degree of felt marking quantitatively; Usability of pressure-sensitive material to measure the distribution of loads arising from the fabric's structure when the applied load is constant.
- Published
- 2005
166. A bibliometric analysis of mountain ecosystem services, 2000–2019.
- Author
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Liu, Wenhao, Wang, Zengru, Li, Ren, and Wu, Tonghua
- Subjects
MOUNTAIN ecology ,ECOSYSTEM services ,OPEN access publishing ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,LAND resource ,SUSTAINABLE development reporting - Abstract
Research on mountain ecosystem services (MES) under the influence of climate change and human activities has gradually become the focus of academic attention in recent years. Here, this study analyzes the research hotspots and frontiers of this field based on metrics including main research forces, core journals and papers, research hotspots and topics by using the methods of bibliometrics and text mining. The results revealed the following: (1) the number of papers is increasing rapidly in recent years. From 2015 to 2019, 929 papers were published, with an average of 185 papers per year. But the average cited times of those papers is declining, dropped from 6.01 in 2016 to 4.2 in 2019. The USA, UK, and China rank the top three of the number of papers. Univ Maryland, Univ Oxford and Univ Wisconsin have the greatest influence, with an average of more than 77 citations per paper; (2) The most cited journals are PNAS, WETLANDS, ECOLOGY, AND SOCIETY, which are cited 191.54, 53.91, and 40.00 respectively. Most papers were published in OA journals including SUSTAINABILITY, WATER, Forests since 2017. Ten core papers undertaking knowledge transfer in this field have been identified; (3) analysis of the keywords found a new trend of integration of natural science and humanities. In two development stages of 2000–2014 and 2015–2019, the research hotspots mainly focused on mountain water resources, forest resources, land resources and the impact of climate change and human activities, and there are obvious differences and characteristics in different stages. The hotspot worthy of attention in the near future is the assessment of mountain ecosystem services capacity and value. This is the first comprehensive visualization and analysis of the research hotspots and trends of mountain ecosystem services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
167. Choice test to determine potential attractants and repellents for the sheep scab mite, Psoroptes ovis (Acari: Psoroptidae).
- Author
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Dunn, J. A., Prickett, J. C., Collins, D. A., Macarthur, R., and Weaver, R. J.
- Subjects
REPELLENTS ,ARACHIDONIC acid ,FILTER paper ,SEMIOCHEMICALS ,LINOLEIC acid ,SHEEP ,BIOLOGICAL assay - Abstract
A choice test bioassay was devised to screen compounds as potential semiochemicals (e.g., kairomones or allomones that mediate aggregation, attraction or repellence) for the obligate parasitic mite, Psoroptes ovis. The choice test used filter paper discs in a 1:4 test:control ratio and was found to be a reliable, effective and efficient method. Four mammalian lipid components were assessed as potential attractants—linoleic acid, arachidonic acid, methyl myristate and squalene—, and the insect/tick repellent DEET for potential repellence. Linoleic acid was significantly attractive to P. ovis adult females and has the potential to act as an attractant. Identification of P. ovis semiochemicals, especially attractants, would be beneficial in the development of novel control methods and tools for this species. This is essential considering the increase in resistance to the limited prophylactic chemical treatments in the UK, and the high prevalence of scab infections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
168. An Unrecorded Position of Watermarks in Early Nineteenth-Century English Paper.
- Author
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DUMONTET, CARLO
- Subjects
WATERMARKS ,PAPER industry ,LAW - Abstract
The article focuses on the unrecorded watermark position in an early 19th century book "A Collection of Songs," Vol. I, by Charles Dibdin. The author explores the Paper Duties Act in Great Britain in the context to the positioning of dated watermarks in manufactured papers. The author adds that the watermark offers information that is valuable to paper historians and analytical bibliographers.
- Published
- 2011
169. 'Mopping up tears in the academy' – working-class academics, belonging, and the necessity for emotional labour in UK academia.
- Author
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Rickett, Bridgette and Morris, Anna
- Subjects
- *
GENDER , *PAPER arts , *HIGHER education - Abstract
Previous research exploring how working-class women experience UK Higher Education (HE) work has made evident recurring themes around social segregation and corresponding difficulties with feeling they belong. This paper develops this work by exploring the ways in which UK, HE based working-class women lecturers talk about their sense of belonging. It was found that, in contemporary UK HE, lecturing work is located within a marketised space where caring for students is central and the deployment of emotional labour to seen to be a necessary requirement to meet those demands. In addition, this labour is understood to be work that working-class women can readily take up, and as one of the few vehicles to enable feelings of value and belonging. However, this work is also devalued, unaccounted for and potentially harmful to those who do engage in it, therefore shoring up/ reinforcing a class and gender stratified UK academy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
170. Some Lessons for Teachers and Examiners from the 1988 GCSE Physics Papers.
- Author
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Tebbutt, Maurice
- Abstract
This article summarizes the examining syllabuses of the 1988 General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) Physics papers. Some of the errors and uncertainties of the GCSE are discussed with examples. Lists five references. (YP)
- Published
- 1989
171. "It's the Best Job on the Paper" – The Courts Beat During the Journalism Crisis.
- Author
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Jones, Richard
- Subjects
JOURNALISM ,PRESS ,FREEDOM of the press ,LAW reports, digests, etc. ,TELEVISION journalists ,LAYOFFS - Abstract
Local journalism in the UK has been described as being in "crisis". Local newspapers have experienced years of declining circulations and staff cuts, leading to questions about how effectively those institutions can continue to perform normative functions of journalism. One of those is to report on the courts. Through analysis of 22 semi-structured interviews with local newspaper reporters who cover the courts beat, agency court reporters who supply the local press, as well as broadcast journalists involved in both local and national court coverage, this paper helps to establish how the daily newswork of court journalists has developed amid a turbulent period in journalism, especially local journalism. The research finds that court reporting has been less affected than other news beats but faces a series of challenges related to financial cuts and other pressures. While the local press has become even more essential to the provision of court reporting, a central part of the news media's fourth estate role, those challenges affect the ability of court reporters to perform this function. This paper recommends that policymakers consider using a form of public funding to guarantee the future of court reporting at the local level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
172. Measuring the effect of highly cited papers in OR/systems journals: a survey of articles citing the work of Checkland and Jackson.
- Author
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Paucar-Caceres, Alberto
- Subjects
OPERATIONS research ,SYSTEMS engineering - Abstract
Looks at a survey of articles citing the works of Peter Checkland and Michael Jackson on operational research and the systems community in Great Britain. Definition of emergence of systems thinking; Stages in the general development of the management sciences; Information on the research papers written by Checkland and Jackson.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
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173. Improving quality of referral letters from primary to secondary care: a literature review and discussion paper.
- Author
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Tobin-Schnittger, Patrick, O’Doherty, Jane, O’Connor, Ray, and O’Regan, Andrew
- Subjects
- *
FAMILY medicine , *MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *MEDICAL referrals , *MEDLINE , *ONLINE information services , *PRIMARY health care - Abstract
Background: Referral letters sent from primary to secondary or tertiary care are a crucial element in the continuity of patient information transfer. Internationally, the need for improvement in this area has been recognised. This aim of this study is to review the current literature pertaining to interventions that are designed to improve referral letter quality. Methods: A search strategy designed following a Problem, Intervention, Comparator, Outcome model was used to explore the PubMed and EMBASE databases for relevant literature. Inclusion and exclusion criteria were established and bibliographies were screened for relevant resources. Results: A total of 18 publications were included in this study. Four types of interventions were described: electronic referrals were shown to have several advantages over paper referrals but were also found to impose new barriers; peer feedback increases letter quality and can decrease ‘inappropriate referrals’ by up to 50%; templates increase documentation and awareness of risk factors; mixed interventions combining different intervention types provide tangible improvements in content and appropriateness. Conclusion: Several methodological considerations were identified in the studies reviewed but our analysis demonstrates that a combination of interventions, introduced as part of a joint package and involving peer feedback can improve. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
174. BSRM Annual Meeting London – 2015 – Poster & Free Paper Abstracts: Free Paper (Podium presentations).
- Subjects
- *
CONFERENCES & conventions , *REHABILITATION , *SOCIETIES - Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
175. The Homogenisation of Prospectuses over the Period of Massification in the UK
- Author
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Knight, Elizabeth Bronwen
- Abstract
Through historically oriented critical discourse analysis this article considers how the messages regarding the purpose of higher education, as presented in prospectuses of four case study institutions, have been impacted by massification and marketisation in England between 1977 and 2018. The prospectuses of four higher education institutions of different status were analysed to trace how discourses relating to the value of an undergraduate degree could be identified in the prospectuses. The findings suggest that while the prospectuses presented multiple rationales as to why students should undertake degrees, there was a significant increase in focus on graduate transitions to employment and a parallel hollowing-out of information relating to course content. The study found that over the period the vocabularies drawn on to present the value of a degree have become homogenised, yet the rationales given for undertaking tertiary study became more numerous and complex, making diversity of institutional offers difficult for prospective students to differentiate.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
176. Following the paper trail: the UK scientific and technological knowledge space and its reliance on international knowledge spillovers.
- Author
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Kogler, Dieter F. and Keungoui Kim
- Subjects
SCIENTIFIC knowledge ,FREE trade ,ECONOMIC expansion ,ECONOMIC development ,COMPETITIVE advantage in business - Abstract
Knowledge is an essential ingredient for economic development, growth and gaining a competitive advantage. In order to produce novel and valuable knowledge, it is advantageous, perhaps vital, to rely on insights gained from prior research efforts. Those knowledge spillovers (KS) provide the rationale for sustained economic growth and produce unique place-based knowledge spaces. Due to the spatial embeddedness and stickiness of knowledge, most investigations mainly pay attention to the localized nature of KS, but what about those spillovers from other jurisdictions, or perhaps even from across the globe? To analyse the role played by international KS, the present study investigates to what extent international KS shape the evolution of the UK science and technology space. The first step involves creating knowledge spaces following the methodology outlined by Kogler et al. (2013; 2017) for the period 2006-15. Subsequently, we are following the paper trail of publications and patents developed by UK authors and inventors to depict to what degree international KS in specific science and technology domains have contributed to the production of novel knowledge in the UK. The results indicate that four out of five citations made in publications and patents in the UK are the works of authors and inventors residing elsewhere. This has important policy implications considering recent tendencies to curtail trade and the free movement of labour, all of which contribute to the diffusion of knowledge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
177. How do we incorporate patient views into the design of healthcare services for older people: a discussion paper.
- Author
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Brocklehurst PR, McKenna G, Schimmel M, Kossioni A, Jerković-Ćosić K, Hayes M, da Mata C, and Müller F
- Subjects
- Aged, Dental Care for Aged organization & administration, Health Priorities, Health Services for the Aged organization & administration, Humans, Needs Assessment, Netherlands, United Kingdom, Dental Care for Aged methods, Patient Preference psychology
- Abstract
Background: Across the European Union costs for the treatment of oral disease is expected to rise to €93 Billion by 2020 and be higher than those for stroke and dementia combined. A significant proportion of these costs will relate to the provision of care for older people. Dental caries severity and experience is now a major public health issue in older people and periodontal disease disproportionately affects older adults. Poor oral health impacts on older people's quality of life, their self-esteem, general health and diet. Oral health care service provision for older people is often unavailable or poor, as is the standard of knowledge amongst formal and informal carers. The aim of this discussion paper is to explore some of the approaches that could be taken to improve the level of co-production in the design of healthcare services for older people., Main Text: People's emotional and practical response to challenges in health and well-being and the responsiveness of systems to their needs is crucial to improve the quality of service provision. This is a particularly important aspect of care for older people as felt, expressed and normative needs may be fundamentally different and vary as they become increasingly dependent. Co-production shifts the design process away from the traditional 'top-down' medical model, where needs assessments are undertaken by someone external to a community and strategies are devised that encourage these communities to become passive recipients of services. Instead, an inductive paradigm of partnership working and shared leadership is actively encouraged to set priorities and ultimately helps improve the translational gap between research, health policy and health-service provision., Discussion: The four methodological approaches discussed in this paper (Priority Setting Partnerships, Discrete Choice Experiments, Core Outcome Sets and Experience Based Co-Design) represent an approach that seeks to better engage with older people and ensure an inductive, co-produced process to the research and design of healthcare services of the future. These methods facilitate partnerships between researchers, healthcare professionals and patients to produce more responsive and appropriate public services for older people.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
178. Multiple Pregnancies Following Assisted Conception: Scientific Impact Paper No. 22.
- Subjects
- Female, Fertilization in Vitro, Humans, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications etiology, Single Embryo Transfer, United Kingdom, Pregnancy, Multiple, Reproductive Techniques, Assisted
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
179. Monetary policy and price stability in British post-war debate: restatement of evidence from economists' papers presented to the Radcliffe Committee.
- Author
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Cristiano, Carlo and Paesani, Paolo
- Subjects
- *
MONETARY policy , *MONETARY theory , *UNEMPLOYMENT ,BRITISH economic policy -- 1945-1964 - Abstract
The article reconstructs the opinions expressed by academic economists in front of the Radcliffe Committee, whose Report was a document of considerable importance for the post-war theory of monetary policy. The Committee provided one of the first official occasions to discuss the nexus between inflation and unemployment in Britain and the role of monetary policy in achieving price stability. Analyzing the Report, the Memoranda and the Minutes of evidence put forth in front of the Committee, the article documents the innovative aspects of the Radcliffe doctrine on monetary issues and its complex connections with Keynesian and Post-Keynesian monetary theory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
180. Plenary Speeches/Invited Papers, Conferences in 2008.
- Subjects
SPEECHES, addresses, etc. ,ENGLISH as a foreign language ,EXHIBITIONS ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,LANGUAGE teachers ,TEACHING methods ,SECOND language acquisition - Abstract
The article presents the plenary speeches delivered during several conferences in 2008. It cites the 42nd Annual Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) Convention and Exhibit that was held on April 2-5 in New York which speeches' titles include "Correctness and Correction," "Creating Independent Language Learners" and "Worlds of Practice: In Search of Community." It notes the 42nd Annual International Association of Teachers of English as a Foreign Language (IATEFL) Conference and Exhibition from April 7-11 in Great Britain which discussed several topics including "Changing Global English Language Teaching (ELT) Practices" and "Motivation and the Vision of Knowing a Second Language."
- Published
- 2009
181. Exploring alternative assessments for signing deaf candidates.
- Author
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O'Neill, Rachel, Cameron, Audrey, Burns, Eileen, and Quinn, Gary
- Subjects
- *
ELECTRONIC paper , *SIGN language , *ATTITUDES toward language , *LANGUAGE policy , *LANGUAGE & languages - Abstract
Attitudes to sign languages or language policies are often not overtly discussed or recorded but they influence deaf young people's educational opportunities and outcomes. Two qualitative studies from Scotland investigate the provision of British Sign Language as accommodation in public examinations. The first explores the views of deaf pupils and staff about the official system for face‐to‐face interpretation of exam papers. The second investigates a centrally translated digital paper with embedded video questions. Discussion focuses on contrasts between the USA and UK approaches to accommodations, raising issues of standardized technical terms in signed languages, the right to respond in sign, and candidate choice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
182. Reforming Bribery: Law Commission Consultation Paper 185 (1) Bribery Reform and the Law Commission--Again.
- Author
-
Alldridge, Peter
- Subjects
BRIBERY ,LAW reform ,CIVIL service ,CRIME - Abstract
The article discusses the proposal for reform of the law on bribery in Grea Britain. It is stated that the Law Commission believes that bribery can be regarded as a threat to duties of loyalty and a violation of the duties of a public sector employee. It explains that bribery law reform has great political significance in the country. According to the author, law reform will work better if taken as a single issue or as a whole field.
- Published
- 2008
183. Invited commentary in response to the paper entitled 'Iodine concentration of milk-alternative drinks available in the UK in comparison with cows' milk' by Sarah Bath and colleagues.
- Author
-
Brito AF
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Female, United Kingdom, Iodine analysis, Milk chemistry
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
184. Paperwork, compassion and temporal conflicts in British social work.
- Author
-
Mueller-Hirth, Natascha and Yuill, Chris
- Subjects
- *
PHILOSOPHY of time , *PAPER arts , *COMPASSION , *SOCIAL services , *SOCIAL workers - Abstract
While previous literature has examined time discourses in social work and demonstrated that social work is predicated on linear understandings of time, one area that has received little theoretical and empirical attention in the literature on time and social work is what effects various social work temporalities exert on the lifeworld of social workers and how they shape their working days. This paper draws on semi-structured interviews with British social workers and employs an abductive approach to data analysis. By analysing the participants' experiences of time and work, the article identifies two temporalities that exist in social work practice, paperwork time and compassionate time. Paperwork time is linear, instantaneous and accelerated, requiring social workers to juggle multiple competing demands and needs. Compassionate time is more developmental and cyclical and requires slower engagement. The paper then discusses how social workers negotiated these contradictory temporalities and highlights the potentially negative effects of temporal conflicts on people's health, well-being and on social work practice at large. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
185. What the papers say: science coverage by UK national newspapers.
- Author
-
Hyden, Fiona and King, Chris
- Subjects
SCIENCE ,NEWSPAPERS ,PRESS ,SCIENCE education ,CURRICULUM ,LIFE sciences - Abstract
Science curriculum development is currently focusing on 'scientific literacy', that is, that a science curriculum should prepare all young people for life, enabling them to understand and engage with scientific reports in the news media. So, what do the news media say about science? A UK newspaper survey conducted in spring 2003 showed that most science stories were related to life science, some to technology and earth science, a few to physics and none directly to chemistry. This 'snapshot' survey of one of the news media suggests that, in future, elements of physics and chemistry might best be taught through life, earth and technological contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
186. Setting Common Examination Papers that Differentiate.
- Author
-
Good, Frances
- Abstract
Considers issues surrounding the use of differentiated examinations. Discusses how differentiation may be provided, the wording of questions, and how marks should be given. Highlights some pitfalls of using this approach. Concludes that, although differentiated examinations are possible, they will not always meet the needs of the end range of test takers. (KO)
- Published
- 1989
187. Young People and Gambling in Britain: A Critique of the DCMS Technical Paper No. 8.
- Author
-
Griffiths, Mark D. and Orford, Jim
- Subjects
GAMBLING ,BEHAVIOR ,ADOLESCENCE ,YOUNG adults ,LITERATURE - Abstract
This report is a brief critique of the report commissioned by the Department of Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS; May-Chahal, Measham, Brannock, Amos, & Dagnall, 2004) to examine adolescent gambling in Britain. This brief critique is split into three main sections that cover general comments followed by more specific comments in relation to the executive summary and the rest of the report. The report also includes our own executive summary and an appendix of comments from other people in the field of youth gambling relating to the DCMS report. The reason for writing this critique is that the conclusions made in the DCMS report are the ones most likely to be heard at Ministerial level. Given that the report is selective in the use of the literature and the executive summary is written in such a way as to seriously minimize the problem and issue of adolescent gambling, we present a similar picture but with a different emphasis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
188. The metamorphosis of the Islamic political economy publications (1980-2021) – a bibliometric analysis.
- Author
-
Khalifah, Mohamad Handi, Savaşan, Fatih, Khan, Naimat U., and Khan, Shabeer
- Subjects
BIBLIOMETRICS ,METAMORPHOSIS ,ISLAMIC finance ,ECONOMIC systems ,RESEARCH personnel ,BIBLIOTHERAPY ,DISTANCE education - Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to trace the contours of Islamic political economy (IPE) for last four decades with the help of bibliometric analysis. This method does not focus on in-depth literature. However, it reviews more material content of the published papers in the field, generally including the number of publications, authors, title, H-Index and authors' affiliation. Design/methodology/approach: The authors use biblioshiny by R in conducting bibliometric analysis. Based on the results of analysis, the authors only found 39 relevant documents to the topic with the help of keyword of "Islamic political economy". The authors analyse the data and visualize it into bibliometric images for the convenience of the readers. Findings: There are 39 documents on IPE in the annual scientific production. The year 1980 had the lowest productivity at 3% while the year 2007 showed an increase in scientific productivity by 13%. The most significant increase in production occurred between 2014 and 2015 by 8%, while the most significant decline occurred between 2007 and 2008 by 10%. The most significant contributors are Akan, T., Choudhury, M.A. and Asutay, M. According to the Corresponding Author's Country, the UK has eight articles on IPE. Humanomics is the most influential Journal, with six documents. Research limitations/implications: This research only examines documents sourced from Web of Science and Scopus under the title "Islamic political economy" and does not include articles from other sources. This research has implications for future researchers and suggests a shift in recent research on IPE towards exploring current realities and expanding beyond traditional economic and political aspects. The goal is to gain a comprehensive understanding of Islam's role in shaping economic and political systems, promoting inclusive sustainable development and social justice, and exploring its relationship with broader political and economic systems. Originality/value: IPE has become a trendy topic in the early days, the second half of the 20th century, during the revival of the Islamic mode of finance and development. However, with time, the discussion on this topic appeared less in scientific and academic publications; this issue needs an overview of how far this discipline has evolved. This work aims to identify future research trends in this area. Scholars should investigate articles by author, institution, country, databases, data sources with high-impact factors and objective metrics to get new perspectives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
189. The Reversal of the Passfield White Paper, 1930–1: A Reassessment.
- Author
-
Beckerman-Boys, Carly
- Subjects
- *
ZIONISM , *LOBBYING , *HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century , *JEWISH history ,BRITISH politics & government, 1910-1936 ,BRITISH foreign relations ,BALFOUR Declaration, 1917 ,PALESTINIAN Jews ,LABOUR Party (Great Britain) ,20TH century ,REIGN of George V, Great Britain, 1910-1936 - Abstract
British mandated Palestine has attracted scholarly attention for its role in the development of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. Some aspects of the time period, however, remain somewhat overlooked, and one prominent example is the reversal of the Passfield White Paper in 1931. Following extremely violent anti-Jewish riots in Palestine in 1929, the British Government in Westminster utilized two commissions of enquiry – the Shaw Commission and the Hope-Simpson Commission – to justify a change in policy. Rather than adhere to Britain’s original Zionist commitments, articulated in the Balfour Declaration and official mandate, the government decided to limit Jewish immigration and land purchase in Palestine, articulated in the Passfield White Paper, before reversing the policy months later. Subsequent explanations of this decision have been sparse and focused almost solely on the efficacy of Zionist lobbying. Why the British Government was susceptible to pressure and how this process took place has remained largely unexplored. In order to provide a more thorough analysis of why the Passfield White Paper was reversed, this article reassesses several assumptions within the literature and places the decision within the context of a Labour Government’s need to maintain internal unity, as well as cross-party support, on foreign and particularly India policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
190. Lifelong learning as a lever on structural change? Evaluation of white paper: Learning to succeed: a new framework for post-16 learning.
- Author
-
Coffield, Frank
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION policy , *POST-compulsory education , *PAPER - Abstract
The government's White Paper, Learning to Succeed: a new framework for post-16 learning, is here evaluated. The considerable strengths of the proposals – replacement of the TECs with Learning and Skills Councils, the adoption of social partnership in the membership of the new Councils, the substantial increase in resource and a large number of specific measures – are briefly welcomed. A number of serious reservations are then discussed in detail – for example, the absence of a model of change, the over-riding concern to meet the skill needs of business, the overreliance on human capital theory and the continued dependence on exhortation as a means of increasing employers' investment in training. Findings from The Learning Society Programme are then used to question some of the central assumptions underlying the official model of progress. It is argued that endless technocratic reforms are more likely to foster conformity, compliance and control rather than emancipation, empowerment and the enhancement of learning. Finally, it is concluded that the government is rightly pursuing radical, structural reform but is failing to recognize the potential of lifelong learning as a major lever on such change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
191. Pulp Fiction? Re-innovation of Paper Manufacture from Textiles.
- Author
-
Ryder, Katie and Morley, Nicholas
- Subjects
- *
PAPERMAKING & the environment , *PAPER & the environment , *PAPERMAKING equipment , *FACTORIES ,TEXTILES & the environment - Abstract
Papermaking is once again under consideration as a new market for waste textiles in the UK. Whereas in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries the driver was to provide a convenient and cheap form of cetlutose, now the need is to create markets for waste textiles that are disposed of to incineration or landfill, or which go to declining recycling markets such as wipers or mattress filings. Technical and economic issues are substantial and it may be that the end product of the papermaking process will not resemble the original product of 200 years ago. This article will consider the technical challenges and theoretical understanding of this re-innovation process. It will explore how the changing costs of environmental regulation compliance, and changing consumer preferences are leading to the revisiting of processes in the UK that were previously abandoned. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
192. Reply to: Letter on the Recent Paper "Vascular 'Long COVID': A New Vessel Disease?".
- Author
-
Zanini, Giada, Selleri, Valentina, Roncati, Luca, Coppi, Francesca, Nasi, Milena, Farinetti, Alberto, Manenti, Antonio, Pinti, Marcello, and Mattioli, Anna Vittoria
- Subjects
POST-acute COVID-19 syndrome ,RISK assessment ,VASCULAR diseases ,DISEASE risk factors ,SYMPTOMS ,CHILDREN ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
The article focuses on the prevalence and challenges of diagnosing Long Covid Syndrome in children and adolescents, highlighting the varied symptoms, the scarcity of literature on the subject, and the potential risk factors, including age, gender, allergies, and persistent symptoms.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
193. "British Asignats": Debt, Caricature and Romantic Subjectivity in 1797.
- Author
-
LAHIKAINEN, AMANDA
- Subjects
DEBT ,ROMANTICISM ,SATIRE in art ,PAPER money - Abstract
The article discusses the portrayal of debt and caricature in graphic satire during Romantic period in Great Britain in 1797. Topics discussed include increasing proliferation of paper money represented social relationships, caricatures providing a visual platform to attach people to debt on a national scale, and politicization of paper money. It mentions James Gillray's caricatures on debt.
- Published
- 2014
194. Consular Reports and International Statistics in the British Parliamentary Papers (1830–1914).
- Author
-
Dertilis, George B.
- Subjects
CONSULAR reports ,STATISTICS - Abstract
Reports on the consular reports and international statistics in the British Parliamentary Papers. Details on diplomatic and consular trade reports; Proposition of solutions on problems; Availability of reports at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office Library.
- Published
- 1990
195. Three policy problems: biocreep and the extension of biopolitical administration.
- Author
-
Powell, Henry and Beighton, Christian
- Subjects
BIOPOLITICS (Philosophy) ,COVID-19 pandemic ,EDUCATION policy - Abstract
This paper critiques recent developments in educational discourse through an analysis of two UK Government White Papers and three specific problems. We argue that the latter herald forms of 'biocreep'. Echoing the analysis of such phenomena in the work of Michel Foucault, this gradual extension of 'biopolitics' into the field of education is a tendency which has accelerated with the Coronavirus pandemic and raises many questions for policy analysis. First, we show how the White Papers' approach to life and its related assumptions embody an attempt to further entrench the techniques of biopolitical population management in secondary and further education settings. Second, our analysis of the two Papers shows not just a deepening discursive shift towards ways of instrumentalising educational processes, but also identifies a triple problem of political assemblage: primo, this shift relies on the assemblage of a 'problematic subject'; secondo, it simultaneously assembles the problem of value extraction; and tertio, it obscures the problem of desire or unruliness of the assemblages created. Just as discursive practices of instrumentation, administration and evacuation try to manage these assemblages, they remain unable to contain the three problems they enshrine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
196. Real Estate Insights The future of property research.
- Author
-
Newell, Graeme
- Subjects
REAL property ,REAL estate business ,RESEARCH questions ,RESEARCH personnel ,RESEARCH methodology - Abstract
Purpose: This paper identifies the need to expand the range of research methodologies considered suitable for high-calibre property research publications in the top property journals, particularly concerning the critical "bigger" property research issues going forward. This is important for early career researchers (ECRs), as the ECRs develop the suitability of the research methodologies used by the ECRs in expanding the ECRs' property research agendas. Design/methodology/approach: This research is based on a thorough understanding and extensive experience of the range of property research methodologies available today to publish in the top property journals. This depth of understanding is supported by extensive discussions with leading property industry professionals, as well as reviewing the property research, track record of several leading property researchers from the UK. Findings: A broader range of research methodologies is needed in property research today to fully capture the challenges of the critical property research questions going forward. These methodologies need to go well beyond the finance paradigm that has dominated property research in recent years. Practical implications: Many of the key property research questions going forward need to be addressed by a range of methodologies for richer and deeper insights into resolving these property issues. This particularly relates to the important research issues for the property industry which require a "bigger picture" analysis of these issues, with the research presented in a manner which is accessible and relevant to property industry professionals. Originality/value: This paper addresses the need to expand the research methodologies used in property research today. This is a key issue for property researchers going forward, as many of the important property research questions cannot be addressed from just within the traditional finance paradigm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
197. Paper and the poor: Romantic media ecologies and the Bank Restriction Act of 1797.
- Author
-
Brylowe, Thora
- Subjects
PAPER ,POOR people ,MEDIA studies ,BANK note laws ,MONEY ,ROMANTICISM - Abstract
Rag paper is a common denominator for many Romantic‐era medial forms. The term "media ecology" has become increasingly accepted in media theory, and its spatial and ecological affinities connect it to the urgent topic of climate change. Media ecology invites book historians to consider the labor as well as the origins of the materials that underwrite our culture. This consideration of paper recasts the literary archive as an accretion of physical as well as intellectual labor. The physical labor necessary for the making of rag paper included increasingly industrialized agricultural work and textile production, as well as rag collecting and sorting, as many period authors were aware. At the inception of the Bank Restriction Period (1797–1821), the introduction of low‐denomination paper banknotes changed the London media ecology in ways that had a devastating effect on the English poor, including the very orders of agricultural and textiles workers, rag collectors, and papermill rag‐room women who had a hand in paper making. The Bank of England investigated and prosecuted hundreds, resulting in poverty, transportation, imprisonment, and executions. Paper notes and their forgeries invited considerations of other forms of cultural value and circulation, including literary authorship, and the article ends with the Bank of England's current celebration of Jane Austen as a literary icon by including her portrait on the polymer £10 note. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
198. Eyes Wide Shut: The Fantasies and Disavowals of Education Policy
- Author
-
Clarke, Matthew
- Abstract
This paper examines the tensions between education policy's attachment to notions such as excellence and inclusion and its investments in managerial tropes of competition, continuous quality improvement, standards and accountability that are at odds with and which undermine its attachments. In order to explore these tensions, I draw on the psychoanalytic notion of fantasy, explained through Stanley Kubrick's final film, "Eyes Wide Shut". My argument is that while the individual and society are both constituted through unavoidable division, antagonism and opacity, these notions are obscured through the operations of fantasy which holds out the promise of wholeness, harmony and redemption. In particular, education serves as a key site in which these fantasmatic ideals are promoted and pursued, a claim I substantiate via an analysis of the UK government's 2016 White Paper, "Educational Excellence Everywhere". Specifically, I read the White Paper in terms of five fantasies of: control; knowledge and reason; inclusion; productivity; and victimhood. My argument is that while fantasy is an inescapable element that inevitably structures what we take to be 'reality', education policy might strive to inhabit fantasy differently, thereby finding ways of escaping its current mode of seeing education with eyes wide shut.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
199. Ballot papers and the practice of elections: Britain, France and the United States of America, c.1500-2000.
- Author
-
Crook, Malcolm and Crook, Tom
- Subjects
ELECTIONS ,UNITED States elections ,DIGITAL media ,BALLOTS - Abstract
The humble ballot paper is a defining technology of elections throughout the world. This article interrogates its contested past by demonstrating - over a long period and in the context of three contrasting countries - how and why it emerged in the early modern period and how it was then used, abused and regulated in the context of the expanded, and eventually mass, electoral arenas of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Ironically, by the time that the ballot paper was firmly established, its monopoly was already being challenged by mechanical and then electronic media, which may eventually condemn it to extinction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
200. Unaffordable Rights: Reconciling the Supreme Court's Recent Decisions on the Legality of Fees.
- Author
-
Brodie, Maxwell
- Subjects
CITIZENSHIP ,LEGAL costs ,CIVIL rights ,LAW reports, digests, etc. - Abstract
PRCBC was a legal challenge to the fees imposed on the citizenship application of a child born in, and who has never left, the UK. The Home Secretary imposed legal fees which were well in excess of the costs associated with the citizenship application. In return, this effectively prevented the applicant, and many others alike, from obtaining British citizenship. Many commentators expected the Supreme Court to strike down the fees and reinforce the importance of citizenship and the rule of law. Instead, the court unanimously upheld the legality of the high fees and rooted their conclusion in ordinary rules of statutory interpretation. To some, PRCBC represents a U-turn from the Court's decision in UNISON, which struck down high fees required by employment tribunal applications for failing a reasonable affordability test. Is PRCBC representative of a shift in the highest court to a less interventionist judicial philosophy? This paper examines whether the Supreme Court's decision in PRCBC can convincingly be reconciled with UNISON by considering the nature of constitutional rights, as well as the relationship between primary and delegated legislation. This paper reveals the flaws in some commentators' criticism of PRCBC and argues that the two cases are compatible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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