235 results
Search Results
2. Equity or Discrimination: Addressing Legal Challenges to Transgender Participation in U.S. High School and College Sport.
- Author
-
Coffey, Lauren McCoy
- Subjects
COLLEGE sports ,TRANS women ,JUSTICE administration - Abstract
The visibility of transgender athletes in elite sport recently prompted concern surrounding the potential competitive advantages for transgender women who underwent through male puberty before transitioning. In the United States, several states passed legislation banning transgender women from high school and/or college sport for the purpose of removing this advantage and keeping sport equitable for cisgender women. While these laws seek to protect women's sports, does the exclusion of transgender athletes from sports connected to their chosen gender identity lead to another form of sex discrimination? This paper addresses the legality of transgender participation bans and related lawsuits. As these legislative changes and the lawsuits challenging them are on-going, this paper presents a snapshot and assessment of these policies in the United States in 2021, whether they are likely to withstand challenge under the current legal system, and how sport organizations may respond when the law is not clear. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Learning letters, not language: The nature and quality of language and literacy apps used during remote learning with preschool children in the United States.
- Author
-
Hadley, Elizabeth Burke, McKenna, Meaghan, and Hull, Katharine
- Subjects
DISTANCE education ,PRESCHOOL children ,LANGUAGE acquisition ,HEALTH literacy ,HEALTH websites ,COVID-19 pandemic ,EARLY childhood educators ,READING comprehension - Abstract
During the COVID-19 pandemic, early childhood educators (ECEs) made a rapid pivot to remote instruction. Much of this instruction was facilitated by digital learning resources, but the nature and quality of these resources for children's language and literacy learning is an open question. This paper draws on a national U.S. survey of ECEs during the second pandemic school year (2020–2021), which asked them to report on the apps and websites they asked children to use during remote learning. We then engaged in a content analysis of the apps/websites used most frequently, evaluating their quality along several dimensions, including support for a full range of literacy competencies, equity, and accessibility. Survey results indicated that preschool children were asked to use a wide range of apps, but six were used most frequently: YouTube, Seesaw, Starfall, Epic, Boom Cards, and ABC Mouse. The content analysis indicated that most apps supported code-focused literacy skills, but had less capacity to foster oral language and comprehension. Apps also presented few opportunities to approximate the active, hands-on learning characteristic of in-person preschool. Our analysis points to the pressing need for teacher guidance in the selection and use of apps that provide comprehensive support for language and literacy. Prior State of Knowledge: Prior studies have investigated the quality of apps for young children's literacy learning, and several studies have investigated the nature and frequency of remote instruction for children attending preschool during COVID-19. Novel Contributions: The present study reports valuable information about which language and literacy apps early childhood educators asked children to use during remote learning and provides a comprehensive evaluation of those apps, including dimensions such as equity and accessibility that have been previously under-researched. Practical Implications: One important implication for administrators is that teachers need support in finding and learning to use apps that align more closely with early learning standards. Teachers can use the QuELLA rubric in this paper as a tool for evaluating apps. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Support Policies for Small Businesses During the Covid-19 Crisis: Evidence from Club Convergence Clustering Approach.
- Author
-
Lau, Chi Keung, Zhang, Dongna, and Gozgor, Giray
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,SMALL business ,BUSINESS revenue - Abstract
This paper examines the small business net revenue club convergence clustering dynamics in 51 states in the United States during the first wave of the Covid-19 pandemic. Our analysis is based on the daily data from January 10, 2020, to June 8, 2020. The results indicate that there was only one club convergence for all states during the first wave of the Covid-19 pandemic. This evidence implies that the support policies enacted during the Covid-19 crisis for small and medium-sized enterprises were effective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. "Relationships are reality": centering relationality to investigate land, indigeneity, blackness, and futurity.
- Author
-
Halle-Erby, Kyle
- Subjects
INDIGENOUS peoples ,EDUCATION research ,AUTHORS ,METHODOLOGY - Abstract
This paper proposes that the paradigm of relationality, engaged methodologically, can be the basis of praxis that purposefully moves away from business-oriented notions of "best practices" and toward education research that meets the needs of Indigenous and Black communities currently designing futures within settler colonial states during climate catastrophe. In so doing, the paper considers what a critical Indigenous research paradigm requires of researchers, what a critical Black epistemology requires, and what we can learn by bringing the two together in a relational approach to qualitative research. Relationality is defined and placed in historical context. The author's positionality is engaged by exploring his relationship to relationality through examination of the confluence of Black and Indigenous epistemologies in the United States. Through auto-reflection on a qualitative study of land-based education, this paper analyzes research "openings" as an example of relational methodology praxis. The paper offers a critical analysis of specific, detailed methodological actions undertaken to practice relationality in order to create cracks in existing educational research methodologies through which relationality can take root. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Public Value and Ethical Challenges in the COVID-19 Pandemic Response.
- Author
-
Liou, Kuotsai Tom and Liou, Alex K.
- Subjects
PUBLIC value ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PUBLIC health administration ,PREPAREDNESS ,PUBLIC health ethics ,POLARIZATION (Social sciences) ,PUBLIC officers - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has been a major public governance issue in the United States since 2020. Public officials at all levels of government have provided important policies to control the spread of the pandemic and reduce its impact to society. This paper examines public value and ethical challenges that are related to the government's pandemic responses. The paper first provides a review of value and ethical studies in public administration and public health crisis. It then examines value concerns and ethical challenges in COVID management and policy cases and the influence of political polarization to the value challenges. The paper concludes with discussions about the pandemic's comprehensive challenges to the traditional professional management and suggestions of public value studies and trainings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. The 100 Leading Contributors to English-Language Gerontological Journals: An International Study of Scholarly Impact.
- Author
-
Hodge, David R., Turner, Patricia R., and Huang, Chao-Kai
- Subjects
GERIATRICS ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,LANGUAGE & languages ,MEDICAL personnel - Abstract
The two aims of this study were to: 1) identify the 100 most impactful contributors to English-language gerontological journals, and 2) map their respective disciplinary affiliations to help illuminate the perspectives shaping gerontological discourse. Toward that end, we conducted a secondary data analysis of a publicly available database of the world's leading scientists. After extracting all scientists in the gerontological category, we rank ordered them according to a composite measure of scholarly impact that controls for self-citations and author order while also calculating other bibliometric statistics. Disciplinary affiliations were assigned based upon the Classification of Instructional Programs codes developed by the National Center for Education Statistics at the United States Department of Education. The results reveal the mean contributor to the gerontological literature published 241.15 (SD = 203.95) papers and – after correcting for self-citations – had an h-index of 50.05 (SD = 25.00), and an hm-index 23.67 (SD = 7.50). A diverse array of professional affiliations characterized the contributors with a plurality being located in the health professions category, followed by the biological and biomedical science, and social sciences categories. The results reveal that gerontology is home to some of the world's leading scientists. Leveraging their expertise can help advance the field's collective knowledge development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. From Abstraction to Possibility? The Case of a New Constitutional Convention.
- Author
-
Levinson, Sanford
- Subjects
- *
CONSTITUTIONAL conventions , *PUBLIC welfare - Abstract
The author comments on two articles on the necessity of a new constitutional convention in the U.S. He explains his support for a new national constitutional convention. He examines the first paper in which the author contrasts the First and Second Amendments as instantiating two completely different visions of politics. He addresses several points raised in the second paper, including the positive value of social welfare guarantees listed in a constitutional text.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Machine learning methods for predicting failures of US commercial bank.
- Author
-
Tuan, Le Quoc, Lin, Chih-Yung, and Teng, Huei-Wen
- Subjects
MACHINE learning ,BANKING industry ,BANK failures ,SIMPLE machines ,MACHINE performance - Abstract
In this paper, we attempt to study the effectiveness of various simple machine learning methods in the prediction of bank failures. From a raw dataset of 10,938 US banks during the period of 2000–2020, we find that machine learning approaches do not really outperform the benchmark of conventional statistical method, logistic regression. However, using PCA to retain relevant variance in variables significantly improve the performance of machine learning methods and raise the out-of-sample accuracy of those method to over 70% to over 80%. Of all the machine learning methods used in this paper, the simple KNN seems to be the best model in forecasting bank failure in the United States. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Going beyond the binary of internationalisation: how international faculty programmes enable institutions to function at home and abroad.
- Author
-
Asada, Sarah R.
- Subjects
GLOBALIZATION ,HIGHER education ,CLASSROOMS - Abstract
Internationalisation is now a prominent feature of the higher education landscape, with many institutions integrating international, intercultural and global dimensions inside and outside the classroom. In this paper, I examine the long-term outcomes of international faculty mobility on individual pathways at home institutions framed within the context of internationalisation. I find that the current mode of internationalisation neglects the role of how abroad activities contribute to subsequent institutional internationalisation at home and abroad. My retrospective tracer study with eight qualitative in-depth interview participants finds that formerly internationally mobile faculty integrate international, intercultural, and global dimensions related to the host country, host region and wider world at their home institutions into their teaching, research and service after returning from abroad. In doing so, I propose a new way of understanding how the complementary pillars of abroad and at home internationalisation maintain an on-going, synergetic process that react and contribute to each other and the way in which internationalisation can be re-visited and re-imagined meeting broader goals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. A Legacy of Revision: Maintaining Professional Expertise Over the Changing Diagnosis and Classification of Intellectual Disability in the United States.
- Author
-
Wolff, Elise
- Subjects
- *
INTELLECTUAL disabilities , *EXPERTISE , *PEOPLE with disabilities , *TWENTY-first century , *PROFESSIONAL employees - Abstract
Drawing on publications produced by one of the oldest and leading professional associations dealing with intellectual disability (ID), this paper explores the continual maintenance of expertise over potentially contested classifications. I find that, given unforeseen difficulties among professionals in actually defining and classifying what is currently known as ID as well as the later addition of new stakeholders in the advocacy field, professionals’ understanding of revision shifted over time from a problem to ultimately be solved to a “legacy of revision” used to explain past changes in criteria and anticipate further ones. In analyzing this legacy, I focus on professionals’ understanding of several shifts surrounding diagnostic and classification criteria over the course of the twentieth and into the twenty-first century. To the extent that previous literature suggests that ambiguities surrounding classification are to be expected, this paper shows how professionals in the ID field drew on resonant themes and rhetorically (re)framed past and future changes in their maintenance of expertise in a field that dramatically shifted in what was acceptable in the treatment of people with disabilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Who’s indoctrinating whom?: searching for anti-racist ideology in educational policy since 2020.
- Author
-
Furrey, Gavin Meyer
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION policy , *ANTI-racism , *EDUCATIONAL ideologies , *RACISM in education , *INDOCTRINATION - Abstract
Amid debates about CRT in education, this paper critically analyses laws that have reportedly sought to expand ‘education on racism, bias, the contributions of specific racial or ethnic groups to U.S. history, or related topics’ with the hypothesis that there would be little evidence of anti-racist ideology in policies pertaining to curriculum. The research design thus leans on King and Chandler’s (2016) distinction between non-racist and antiracist stances, as well as Andreotti et al’.s (2015) social cartography that maps out ‘soft-reform’ and ‘radical reform’ spaces, to achieve a latent content analysis of 14 pieces of legislation across 13 states since 2020 to identify and analyse the ideological characteristics of these pieces of legislation. Only four of the 14 documents from four different states contain a significant anti-racist ideological leaning; the others express a liberal multicultural ideological position that celebrates difference and recognizes contributions, but does not examine systemic racism. Thus, among states that are legislating more ethnic studies, the vast majority do not legislate anti-racist positions. This paper concludes that there is little evidence of anti-racist ideas being legislated into primary and secondary education in the United States, and that most curricular reforms toe a non-critical ideological line. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Subsidiary networks, connectivity, and urban-regional economic development.
- Author
-
Bathelt, Harald and Buchholz, Maximilian
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC development , *INTERNATIONAL economic relations - Abstract
This paper argues that urban-regional income development depends on a larger fabric of economic relations at the national and international levels. Focusing on Core-Based Statistical Areas (CBSAs) in the US, the paper identifies firms' subsidiary networks across space and their changes over time. These networks form a basic architecture through which important growth impulses in production and innovation are transmitted that impact urban income levels. Using a balanced panel of U.S. CBSAs with LexisNexis Corporate Affiliations data from 1993 until 2017, we develop a model that examines the relationship between national and international connectivity and urban income levels, differentiated by origin/destination of ties, industrial sectors, and various interaction effects. Our results strongly support that linkages at both the national and international scale (particularly linkages with European locations) are significantly related to urban-regional income development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Discussion of federal policies affecting broadband expansion and telehealth in Appalachia.
- Author
-
Kirkland, Deborah A. and Lindley, Lisa C.
- Subjects
- *
INTERNET access , *HEALTH services accessibility , *MEDICAL quality control , *HEALTH policy , *NURSING , *TELEMEDICINE , *RURAL health services , *ADVANCED practice registered nurses , *RURAL conditions , *PUBLIC health , *TELENURSING , *QUALITY assurance , *HEALTH equity , *COVID-19 pandemic ,FEDERAL government of the United States - Abstract
There have been 188 rural hospital closures in the United States since 2010 with approximately 20% of these in Appalachia. Telehealth has become a way that nurses can reach rural patients who might not otherwise receive health care. The purpose of this paper is to (1) outline the federal policies enacted during COVID-19 for broadband expansion; and (2) suggest how advanced practice nursing care might be affected by broadband expansion and telehealth in the region. A search of PubMed was conducted in January 2023, using the search words, "policy", "telehealth", "broadband", and "Appalachia". New laws appropriated funds to expand broadband infrastructure that made it possible for telehealth to be used by nurses to deliver health care to rural patients. This discussion paper found that broadband legislation was instrumental in expanding telecommunications and telehealth by NPs. There is a great need for broadband to continue to expand and for trained nurses to provide care via telehealth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Negotiating Work-Family Transitions: Reverse Family Migration among Second-Generation Hong Kong Mothers.
- Author
-
Ngan, Lucille Lok Sun
- Subjects
- *
FAMILIES , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *FAMILY unity (Law) - Abstract
Gendered and generational understandings of circular migration are scant in studies of Chinese family migration. Filling this gap, this paper draws on in-depth interviews with twenty-six returnee families to examine the work–family transitions of previously employed, overseas-educated mothers who have re-migrated from Hong Kong to Canada, Australia, the United States, or the United Kingdom. These overseas-educated returnee mothers possess transnational backgrounds that differentiate them from most first-generation immigrant mothers. This paper shows that, despite this distinction, reverse migration leads to compromised careers and domestication for these women, although they accept, and in some cases embrace, such compromises. This study elucidates how both husbands and wives in these families justify women's post-migration changes in their work and caregiving roles. It argues that beyond economic rationalization, interrelated gender, cultural, transnational, and family lifestyle dimensions distinctively impact how second-generation returnee mothers negotiate work–family transitions. This paper offers new insights involving generational and gendered dimensions into the study of Chinese family migration. It also widens the discussion of the impact of family migration on skilled immigrant women in transnational circuits beyond its focus on the lives of first-generation skilled immigrant women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Passing the torch: intergenerational capital transmission and the Black legacy experience at a PWI.
- Author
-
Sewell, Christopher J. P.
- Subjects
DIVERSITY & inclusion policies ,EDUCATION policy ,RACISM in education ,SOCIAL capital ,HIGHER education - Abstract
As American colleges and universities become more diverse, expanding our vision and working around what it means to be a legacy, especially at Predominately White Institutions, will be essential. This paper examines Black families' experiences at Churchill, a small liberal arts PWI in the Northeast. With the aid of Yosso's community cultural wealth and Bourdieu's notions of cultural and social capital, it examines how parents' experiences at Churchill and exposing their child to Churchill shaped and informed their child's decision to attend their parent's alma mater and the passing of social and cultural capital between the generations. Findings suggest that while navigational and familial capital passes between generations, Black cultural capital does not pass smoothly and impacts their child's experience at Churchill. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. A social-ecological examination of sleep among Airmen in technical training.
- Author
-
Ellis, J. M., Estevez Burns, R. A., Blue Star, J. A., Patience, M. A., Brown, L. N., Ruggieri, J., Joiner, A. V., Little, M. A., and Talcott, W. G.
- Subjects
- *
QUALITATIVE research , *FOCUS groups , *CONTENT analysis , *DECISION making , *SOCIAL context , *THEMATIC analysis , *SLEEP , *HEALTH behavior , *HEALTH education , *SLEEP quality , *MILITARY personnel , *MANAGEMENT - Abstract
Inadequate sleep is an on-going risk to the health and mission readiness of U.S. Armed Forces, with estimates of sleep problems high above U.S. civilian populations. Intervening early in the career of active duty Air Force personnel (or "Airmen") with education and the establishment of healthy behaviors may prevent short and long term-detriments of sleep problems. This paper describes the results of a qualitative study seeking to understand the facilitators and barriers to achieving good sleep in a technical training school during the first year of entry into the United States Air Force. Using the social ecological framework and content analysis, three focus groups with Airmen were conducted to explore themes at the individual, social, environmental, and organizational/policy level. Overall, results indicated a cohort motivated to achieve good sleep, and also struggling with a number of barriers across each level. This paper highlights opportunities for population health interventions during technical training aimed at supporting Airmen in developing healthy sleep behaviors early in the course of their career. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Abortion as the Gateway to Recognizing Lived Female Experience.
- Author
-
Grill, Hillary
- Subjects
ABORTION ,REPRODUCTIVE rights ,LEGAL rights ,FEMALES ,APPELLATE courts - Abstract
For 49 years, the right to abortion was taken for granted—inhaled by every girl, every woman—by all people assigned female at birth in the United States. This right no longer exists. In 2022, with the Dobbs v. Jackson decision, the Supreme Court removed federal protection for the legal right to abortion and therefore women's agency over their bodies. This paper will contextualize abortion as part of a continuum that encompasses gender, motherhood and the meaning of reproduction and reproductive rights as sociocultural and intrapsychic phenomena. The expectation that mature female-bodied people are child-desiring women persists and is not conceptualized as optional. It is the original choice women do not have. The next choice women no longer have, if they become pregnant, is whether or not to continue a pregnancy. The Dobbs decision means the cultural reinstatement of female de-sexualization, along with the suffocating and silencing of agency—a negation of women's voices, desire, power and subjectivity—a recipe for psychological destabilization. Personal and clinical material will illustrate these points. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Patent assertion entities and follow-on innovation. Evidence from patent acquisitions at the USPTO.
- Author
-
Orsatti, Gianluca and Sterzi, Valerio
- Subjects
NONPRACTICING entities (Patent law) ,PATENT databases ,PATENTS ,PATENT suits ,INVENTIONS - Abstract
Patent monetisation is an important source of revenues worldwide. This activity is increasingly carried out by patent assertion entities (PAE), which are at the origin of about 40% of infringement actions filed in the United States. This paper uses an original database of US patents reporting PAE patent acquisitions. We document two key empirical facts about the presence of PAEs in the market for patents. First, PAEs build large patent portfolios and contribute significantly to patent transfers in the US. Second, their impact on follow-on innovation is, on average, negative. With a series of dynamic diff-in-diffs analyses, we estimate a significant post-transfer drop in forward citations received by patents acquired by PAEs. This drop is not immediate but takes some years to materialise. Heterogeneity tests show that our results are driven by acquisitions of old and highly cited patents, as well as by patent acquisitions by large patent aggregators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Transgender Imagining and the Danger of Normative Theory.
- Author
-
McGleughlin, Jade
- Subjects
- *
TRANSGENDER people , *TRANSGENDER rights , *TRANSGENDER communities , *BODY marking , *TRANSPHOBIA - Abstract
This paper looks at the harms of superimposing normative theorizing on communities who live and love outside the psychoanalytic norm, particularly transgender individuals. Writing in 2019/2023, an especially perilous period for transgender people's rights and safety in the United States, McGleughlin critiques a published paper by Alessandra Lemma to illustrate the analytic tendency to rely on normative theory that may harm patients. Lemma's pieces focuses on a patient called "Jane." The 18-year-old wishes to pursue body modification to change their gender, but the analyst believes Jane is not "truly" transgender, and she creates a narrative of Jane's repair. While Lemma's rhetoric suggests that she does not believe that transgender life is inherently pathological, McGleughlin exposes a beneath-the-surface treatment rife with normative assumptions. Uncritically bringing these assumptions to clinical work has the potential to distort or even erase the story of the other, the author argues, harkening back to treatments in which the clinician is said to have "helped" the gay or lesbian patient show sexual restraint. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Agricultural Injury Surveillance in the United States and Canada: A Systematic Literature Review.
- Author
-
Li, Sihan, Raza, Mian Muhammad Sajid, and Issa, Salah
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC health surveillance , *SEX distribution , *PROBABILITY theory , *AGE distribution , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *WORK-related injuries , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *MEDICAL records , *ELECTRONIC health records , *QUALITY assurance , *DATA analysis software , *AGRICULTURE - Abstract
Agricultural injuries remain a major concern in North America, with a fatal injury rate of 19.5 deaths per 100,000 workers in the United States. Numerous research efforts have sought to compile and analyze records of agricultural-related injuries and fatalities at a national level, utilizing resources, ranging from newspaper clippings and hospital records to Emergency Medical System (EMS) data, death certifications, surveys, and other multiple sources. Despite these extensive efforts, a comprehensive understanding of injury trends over extended time periods and across diverse types of data sources remains elusive, primarily due to the duration of data collection and the focus on specific subsets. This systematic review, following Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines, consolidates and analyzes agricultural injury surveillance data from 48 eligible papers published between 1985 and 2022 to offer a holistic understanding of trends and challenges. These papers, reporting an average of 25,000 injuries each, were analyzed by database source type, injury severity, nature of injury, body part, source of injury, event/exposure, and age. One key finding is that the top source of injury or event/exposure depends on the chosen surveillance system and injury severity, underscoring the need of diverse data sources for a nuanced understanding of agricultural injuries. This study provides policymakers, researchers, and practitioners with crucial insights to bolster the development and analysis of surveillance systems in agricultural safety. The overarching aim is to address the pressing issue of agricultural injuries, contributing to a safer work environment and ultimately enhancing the overall well-being of individuals engaged in agriculture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Where do incarcerated trans women prefer to be housed and why? Adding nuanced understandings to a complex debate through the voices of formerly incarcerated trans women in Australia and the United States.
- Author
-
Brömdal, Annette, Sanders, Tait, Stanners, Melinda, du Plessis, Carol, Gildersleeve, Jessica, Mullens, Amy B., Phillips, Tania M., Debattista, Joseph, Daken, Kirstie, Clark, Kirsty A., and Hughto, Jaclyn M. W.
- Subjects
- *
SAFETY , *IMPRISONMENT , *RESEARCH funding , *CORRECTIONAL institutions , *GAY people , *CRIMINALS , *INTERVIEWING , *ATTITUDES toward sex , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *THEMATIC analysis , *SOUND recordings , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *SOCIAL attitudes , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *RESEARCH methodology , *TRANS women , *HOUSING - Abstract
Background: Incarcerated trans women experience significant victimization, mistreatment, barriers to gender-affirming care, and human rights violations, conferring high risk for trauma, psychological distress, self-harm, and suicide. Across the globe, most carceral settings are segregated by sex assigned at birth and governed by housing policies that restrict gender expression—elevating ‘safety and security’ above the housing preferences of incarcerated people. Aim/methods: Drawing upon the lived experiences of 24 formerly incarcerated trans women in Australia and the United States and employing Elizabeth Freeman’s notion of chrononormativity, Rae Rosenberg’s concept of heteronormative time, and Kadji Amin’s use of queer temporality, this paper explores trans women’s carceral housing preferences and contextual experiences, including how housing preferences challenge governing chrononormative and reformist carceral housing systems. Findings: Participants freely discussed their perspectives regarding housing options which through thematic analysis generated four options for housing: 1) men’s carceral settings; 2) women’s carceral settings; 3) trans- and gay-specific housing blocks; and 4) being housed in protective custody or other settings. There appeared to be a relationship between the number of times the person had been incarcerated, the duration of their incarceration, and where they preferred to be housed. Conclusions: This analysis contributes to richer understandings regarding trans women’s experiences while incarcerated. This paper also informs the complexities and nuances surrounding housing preferences from the perspectives of trans women themselves and considers possible opportunities to enhance human rights, health and wellbeing when engaging in transformative approaches to incarceration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. "Awakening the sleeping giant": teacher leadership in Jamaica and the USA.
- Author
-
Roofe, Carmel and Blair, Eleanor
- Subjects
- *
TEACHER leadership , *SCHOOL improvement programs , *TEACHING - Abstract
Given discourse across the globe on school reform and the importance of teachers' work to school improvement, teacher leadership represents an opportunity to re-imagine school cultures, and to consider a range of factors that impact the teaching profession and contribute to overall school improvement. Based on a qualitative inquiry of 24 teacher leaders across two country contexts (Jamaica and the United States) and using the metaphor of 'awakening the sleeping giant', we argue that teacher leadership is an untapped phenomenon and a necessity for 21st century school improvement. Within this paper we draw on the teacher leaders' stories to provide an understanding of the power and resources residing in the domain of teachers' work. Through the findings we showcase that there are elements of teacher leadership that transcend specific school and country contexts based on school structure and historical precedents. The findings presented in this paper also highlight that teachers' work is highly political and that historical precedents related to power and gender created differences in how teacher leadership has been perceived and enacted. The paper closes with a discussion about the cross-cultural 'truths" that emerged and the implications for teachers' work and school improvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Ageing with (and into) assistive technology: an exploration of the narratives of amputees and polio survivors.
- Author
-
Johnstone, Lewis, Almukhtar, Ali, DePasquale, Rebecca, Warren, Narelle, and Block, Pamela
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOLOGICAL aspects of aging , *PATIENT autonomy , *POLIO patients , *INTERVIEWING , *AMPUTEES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *DECISION making , *ASSISTIVE technology , *THEMATIC analysis , *BIOGRAPHY (Literary form) , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *SELF-perception - Abstract
Assistive technologies (AT) perform an important social role, interacting with cultural systems to produce or hinder accessibility to biosocial environments. This interaction profoundly shapes not only how an individual body can be experienced by users but also produce and hinder accessibility to biosocial environments. AT users have historically been viewed through a medical model, which deems them disabled by their impairments and by dominant ableist narratives. Therefore, this paper serves to provide an insight into the importance of ageing with and into AT. This paper aims to investigate polio survivors' and diabetic amputees' experiences of assistive technologies in order to better understand impacts upon narrative and identity. By applying an anthropological and sociological lens, a holistic view of the experiences of polio survivor and amputee AT users is developed. This paper draws on 16 in-depth interviews with polio survivors and diabetic amputees in the United States (US) and Australia, which were analysed using an experience-centered narrative approach. Both projects were approved by ethics boards. All participants provided written consent. Five themes were identified: a) disruption to biographies, which reflected AT impact on how narratives become altered; b) impacts to autonomy, which reflected the importance of regaining previous daily activities; c) re-engaging with community life, which highlighted how AT supported participation in valued activities; d) self-perceptions of assistive technologies, which act in opposition to external perspectives and challenge ableist narratives; and e) an intergenerational comparison of new and older AT users highlights the importance of temporalities. This paper offers new perspectives on ageing with assistive technologies, with a focus on identity and narrative. The importance of this paper is to contribute to the existing literature that demonstrates the cultural implications that arise through embodiment and assistive technologies. The use of assistive technology can help individuals regain function, but the individual circumstances require consideration The use of assistive technology is a complex entanglement of bodies, environments, biographies, and imagined futures. The use of assistive technology can provide participants autonomy over their narratives and assist with maintaining their identities [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Locating Odissi in the United States: Dancing through Curricula, Teaching Methods, and Assessment.
- Author
-
Kaktikar, Aadya
- Subjects
ODISSI dance ,DANCE education ,CURRICULUM ,TEACHING methods - Abstract
Teaching Odissi in the university space is not new to me. However, as a dancer-scholar located in India, teaching this dance form in a university in the United States expanded and deepened my understanding of this dance form and the ways it can be taught. This encounter, a collision of cultures, beliefs, and movement practices in the dance studio, engendered a pedagogical process that revealed itself as I taught this class over two semesters. The design of the class discussed in this article emerged from an intersection of my own training in Odissi with my guru and the institutional requirements of the program. This paper unpacks my pedagogical process of creating a syllabus, adopting teaching strategies, and assessing student work for negotiating the cultural chasm between me and my students, hoping to generate a sense of critical questioning, mutual curiosity, and respect. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Moving from dialogue to demonstration: assessing anti-racist practice in social work education utilizing simulation.
- Author
-
Lynch, Brittany
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL work education , *HEALTH equity , *ANTI-racism , *PANDEMICS , *WHITE supremacy - Abstract
The stark racial health disparities associated with the COVID-19 pandemic coupled with the apparent rise of white supremacy in the United States (U.S.) supports the necessity of anti-racist social work education and practice. Anti-racist practice is particularly salient given the significant numbers of Black, Indigenous, People of Color (BIPOC) served by social workers across the country. This paper highlights ways in which racism continues to permeate the country and the implications for social work practice and education, and how assessment of anti-racist practice has historically and continues to be absent in social work education. After reviewing the coming changes to the Council on Social Work Education's (CSWE) Educational and Policy Accreditation Standards (EPAS) associated with centering anti-racism in social work education, the paper then offers a rationale for utilizing simulation in student assessment of anti-racist practice behaviors. In order to ensure that social work students are meeting the mandate associated with practicing through an anti-racist lens and are ready to effectively collaborate with BIPOC communities, social work students must be adequately assessed while engaged in their educational training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Regional-scale cultural conservation planning and policy in the United States: an appeal for improvement.
- Author
-
Goldberg, Lacey and Bose, Mallika
- Subjects
CULTURAL property ,LANDSCAPE architecture ,CULTURAL landscapes ,LANDSCAPE changes ,REGIONAL planning ,CULTURAL policy - Abstract
Pennsylvania's (PA) processes and policies for landscape-scale cultural and visual resource conservation are lacking. In PA, like much of the United States (US), landscape change policies are prescriptive and concerned mainly with ecology, health, safety, and welfare issues. These factors combined relegate cultural and scenic aspects to ancillary matters, often leading to their degradation. Culturally focused fields, such as landscape architecture, archaeology, and planning call for rescaling cultural conservation planning to regional scale. Rescaling would treat cultural resources like other environmental and ecological resources, giving cultural resources equal weight in conservation evaluations. The United Kingdom (UK) has policies specifically for visual impact assessment required for development projects. This paper discusses scale issues and political processes within regional visual and cultural resource conservation in PA, US, compares nascent regional-scale planning efforts in PA and the UK, and proposes improvements to PA and, by extension, US cultural landscape conservation policy implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Global learning: A post-COVID-19 approach to advance health equity.
- Author
-
Parke, Dana Marie, Ogbolu, Yolanda, and Rowthorn, Virginia
- Subjects
- *
MIDDLE-income countries , *INTERDISCIPLINARY education , *ENDOWMENTS , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *LEARNING , *WORLD health , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *HEALTH equity , *PUBLIC health , *COMMUNITY services , *COVID-19 pandemic , *WEBINARS , *LOW-income countries - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated acceptance of learning from other countries, especially for high-income countries to learn from low- and middle-income countries, a practice known as global learning. COVID-19’s rapid disease transmission underscored how connected the globe is as well as revealed stark health inequities which facilitated looking outside of one’s borders for solutions. The Global Learning for Health Equity (GL4HE) Network, supported by Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, held a 3-part webinar series in December 2021 to understand the current state of global learning and explore how global learning can advance health equity in the post-COVID-19 era. This paper reflects on these cutting-edge discussions about the current state of global learning, drawing upon the highlights, perspectives, and conclusions that emerged from these webinars. The paper also comments on best practices for global learning, including adapting for context, addressing biases, funding considerations, ensuring bidirectional partnerships, community engagement, and adopting a multidisciplinary approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Faith-based organizations and poverty alleviation: a scoping review on definitions and terminology (2010–2021).
- Author
-
Maes, Sarah, Schrooten, M., Raeymaeckers, P., and Broeckaert, B.
- Subjects
POVERTY reduction ,CONSENSUS (Social sciences) ,SPIRITUALITY ,SOCIAL support ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,POVERTY areas ,SOCIAL sciences ,RESEARCH funding ,AT-risk people ,TERMS & phrases ,RELIGIOUS institutions ,LITERATURE reviews ,RELIGION ,GREY literature ,CHURCH buildings ,SOCIAL case work - Abstract
In this paper, we present the results of a scoping review in which we examined the scientific literature (2010–2021) on faith-based organizations (FBOs) working within the field of poverty alleviation, focusing on the way studies define and use the term FBO. Fifty-two relevant studies were identified and included. Our research shows that the term FBOs is primarily used in American studies. Moreover, there is no broad consensus on the exact definition or meaning of the term nor on its scope. Because of this lack of consensus and the inherent shortcomings of the term, we suggest to replace the term FBO by the term "religion-based solidarity initiatives" (RSIs), We define RSIs as: "Initiatives that, from a religious inspiration, aim at organizing collective action for and/or providing support or services to people in vulnerable positions." These initiatives can range from small scale ad hoc initiatives till large scale formal organizations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Racial differences in maternal risk factors associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes: a population-based study exploring urban and rural geographies in the United States.
- Author
-
Clay, Shondra Loggins, Woodson, Markisha J., Makelarski, Jennifer A., Cheng, W. Susan, Alston, Reginald J., Trask, Jeffrey, and Hodges, Terence
- Subjects
STATISTICS ,HEALTH services accessibility ,SOCIAL support ,RURAL conditions ,AGE distribution ,RACE ,PREGNANT women ,MEDICAL care costs ,HEALTH status indicators ,FISHER exact test ,RISK assessment ,PREGNANCY outcomes ,INCOME ,LOW birth weight ,PREGNANCY complications ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,HEALTH behavior ,SOCIAL classes ,METROPOLITAN areas ,INFANT mortality ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,WHITE people ,AFRICAN Americans ,INSURANCE ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
This paper explores racial differences in maternal risk factors associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes across urban and rural geographies using 2019 data from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System. Bivariate chi-square tests and logistic regression were performed which showed statistically significant geographical differences among Non-Hispanic (NH) Black pregnant women across income levels (p =.016) and perceived health status (p =.003). Regression analyses indicated an increased racial gap between NH White pregnant women and other racial/ethnic groups. The findings support that there are statistically significant racial differences in maternal risk factors across urban and rural geographies for NH Black and Hispanic pregnant women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Some like it HOT: The racialization of mobility, the racial tax state, and silence in managed lane conversions.
- Author
-
Tobias-Lauerman, Abigail, Bohon, Stephanie, and Presser, Lois
- Subjects
RACIALIZATION ,TRANSPORTATION ,METROPOLITAN areas ,VEHICLES - Abstract
Transportation in the United States is a deeply and intricately racialized system. In this paper, we use Seiler's ideas regarding the racialization of mobility and Henricks and Seamster's theory of the racial tax state, in conjunction with Presser's analysis of the unsaid, to explain high-occupancy vehicle (HOV) to high-occupancy toll (HOT) lane conversions in U.S. metropolitan areas. We argue that silence on race in the major push for HOV to HOT lane conversions by libertarian "think tanks" and U.S. Department of Transportation guidance is fundamental to instrumentalizing transportation policy for racist tax regimes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Former NCAA Division I athletes' perceptions of intervention components to improve post-sport physical activity.
- Author
-
Ferrara, Paula-Marie M., Zakrajsek, Rebecca A., Eckenrod, Morgan R., Beaumont, Cory T., and Strohacker, Kelley
- Subjects
- *
GYMNASTICS , *SPORTS psychology , *QUALITATIVE research , *RESEARCH funding , *RETIREMENT , *ROWING , *TENNIS , *FOOTBALL , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *STATISTICAL sampling , *INTERVIEWING , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LACROSSE , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *DIVING , *TRACK & field , *COLLEGE sports , *HEALTH promotion , *BASKETBALL , *SOFTBALL , *COMPARATIVE studies , *SOCIAL support , *ATHLETIC associations , *COLLEGE athletes , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *PHYSICAL activity - Abstract
Emerging research supports that some former collegiate athletes (FCAs) can become physically inactive after retiring from sport, which can exacerbate unfavorable changes in long-term health. While researchers have addressed transitional difficulties FCAs may experience after retiring, little empirical evidence exists on how to promote healthy post-sport physical activity (PA) levels for those who are insufficiently active. Because of FCAs' past sports training, considering their opinions for effective PA program components may be beneficial in early stages of behavioral intervention development. As such, 17 insufficiently active former National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I athletes engaged in semi-structured interviews exploring their post-sport PA experiences and perceptions of effective program characteristics. Using Consensual Qualitative Research procedures, five domains were constructed. Three domains were discussed in a previous article; this paper overviews the remaining two, which describe participants' opinions of what would effectively promote PA in their population: (a) a desire for an 'athletics-lite' atmosphere in an FCA-targeted intervention, and (b) using technology to positively engage former athletes in their PA transition. While participants believed an athletics-based program where they are provided feedback and individualized workouts would be effective in maintaining PA, this may indicate underdeveloped autonomy in some FCAs regarding PA maintenance post-sport. Initially utilizing college sports personnel in a program may aid FCAs at risk of inactivity in transferring skills used in sport to independent PA maintenance after retiring. Further, the introduction and use of technology may help facilitate self-monitoring of progress, social support, and individualization when external resources are unavailable. Lay summary: Seventeen, inactive former college athletes (FCAs) were interviewed to understand enablers for promoting physical activity (PA) in their population. Utilizing sport/exercise personnel to help FCAs become more autonomous in their behavior and promoting self-monitoring through technology may help those in this population who struggle to maintain PA post-sport. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: On-campus programs should consider involving athletics personnel (e.g., coaches, athletic trainers, certified mental performance consultants) and, pending available resources, outside experts (e.g., exercise physiologists) to deliver techniques, strategies, and education to explicitly support retiring student-athletes in maintaining PA after retirement. The perceived need for an athletics atmosphere, such as a coach-figure and teammates to be competitive with, may indicate underdeveloped autonomy for maintaining PA in insufficiently active FCAs. While athletics personnel may be useful in early promotion of PA, programs should strive to help them build more self-determined forms of motivation and be self-sufficient in maintaining PA post-sport. Programs may consider promoting the maintenance of PA to students-athletes via the use of wearable devices, PA applications, and online resources to promote self-monitoring of behavior, facilitate social support, and provide education on healthy PA practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Rethinking interventions for dementia through a nonpharmaceutical lens: An analysis of five interventions.
- Author
-
Calhoun, Denise L.
- Subjects
- *
ALZHEIMER'S disease treatment , *TREATMENT of dementia , *DEMENTIA prevention , *ELDER care , *INTERPERSONAL psychotherapy , *MUSIC therapy , *MEDICARE , *INTERNET , *NEUROSCIENCES , *LONELINESS , *CAREGIVERS , *TECHNOLOGY , *SOCIAL skills , *SOCIAL networks , *COGNITIVE therapy , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *MEDICAID , *HOMELESSNESS , *PHYSICAL activity , *SOCIAL participation , *SOCIAL isolation - Abstract
The future welfare of older adults is a worldwide concern. By 2034, it is estimated that individuals 65 and older in the U.S. will be 77 million. Consequently, this reality will impact healthcare facilities and increase Medicare and Medicaid costs, resulting in higher incidents of homeless older adults, children caring for parents, the need for more caregivers, and an increased number of older individuals experiencing various forms of dementia. To address these concerns, the current trend for treating the onset of dementia and Alzheimer's disease has been moving toward nonpharmaceutical interventions. Even though researchers have tapped into the benefits of several nonpharmaceutical treatments, there appears to be a constant debate on establishing which method is most effective. Deciding on best practices and methods to slow down and/or halt the progression of dementia is the gap this research needs to fill. To provide clarity on the topic, an analysis of alternative interventions to treat the onset of dementia is what this paper strived to achieve. The analysis involved comparing and contrasting the benefits of each intervention as well as illustrating the implications of the findings. In this regard, a systematic review was conducted examining the benefits of five nonpharmaceutical strategies; mental training, music therapy, technology usage, physical activity, and social interaction. Although findings revealed some form of improvement in each of the nonpharmacological interventions examined, the overarching theme appeared to lean toward providing mental stimulation. It was also not conclusive that physical activity prevented cognitive decline. More research is recommended. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Can baby bonds address the injustice of racial wealth disparities?
- Author
-
McMullen, Steven
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL injustice , *RACIAL inequality , *WEALTH inequality , *ECONOMIC opportunities , *SOCIAL justice - Abstract
The injustices that have been visited upon racial minorities in the United States have a substantial economic legacy, both in terms of wealth disparities and resulting structural differences in economic opportunities. In response, some prominent Black scholars and policymakers have proposed a 'baby bonds' wealth-building policy. In this paper, I complement the economic justifications for this policy by examining the case for the proposal in terms of racial justice. The common justifications in the literature use a 'justice as rectification' framework, but this framework is a poor fit for the baby bonds proposal, unless we first examine the policy as a way to mitigate barriers to economic opportunity caused by persistent wealth gaps. This analysis focuses the case for baby bonds on their real selling point: a universal wealth policy can limit the intergenerational impact of injustice and misfortune of all kinds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Promoting character through developmental experiences in conservation service youth programs.
- Author
-
Syvertsen, Amy K., Scales, Peter C., Wu, Chen-Yu, and Sullivan, Theresa K.
- Subjects
- *
ADOLESCENT development , *INTELLECT , *COMMUNICATIVE competence , *REPEATED measures design , *RESEARCH funding , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *REFLECTION (Philosophy) , *SOCIAL responsibility , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ANALYSIS of covariance , *CHARACTER , *ETHICS , *ODDS ratio , *HEALTH promotion , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *COMMUNITY-based social services , *PATIENT participation - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to understand the developmental experiences that unfold in youth development contexts, and why they matter for character development. Drawing on pre- and post-program data provided by 846 adolescents (47% female, 63% youth of color), this paper empirically investigated the role of three developmental experiences―developmental relationships, critical reflection, and intrinsic program engagement―in promoting civic, moral, intellectual, and performance character strengths in a conservation context in the United States. Results provide robust evidence of the pervasive power of all three developmental experiences, and especially youth-adult developmental relationships and critical reflection, in promoting key elements of character. Specific suggestions are described for organizational action to invest strategically and systematically in these program features to support young people's character development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Teaching Reproducible Methods in Economics at Liberal Arts Colleges: A Survey.
- Author
-
Underwood, Anthony, Sichel, Aidan, and Marshall, Emily C.
- Subjects
UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,TEACHING methods ,COLLEGE majors ,ECONOMIC research ,RESEARCH skills - Abstract
Economics has become increasingly empirical and, alongside this shift, has come more demand for improved transparency and reproducibility in empirical economic research. In this article, we distribute a survey to almost 1500 economics faculty from the top 161 liberal arts colleges with an economics major (according to U.S. News & World Report) in the United States to determine the prevalence of teaching reproducible methods in undergraduate economics, summarize the most-common methods of instruction, and determine the intended student learning objectives. We find that of the economics faculty at liberal arts colleges who teach these reproducible methods, most do so in advanced upper-level (42%) and basic econometrics (31%) courses. Those faculty report teaching reproducibility using the following methods: transparent coding (85%), organizational skills (78%), and producing replication documentation (47%) through individual research projects (82%), homework assignments (55%), and/or workshops (33%). We conclude with some qualitative text analysis to shed light on the intended learning objectives and find that research skills (59%) and the importance of reproducibility (37%) are the most common reasons cited for teaching these methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Beyond Victim Identification: A Practitioner's Guide to Designing a Youth Anti-Sex Trafficking Advocacy Program.
- Author
-
Twis, Mary K., Cimino, Andrea N., and Plunk, Marilyn
- Subjects
- *
CHILD trafficking , *HUMAN trafficking , *SEX trafficking , *SEX trafficking of minors , *SOCIAL services , *SEX crimes , *VICTIMS - Abstract
Thousands of youth are sexually trafficked each year in the United States. In order to address this concern, anti-trafficking advocates often emphasize the importance of uniform screening protocols to assist with the identification of survivors. Unfortunately, an oft-overlooked component of sex trafficking identification is what to do once a victim has been identified, and how to best meet survivors' complex needs. In this article, the authors provide social work practitioners and other advocates with best practice guidelines for how to design and evaluate anti-sex trafficking advocacy programs for children and youth. These guidelines include considerations related to direct services with clients, community partnerships, and organizational capacity, as well as recommendations for how to begin and then evaluate programming. Regardless of the form selected for the program, all anti-sex trafficking programs should be designed to provide effective, client-centered follow-up and advocacy once a positive identification is made in the community. The recommendations included in this paper are based upon extant literature, the authors' practice experience with survivors, and insights from anti-sex trafficking program evaluations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The contested politics of food banking in the United States.
- Author
-
Lohnes, Joshua
- Subjects
- *
FOOD banks , *PRESIDENTIAL administrations , *POLITICAL movements , *MUNICIPAL services , *GENEROSITY ,UNITED States economy - Abstract
Rising out of the devolution of public services to private actors during the Reagan administration, the food banking economy in the United States is now a multi-billion-dollar industry. The social and political movements that institutionalized charitable food networks are diverse and often contradictory, offering a window into the politics and competing interests of a U.S. food system that has long grappled with glaring contradictions between food waste and hunger. In this paper, I analyze shifting moral economies of hunger relief within a diverse social movement (re)negotiating a set of legal codes and social norms established over the past forty years of hunger relief through charity. I argue that charitable food networks offer a window into the political contest currently unfolding over the future of the U.S. food system. As such, the debates within these spaces are critical to understand the broader politics of food provisioning in the United States. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. What is Cooperative Extension and How Can it Support Intergenerational Programming with Evidence-Based Curricula?
- Author
-
Juris, Jill, Jarrott, Shannon E., Scrivano, Rachel M., Tyler-Mackey, Crystal, Tanner, Karen, and Doss, Libbie
- Subjects
- *
INTERGENERATIONAL relations , *NUTRITION education , *PRESCHOOL education , *CURRICULUM implementation , *CURRICULUM - Abstract
The network of Cooperative Extension professionals across the United States offers fertile ground for the development of intergenerational partnerships in communities. Cooperative Extension programming prioritizes implementation of evidence-based curricula. This paper provides a reflection of an intergenerational program that adapted evidence-based preschool nutrition education for an intergenerational setting by collaborating with Virginia Cooperative Extension. Specifically, we detail how Cooperative Extension personnel are valuable community partners for implementing evidence-based practices in intergenerational programming via curriculum adaptation. Integrating evidence-based curricula and intergenerational practices can support program sustainability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Teaching Civics: An Overview of Instructional Strategies Using Primary Sources, Role-Play and Simulations, and Academic Service Learning for Teaching Civic Knowledge, Skills, and Dispositions.
- Author
-
Halverson, Lisa R., Tucker, Eleesha, and Smith, Glori H.
- Subjects
- *
SERVICE learning , *CIVICS , *SOCIAL sciences education , *CIVICS education , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes , *SOCIAL impact - Abstract
AbstractCivic education is essential to the perpetuation of American self-government. Despite this important role, civic education in the United States has been neglected for several decades and is only recently seeing a resurgence in the classroom and as a focus of research. Conceptions of what constitutes effective civic education vary widely, creating a great multiplicity in what is measured and how, and obfuscating which pedagogical practices are most effective. This paper provides an overview of civic education and the outcomes—including civic knowledge, civic skills, and civic dispositions—that are the goals of such education. We then examine three pedagogies—instruction through primary-source analysis, simulation-based learning, and academic service learning—and review examples of the civic outcomes of these pedagogies. We seek to answer several questions: How are these instructional practices defined? What debates and challenges surround their implementation? What evidence is there that such techniques result in civic outcomes? Finally, what implications are there for the social studies classroom? We demonstrate that these three pedagogies have the potential to improve civic learning, and that a mixture of engaging and effective pedagogies is ideal. We encourage further research on the civic outcomes resulting from the implementation of various pedagogies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. On the properties of the labour wedge: hours worked and government transfers in perspective.
- Author
-
Kamara, Ahmed
- Subjects
WORKING hours ,WEDGES ,BUSINESS cycles ,BUSINESS hours ,UNITS of measurement - Abstract
Questions surrounding the labour wedge and the tax wedge in the United States are complicated by the fact that, historically, there is a lack of coherent relationship between the series of hours worked (based on standard measurements) and that of the tax wedge. This has been cited as grounds for discounting the tax wedge as a viable explanation for the behaviour of the labour wedge. In this paper, I explore an alternative measurement of labour hours in the United States in a bid to clear up some of the morass surrounding the tax wedge and hours worked. In the process, I show that, the labour wedge is rather more aligned with available labour hours over the business cycle than it does actual hours worked. Moreover, cyclical properties of the available hours series, however puzzling, are explained by the presence of a government transfer scheme which I introduce in the household side of the market. Also, the presence of the transfer scheme alters the marginal rate of substitution (MRS) between consumption and leisure, and by doing so, reverses the cyclical properties of the tax wedge. This puts the tax wedge in alignment with the labour wedge over the business cycle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Engineering professor perceptions of undergraduate engineering student stress.
- Author
-
Sanders, Jeanne, Johnson, Eileen, Mirabelli, Joseph, Kunze, Andrea, Vohra, Sara, and Jensen, Karin
- Subjects
- *
ENGINEERING students , *SPATIAL ability , *UNDERGRADUATES , *OVERPRESSURE (Education) , *MENTAL health of students , *COLLEGE teachers , *INTERPERSONAL relations - Abstract
Engineering professors are well positioned to support their undergraduate students, who often experience diminished mental health. This paper examines engineering professors’ perceptions of their undergraduate engineering students’ experiences of stress. The described perceptions include when they notice student stress, which stressors they perceive, and supports that these students use. In this qualitative study, we interviewed 24 engineering professors and four career advisors at 18 institutions in the United States about these topics. Results show that these professors often had consistent access to notice indicators of student distress. They described key sources of student stress: balancing responsibilities, significant academic stress, and a culture of competition. They were less likely to notice student stressors associated with interpersonal relationships and identity-related stressors, which are less related to their role as professors. Supports that professors described included interpersonal relationships and health and wellness activities. This lays a foundation for encouraging engineering professors to support their students’ mental health and wellness even more. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Critical thinking for transformative praxis in teacher education: Music, media and information literacy, and social studies in the United States.
- Author
-
Miller, Richard, Liu, Katrina, Crowley, Christopher B., and Yu, Min
- Subjects
- *
TEACHER education , *CRITICAL thinking , *INFORMATION literacy , *SOCIAL sciences education - Abstract
The notion and practice of critical thinking (CT) has moved from its speculative formation by John Dewey to a standard element in teacher education curricula and standards. In the process, CT has narrowed its focus to the analysis and articulation of logical thought, and lost transformative value. In this paper, we examine the conception and implementation of CT in three teacher education domains primarily in the United States–music, media and information literacy, and social studies–asking how CT has deformed education in those domains, and how domain-specific approaches could reinvigorate CT. We further suggest refocusing the purpose of CT in teacher education on accomplishing transformative education for equity in school and society, by implementing a critically reflective, transformative praxis based on the insights of domain-specific approaches to CT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Sexual Assault Survivors’ Individual and Group Therapy Experiences at Rape Crisis Center.
- Author
-
Karakurt, Günnur, Lovell, Rachel, McGuire, Margaret, Çetinsaya, Elif Ezgi, and Mouncey, Kirsti
- Subjects
- *
SEXUAL assault , *GROUP psychotherapy , *RAPE , *CRIMINAL justice system , *PSYCHOTHERAPISTS , *COMMUNITY organization , *CRIMINAL procedure - Abstract
AbstractSurvivors of sexual violence often experience short-and long-term mental and physical health conditions due to the victimization. Rape Crisis Centers are community-based advocacy organizations that provide free supportive services to survivors of sexual assault, such as 24-hour crisis hotlines, medical advocacy, individual and group therapeutic services, and victim advocacy services for those with cases within the criminal justice system. However, the efficacy of these services in assisting survivors is not well known, often due to researchers’ lack of access to clients. In this paper, we investigate the experiences of survivors directly from the survivors receiving psychotherapy services from a Rape Crisis Center in an urban jurisdiction in the Midwestern United States. We qualitatively interviewed nine survivors who attended individual and/or group therapy. In-depth analysis showed that four themes emerged regarding their experiences. Two themes pertain to positive outcomes—emotional processing and group therapy dynamics. One theme concerns obstacles. The final theme relates to suggestions for service improvement. The discussion includes summaries of the reflective findings and recommendations for future practice. This research contributes to informing and improving practices and policies to better serve survivors of sexual assault. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Trends in the Use of Assistive Technology: An Exploration of Emerging Shifts in Assistive Devices Used to Support Individuals in Their Lifestyle Preferences and Goals.
- Author
-
Clay, Shondra Loggins
- Subjects
- *
LIFESTYLES , *INSURANCE , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ASSISTIVE technology , *STATISTICS , *QUALITY of life , *RESEARCH methodology , *DATA analysis software , *PEOPLE with disabilities , *DEMOGRAPHY - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to explore 10-year trends in the use of Assistive Technology (AT). Using 2006 and 2015 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) data, univariate analysis were performed, and the rate of change was calculated. In both 2006 and 2015 data, a higher per cent of Blacks were using AT compared to Whites and Hispanics (p <.001); however, the rate of increase indicate that Blacks had the lowest per cent change (23.9%) compared to Whites (26.8%) and Hispanics (27.3%). Results indicated that AT use is statistically more prevalent in women, individuals who are not married (e.g. divorce, widowed, separated), the veteran population, lower educational attainment levels (e.g. some high school or less), lower income levels, the ageing population, unemployed (e.g. out of work, retired, unable to work) and individuals with limited functioning because of a disability. Similarly, individuals who have healthcare coverage, and individuals with concerns with medical costs used AT more. Even though most factors yielded higher utilisation rates when comparing 2006 to 2015 data, the rate of change had varying 'speeds' of improvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. US Child Welfare Practice During the COVID Pandemic: An Exploratory Study of Working Conditions, Practice Experiences, and Concerns.
- Author
-
Douglas, Emily, Gushwa, Melinda, Hernandez, Ana, and Ammerman, Marguerite
- Subjects
- *
CHILD welfare , *WORK , *PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *MEDICAL protocols , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *SOCIAL workers , *PERSONAL protective equipment , *PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout , *MEDICAL personnel , *SOCIAL services , *WORK environment , *STATISTICAL sampling , *CHILD abuse , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *LABOR turnover , *SOCIAL worker attitudes , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *CHILDREN'S accident prevention , *STAY-at-home orders , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *ODDS ratio , *RESEARCH , *MEDICAL masks , *OCCUPATIONAL exposure , *JOB descriptions , *STATISTICS , *RISK perception , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *COVID-19 pandemic , *EXPERIENTIAL learning , *INDUSTRIAL safety , *WELL-being , *SECONDARY traumatic stress , *SICK people - Abstract
This paper addresses the experiences of US child welfare professionals during the COVID pandemic. Using an online survey, we report on a convenience sample of 444 child welfare workers. The majority reported receiving adequate guidance on staying safe; 86.3% were given access to face masks. Workers reported 75.8% of clients used masks; 10.7% reported contracting COVID through work. About 80% worried that child clients were more at-risk. Workers who felt the most supported and least at-risk were those with stay-at-home orders. Results are discussed in terms of supporting child welfare professionals during periods of crisis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Food justice within US-based social work literature: a 20-year scoping review.
- Author
-
Silva, Carla
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL services , *SOCIAL work education , *SOCIAL workers , *FOOD security , *SOCIAL impact , *JUSTICE - Abstract
Social workers within the United States (US) have addressed food issues since the profession’s origin in the late 1800s. Today, the acute problem of food insecurity continues to concern social workers. However, solely addressing food insecurity is not holistic nor sufficient to adequately promote food justice. Nevertheless, most food assistance resources familiar to and employed by social workers address food insecurity and lack structural change components to fully address food injustice. This paper reports the findings of a scoping review of US-based social work scholarly literature from 2000 to 2020 to understand the profession’s engagement with food justice, identify implications for social work practice and education, and promote the development of new knowledge that may result in more social work led, dynamic, and comprehensive food justice. The findings reveal a dearth of unequivocal discourse among social work scholars in the US concerning food justice, highlighting a significant knowledge gap within US-based social work scholarship. This gap underscores the potential for enriching social work education to equip students adequately for addressing food justice in practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Trends in assortative mating in the United States, 1700–1910. Evidence from FamiLinx data.
- Author
-
Corti, Giulia, Minardi, Saverio, and Barban, Nicola
- Subjects
- *
ASSORTATIVE mating , *MATE selection , *MARRIAGE age , *DEMOGRAPHY , *SOCIAL background , *SOCIAL groups - Abstract
Couple formation and assortative mating significantly influence societal structures, as marriages between individuals from diverse geographical or social backgrounds promote intra-family diversity. Understanding these patterns is crucial for grasping the demographic processes that shape contemporary societies. However, the scarcity of comprehensive data has impeded progress in this area. This paper aims to fill this gap by investigating assortative mating trends in the United States among birth cohorts from 1700 to 1910, utilizing data from FamiLinx, an online crowdsourced genealogical database. We focus on two primary dimensions: migration background (including natives, first and second-generation migrants) and age at marriage. Our analysis yields three major findings. First, we document significant changes in assortative mating trends over time, reflecting the dynamic nature of mate selection and its responsiveness to societal shifts. Second, we uncover substantial heterogeneity in assortative mating patterns across different social groups, indicating varying social dynamics and preferences. Third, we illustrate how these trends can be differently interpreted depending on whether the perspective is individual or familial. Additionally, we explore the advantages and limitations of using online genealogical data for historical studies of assortative mating, highlighting its potential for offering new insights while acknowledging the challenges posed by data quality and representativeness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. THE U.S., KUOMINTANG AND TIBETAN RESISTANCE 1950–1960: COVERT OPERATIONS, CONSEQUENCES AND TIBETAN PARATROOPS IN TAIWAN.
- Author
-
Tsering, Dolma
- Subjects
- *
RESISTANCE to government , *PARACHUTE troops - Abstract
This paper reflects on the complex political dynamics between the United States, the Chinese Nationalist Party (Kuomintang) and Tibetan leaders from 1950 to 1960. In contrast to the existing literature, this study assesses these trilateral relationships by focusing on attempted covert operations and consequences. While volumes of studies have been published about the United States Central Intelligence Agency's (CIA) involvement in the Tibetan resistance movement, what remains understudied is the secret but unsuccessful attempts at cooperation between the Kuomintang and Tibetans and the role that the U.S. played in these activities. Findings demonstrate that the U.S. and Kuomintang's interest was driven by the desire to exploit the Tibetan resistance to advance their interests in combating Communist China. However, Tibetan resentment towards the Chinese and the lack of Kuomintang influences in Tibet compelled the U.S. to push back the Kuomintang in these trilateral relationships. This created a major barrier in U.S.-Taiwan relations and between Tibetans and the Kuomintang. In the race to exploit the Tibetan resistance, the U.S. became the winner. The Kuomintang, however, continued to explore the opportunity. Intricacies of nationalism, opportunism and pragmatism transiting through this period reveal realities of realpolitik. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Early childhood practicum students' perceptions and experiences of a remote directed fieldwork course during the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Author
-
Wee, Su Jeong, Dennis, Jessica Michele, Lo, Yafen, Ly-Hoang, Kheng, and Ramirez-Ulloa, Patricia
- Subjects
- *
FIELDWORK (Educational method) , *DISTANCE education , *TEACHING methods , *ONLINE education , *COVID-19 pandemic , *EARLY childhood education - Abstract
Early childhood (EC) education has usually involved in-person teaching and learning. However, the COVID-19 pandemic has imposed remote teaching on EC practitioners and complicated practicum students' fieldwork experiences. This study explored EC practicum students' fieldwork experiences in the U.S. during the pandemic and their preparedness for online teaching and technology employment and integration. Participants included 28 students enrolled in Directed Field Experience in Spring 2021. A mixed-methods approach incorporating multiple sources of data, including reflection papers, interviews, and questionnaires, was used. The findings showed that the EC practicum students changed their perceptions of and attitudes toward a remote field experience course and online teaching with young children over the semester. Additionally, EC practicum students' challenges and professional and academic growth were evident in their reporting. These findings have implications for the development of effective strategies for alleviating EC practicum students' challenges, facilitating their professional growth, and providing resources to integrate digital technology in their teaching in developmentally appropriate ways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.