1,033 results
Search Results
2. KEY PAPERS IN OLD AGE PSYCHIATRY SERIES EDITOR: ALISTAIR BURNS.
- Author
-
Burns, Alistair
- Subjects
- *
SCHIZOPHRENIA , *PATIENTS , *SENILE dementia , *DIAGNOSIS , *PSYCHOSES - Abstract
The article presents research papers on clinical observations and follow-up patients at the Bethlem Royal Hospital in London, England. There are eight chapters that presents background, aims, method and clinical characteristics of patients. In the first chapter, Felix Post summarizes present knowledge of late paraphrenia, drawing on the clinical descriptions of earlier workers and emphasizing the relative rarity of descriptions of schizophrenia occurring after the age of 50 or 60 and the difficulty early nosologists had in making the differentiation from senile psychosis.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The Artists' Papers Register.
- Author
-
Shepherd, Rupert
- Subjects
- *
ONLINE information services , *ONLINE databases , *ART , *ARTS , *ARTISTS , *CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
The article reports on the celebration held at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, England in line with the launch of the Artists' Papers Register, an online register of documents relating to designers, artists and craftspeople. The register lists papers or groups of papers relating to artists and organizations in 823 repositories. Morever, by "Artists", the register does not only refer to "fine artists" but also to designers and design groups and studios, organizations, critis and art historians. Also, the register covers a wide range of topics and individuals, from the unexpected to the most prolific and talked about.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Announcements.
- Subjects
BUSINESS enterprises ,CORPORATIONS ,STOCK exchanges - Abstract
Presents the titles of various papers that have been accepted for publication in the 'European Financial Management Journal.' 'Performance and Policy of Foundation-owned Firms in Germany,' by Markus Herrman and Guenter Franke; 'Diversification, Ownership and Control of Swedish Corporations,' by John A. Doukas, Martin Holmen and Nickolaos G. Travlos; 'Competition on the London Stock Exchange,' by Nicholas Taylor.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Abstracts of papers presented at the 8th annual meeting of the Society for Cutaneous Ultrastructure Research.
- Subjects
ANNUAL meetings ,ULTRASTRUCTURE (Biology) ,NAILS (Anatomy) ,ICHTHYOSIS ,CELLS - Abstract
The article presents information about abstracts of various papers presented at the 8th annual meeting of the Society for Cutaneous Ultrastructure Research that was held from May 21 to 23, 1981 in London, England. Some papers are, the study to investigate the ultrastructure of the nail plate by G. Achten, D. Parent, G. De Dobbeleer and F. Stouffs-Vanfoof, Ichthyosis hystrix type Curth-Macklin had been separated from bullous ichthyosiform erythroderma on the basis of its peculiar ultrastructural features with tonofibriltar shell formation and a high percentage of binuclear cells by I. Anton-Lamprecht, B. Kern, G. Goerz and S. Marghescu.
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Choice-equity dilemma in special education provision Policy Paper 6, 6th Series, June 2010 SEN Policy Options Group SEN Policy Options Group.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,SPECIAL education ,SEMINARS - Abstract
The article discusses the highlights of the Choice-Equity Dilemma in Special Educational Provision seminar held at the Clore Management Centre, Birkbeck College in London, England on May 19, 2010. The objective of the seminar was to discuss issues about tensions between the principles of equity and choice in special educational provision. An overview of the role of the SEN Policy Options Steering Group is presented.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Papers presented at The City University Centenary Conference, Department of Optometry and Visual Science in Northampton Square, London, UK on 1 June 1994.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,OPTOMETRY - Abstract
This article presents abstracts of papers presented at City University Centenary Conference, in London, England on June 1, 1994. All the speakers at the conference were former undergraduate or postgraduate students of the Department of Optometry and Visual Science at the university. One of the papers focused on the correction of presbyopia. According to researcher M.H. Freeman, any corrective device for presbyopia must provide acceptable optical quality over the corrective effect required. Another paper talked about the ocular response to sustained visual tasks. Various other topics on which papers were presented included retinoscopy, corneal regeneration and glaucoma.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Area Prize.
- Subjects
ARBITRATION & award - Abstract
The article lists the previous winners and the 2007 winner of the Wiley-Blackwell Area Prize which was announced at the RGS-IBG Annual General Meeting on June 2008 at the RGS-IBG headquarters in London, England including Jessica Graybill, Clare Herrick, and Pauline Couper.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Short papers meeting, Royal Society of Medicine, London, Section of Coloproctology, 24 November 2004.
- Subjects
COLON diseases ,PROCTOLOGY ,GASTROENTEROLOGY - Abstract
Focuses on abstracts of articles on coloproctology presented at the Royal Society of Medicine's meeting in London, England. "Can Haematological Indices Predict Positive Findings of Endoscopies Performed for Anaemic Patients," by A.M.P. Schizas, R. Reid and M. George; "Immunonutrition Does Not Benefit Elective Surgical Patients Undergoing Restorative Proctocolectomy," by S.C. Mills and A.C. Windsor; "Iron Deficiency Anaemia– Useful Screening Tool for Right Sided Colon Cancers?," by Sajal Rai; "Time Up for the 2 Week Standard?," by M. A. Scott, A. Knight, K. Brown and J.R. Novell.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Short Papers Meeting, Royal Society of Medicine, London, Section of Coloproctology, February 2004.
- Subjects
MEETINGS ,GYNECOLOGISTS ,PLASTIC surgeons ,COLON diseases - Abstract
The article presents information on meetings conducted by Royal Society of Medicine, London, that were held in February 2004. Multidisciplinary patient management of complex pelvic and perineal disease began in South Wales in 1992 and gradually developed into a formal team with two colorectal surgeons, a urologist, a gynaecologist and a plastic surgeon. A retrospective review was undertaken of 130 case records of patients managed by the pelvic oncology group. There were no postoperative deaths and morbidity was low. Where surgical clearance was attempted we achieved clear histological margins in 62% of cases.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Linking spatial and social mobility: Is London's "escalator" as strong as it was?
- Author
-
Champion, Tony and Gordon, Ian
- Subjects
ESCALATORS ,INTERNAL migration ,CORPORATE profits ,YOUNG adults ,SOCIAL mobility - Abstract
The "escalator region" concept became a key element of migration literature after Fielding's work on South East England and fuelled a welcome growth of interest in the links between spatial and social mobility. More recent research has shown that London has continued to perform an escalator function since the 1970s, but little attention has been given to how its strength has altered both over time and compared with other parts of the UK. Against the background of the declining rates of internal migration observed in the United States and several other countries, this paper seeks to identify whether London's escalator role was waxing or waning over the four intercensal decades between 1971 and 2011. The primary emphasis is on the chances of people shifting up from noncore to core white‐collar work during each decade for London's nonmigrant and in‐migrant populations, in both absolute terms and relative to England's second‐order cities. It is found that over the three decades since the 1970s London's escalator was still performing in the way originally conceived, but although its net gain of young adults from the rest of England and Wales steadily increased over this period, it was not operating as strongly in 2001–2011 as during the 1990s in terms of both the career‐progression premium gained by its in‐migrants and the extent of its advantage over England's second‐order cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The Peasants Seminar of the University of London, 1972‘1989: A Memoir.
- Author
-
Byres, Terence J.
- Subjects
PEASANTS ,SEMINARS ,MEMOIRS ,LAND reform ,ECONOMICS ,INTELLECTUALS - Abstract
This is a memoir of the Peasants seminar of the University of London, which ran between January 1972 and February 1989, and to which 208 papers were presented. The following are considered: its origins, the influences which shaped it, and its agenda; the circumstances of its launching; how it gave rise, very directly, to the Journal of Peasant Studies in 1973; its synergy with JPS, especially in the 1970s, and something of its themes, ambience and development. It is concluded that there is no better way of starting and sustaining, in its early phases, a journal than first securing a strong intellectual base, in the shape of a seminar that meets regularly and has a cohesive, but critical, intellectual community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Clarification of papers regarding the St Marys’s team approach to tracheostomy care.
- Author
-
Arora, A., Hettige, R., Ifeacho, S., and Narula, A.
- Subjects
TRACHEOTOMY patients ,OTOLARYNGOLOGY ,MULTIDISCIPLINARY practices ,SAINT Mary's Hospital (London, England) ,HOME care services - Abstract
The article presents the authors' clarification of papers regarding the Saint Mary's Hospital Tracheostomy MultiDisciplinary Team's (TMDT) approach to tracheostomy care in London, England. They mention the responsibility of Julie Oxton in organizing the tracheostomy training sessions for nurses and physiotherapists. They clarify that the training day, which took place during the ward round under Otolaryngology supervision, was not a formalized training session.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Short Papers Meeting, Royal Society of Medicine, London, Section of Coloproctology, February 2004.
- Author
-
Padmanabhan, J., Niaz, A., Baig, M K., and Woods, W.
- Subjects
RECTAL cancer ,CANCER treatment ,COMPUTER systems ,MEDICINE ,MEDICAL records ,SOCIETIES - Abstract
This article presents information related to the outcome of endoscopic transanal resection of rectal cancer in a district general hospital. This paper was presented at a meeting conducted by the Royal Society of Medicine, London. This study included 20 patients who underwent ETAR, between January 1995 and August 2003. A retro- spective evaluation of the outcome of ETAR, was performed from the operation registers, clinical records, Hospital patient administration computer system. They conclude that endoscopic transanal resection is a simple operation with short hospital stay and low compli- cation rate and good symptom relief in a high risk population for whom there is little alternative treatment.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Discussion Papers.
- Subjects
RESEARCH - Abstract
Presents a list of discussion papers of London Business School's Centre for Economic Forecasting in London, England for 1997 and 1998.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Recent Research.
- Subjects
RESEARCH ,MONETARY unions - Abstract
Presents a summary of several research papers of London Business School's Centre for Economic Forecasting in London, England, including `Monetary Union: The Ins and Outs of Strategic Delegation,' by Paul Levine and Joseph Pearlman.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Discussion Papers.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC forecasting - Abstract
Introduces the discussion papers submitted to the Center for Economic Forecasting of the London Business School in London, England from 1996 to 1998. `Weak Exogeneity and Joint Normality,' by Caporale and Pittis; `International Economic Policy Coordination: A Brief Survey of the Literature,' by Caporale; `Causality and Forecasting in Incomplete Systems: Evaluating Potential Losses,' by Caporale and Pittis.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Countdown to 2000: a major international conference for the primary health care team, 21-23 September 1987, London.
- Author
-
Henderson VA
- Subjects
PRIMARY health care ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,NURSES - Abstract
Presents a report of a conference titled 'Countdown to 2000.' held at London, England from September 21-23, 1987 for the primary health care team. Headings of the contributory themes used in categorizing papers presented at the conference; Cultural conditions affecting health need and services; Changing role of nurse and other health care providers.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. THE ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING.
- Author
-
Duffey, E. A. G. and Goodman, G. T.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,ECOLOGY ,ANNUAL meetings ,SOCIETIES - Abstract
The article discusses the highlights of the 50th Annual General Meeting of the British Ecological Society held at the Botany Lecture Room at the University of London in England on January 3, 1969. The minutes of the 49th Annual General Meeting were taken as read, approved and signed. The report of the Honorary Secretaries was presented for discussion of the members present.
- Published
- 1969
20. Transnational Relations: Family Migration among Recent Polish Migrants in London.
- Author
-
Ryan, Louise
- Subjects
TRANSNATIONALISM ,INTERNATIONAL relations research ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,IMMIGRANTS ,FAMILIES - Abstract
This paper is based on a qualitative study of recent Polish migrants in London (). The paper reveals the roles that different family members played in the migration narratives of these Polish migrants. In order to gain a broader understanding of migration patterns, it is necessary to explore what is meant by 'the family' and how this may operate transnationally. By examining spatially dispersed relationships, the paper aims to contribute to an understanding of transnational families. In addition, by highlighting the various ways in which families may be split, reunited, and reshaped through the process of migration, the paper argues for a need to explore the shifting ties between relatives 'here' and 'there'. The paper explores the dynamism of these relationships over time in the context of specific immigration regimes and the interplay with local attachments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Notes to contributors.
- Subjects
PERIODICALS ,SOCIOLOGICAL research - Abstract
The article provides information about the journal and presents submission guidelines for articles for review. The journal aims to cater a medium for the publication of original papers covering the entire complete duration of sociological thought and research. The author stressed that the journal will give preference to publish the original papers whose works are focused on current developments in research and analysis. Contributions, correspondence and books for review must be directed to "The British Journal of Sociology," London School of Economics, Houghton Street, London, England.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Keeping our children safe and calm in troubled times.
- Author
-
Nunn, Kenneth
- Subjects
WORLD War II ,GRANDPARENTS ,FREEDOM of information ,EMOTIONS ,PARENTS - Abstract
Keeping children safe and keeping children free from worry are usually tasks that parents do without any sense of cross-purpose. In times of threat and very real danger, these two parental goals come into conflict. This article articulates the confusion of intentions amidst the pandemic. It alludes to previous crises such as happened in both World Wars to protect children including Operation Pied Piper to evacuate them from London in World War 2. The aim of this paper is to give parents and clinicians an awareness of the child's and young person's point of view, in particular, the worry of children for parents. The burden on children of fearing that they may infect parents, grandparents and loved ones generally is considerable. Parents who deny what is happening lack credibility. Parents who fail to manage their own anxieties burden their children with burdens they themselves cannot bear. Honesty about the need for safety and courage as parents to promote calm are what good parents have been doing throughout history. Telling children what they are doing that is right helps them to know what 'the right' is. The possibility is considered that we will come through the pandemic with a greater sense of what matters to our children and what should matter to us. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Annual meeting of DSA Development Management Study Group.
- Subjects
ANNUAL meetings - Abstract
This article discusses three papers presented at the annual meeting of the Development Management Study Group held March 6, 1998 in London, England. The first of these, by Roger Wilson, Head of the Government and Institutions Department at DFID, focused on the new policy directions for British development aid since the change of government last year. Wilson revealed that there is renewed focus on poverty and its relationship to governance, on civil rights and exclusion and on the need for effective systems. There is also a new concept of partnership with selected countries whereby they will be able to get money more flexibly, with a trend away from aid for project expenditure. The second paper by John Cameron described how the audit was undertaken for the Population Programme over a period of a year and a half under the umbrella of the National Institute for Population Studies in Pakistan and funded by British Overseas Development Administration. Overall there was a finding that while political input was weak in setting policy, it was undermining the programme in recruitment, transfer and promotions. The paper by Marc Labie on The Structuring of Microfinance Organizations: What Can We Learn from Mintzberg was based on the writer's research on the Corposol/Finansol organization in Colombia, which was initially lauded as one of the major success stories in the microflnance field in Latin America, but collapsed within a couple of months after eight years' existence.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. International Cancer Nursing Congress in the United Kingdom, 4-8 September 1978.
- Author
-
Smith, James P.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,NURSING ,NURSES ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
The article focuses on the International Cancer Nursing Congress, held from September 4-8, 1978, in London, England. The conference was sponsored by the periodical "Nursing Mirror" and the Royal Marsden Hospital. During the week, over 50 papers were delivered at the congress, which focused continually on nursing and the role of the nurse in care, particularly in the care of patients living and dying with cancer. The congress was opened by the Secretary of State for Social Services, David Ennals, MP, who also hosted a reception for the international delegates at the Savoy Hotel, London, later on the first day on behalf of Her Majesty's Government.
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. EASTER MEETING.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,PROFESSIONAL associations ,ECOLOGY ,HABITATS ,CONSERVATION of natural resources - Abstract
Information about several papers discussed at the Easter meeting of the British Ecological Society held in London, England from April 3-4, 1951 is presented. Topics include the ecology of Hydropsychideae, or Tricoptera, the localization of Cladocera in lakes and ponds and the relationship between the natural habitat preferences of a particular animal and the choice of alternative ones' in towns. A topic on nature conservation was also discussed.
- Published
- 1952
26. Art and gentrification: pursuing the urban pastoral in Hoxton, London.
- Author
-
Harris, Andrew
- Subjects
GENTRIFICATION ,ART & history ,AESTHETICS - Abstract
The role of artists as precursors and agents of gentrification processes has been widely acknowledged and studied. Yet there has been limited consideration of the particular aesthetic practices and attitudes deployed by these artists, and the related urban landscapes they have helped shape and re-imagine. This paper uses the notion drawn from art history of the 'urban pastoral' to highlight largely disregarded socio-cultural and political relations of power accompanying gentrification. It focuses on a district of inner London called Hoxton where a deindustrialised location and a legacy of forms and practices of British working-class popular culture offered artists a rich resource and socio-spatial environment to work and operate during the 1990s. By indulging in fantasies and performances of the urban pastoral, these artists fashioned a new cultural landscape that not only catered to many of the lifestyle tastes and investment priorities within postindustrial London, but manipulated and downplayed the complex and potentially conflictual histories of the area. The paper argues that this capture of urban space through the pastoral is indicative of new forms of gentrification where class-based and race-related neighbourhood change occurs without direct displacement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. 'Geography matters': the role distance plays in reproducing educational inequality in East London.
- Author
-
Hamnett, Chris and Butler, Tim
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL equalization ,EQUALITY & society ,SECONDARY education ,EDUCATIONAL resources ,GEOGRAPHICAL research - Abstract
There is a longstanding literature on the unequal geographical distribution of welfare. In this paper we argue that increasingly geography is becoming the basis for rationing access to some forms of welfare. Focusing on access to secondary schools in East London, England, where the demand for places at the more popular schools generally far exceeds the number of places available, we show how distance from school has now become the primary means of allocating places. Rather than educational resources attempting to compensate for geographical disadvantage, geography (in the form of distance from school) has become the rationale by which those living in advantaged areas continue to have privileged access to educational resources. Whereas previously the role of the state was to compensate for the unfairness of such geographical inequalities, geography (via distance to school) is now used to justify the unequal allocation of scarce school places. The paper demonstrates that not only does the near universal adoption of distance-based allocation policies in East London lead to the reproduction of social advantage and disadvantage, but also it is creating new hierarchies of school popularity and more important unpopularity which are not always clearly related to issues of school attainment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The fall and rise of home economics education: newly available home economics archives at The Women's Library.
- Author
-
Murphy, Gillian
- Subjects
HOME economics ,LIBRARY special collections ,FOOD studies (Education) - Abstract
This paper highlights some of the archives held at The Women's Library relating to home economics. It concentrates on the archives of the Institute of Home Economics, its successor and predecessor. It considers strengths in the collections, in particular home economics education. Although the profession ultimately failed to secure home economics as a foundation subject in the National Curriculum in 1987, it appears that food education is more important than ever, especially when we are reminded about childhood obesity in the daily news. The paper concludes that formal home economics teaching did fulfil the vitally important function of teaching young people how to feed themselves properly, and that food does provide an important part of children's education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Design capital: practice and situated learning in London design agencies.
- Author
-
Sunley, Peter, Pinch, Steven, and Reimer, Suzanne
- Subjects
DESIGN ,CONSULTANTS ,DESIGNERS ,BUSINESS enterprises ,TACIT knowledge ,LEARNING - Abstract
This paper considers the relations between practice, knowledge and context in design consultancies. It uses a case study of design consultancies in London based on in-depth interviews with designers working in design agencies in the city. The paper argues that the relations between design knowledge and context have been conceived in two ways. The first account emphasises the sharing of tacit knowledge in a design community marked by relatively strong and durable social ties. The second approach argues instead that design is a creative collectivity with much weaker social ties and a broader range of types of knowledge. It is argued that while both of these approaches illuminate parts of situated learning and context in design consultancies, these are actually more complex and mixed than either account recognises. Both accounts overlook the crucial importance of what are termed medium-strength ties between designers and their clients that combine market contracts with personal regard and friendship. The paper concludes by suggesting that such medium ties are increasingly important in design-based innovation systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Migration trajectories of 'highly skilled' middling transnationals: Singaporean transmigrants in London.
- Author
-
Ho, Elaine Lynn-Ee
- Subjects
EMIGRATION & immigration ,SKILLED labor ,SPACE trajectories ,POPULATION - Abstract
The role played by the state in regulating population movements has been the subject of study in migration scholarship. Immigration regimes manage migration through visa restrictions stipulating the type of work migrants perform and their entitlement to rights. However, studying migration only in terms of visas or occupational categories limit a full understanding of the breadth and changing episodes making up migrant experiences. Based on a case study of 'highly skilled' Singaporean transmigrants in London, this paper investigates, first, the way such migrants utilise changing visa strategies to incrementally extend their stay in London. Second, the paper contextualises their migrant subjectivities and identities within the immigration and emigration regimes in which they are embedded. In so doing, the paper argues for a trajectory perspective of migration that recognises the changing strategies as well as practical and emotional challenges experienced by 'highly skilled' middling transnationals. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. “We have a little bit more finesse, as a nation”: Constructing the Polish Worker in London's Building Sites.
- Author
-
Datta, Ayona and Brickell, Katherine
- Subjects
LABOR ,BUILDING sites ,SOCIAL interaction ,LABOR market ,SOCIAL psychology ,WORK ethic - Abstract
This paper examines how male Polish builders in London construct themselves relationally to English builders as they negotiate their place within the labour hierarchies of the building site and in the London labour market. This is based on semi-structured interviews and participant photographs taken by Polish migrants arriving in the aftermath of the European Union expansion in May 2004, and now working in building sites across London. These buildings sites are mundane elements of a global city which employ transnational labour, and where differences between Polish and English builders become significant discursive tools of survival in a competitive labour market. The paper illustrates how Polish workers mark themselves as “superior” to English builders through the versatility of their embodied skills, work ethic, artistic qualities, and finesse in their social interactions on the building site. This paper thus provides new ways of understanding the meanings of work and the complexity of identity politics within the spaces of low-paid manual work in a global city. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Short-term Contrarian Strategies in the London Stock Exchange: Are They Profitable? Which Factors Affect Them?
- Author
-
Antoniou, Antonios, Galariotis, Emilios C., and Spyrou, Spyros I.
- Subjects
CONTRARIAN investing ,EFFICIENT market theory ,RESEARCH methodology ,INFORMATION-seeking behavior ,MATHEMATICAL models of finance ,ECONOMIC statistics ,STOCK exchanges - Abstract
This paper provides evidence on short-term contrarian profits and their sources for the London Stock Exchange. Profits are decomposed to sources due to factors derived from the Fama and French (1996) three-factor model. For the empirical testing, size-sorted sub-samples are used, and adjustments for infrequent trading and bid-ask biases are also made. Results indicate that UK short-term contrarian strategies are profitable and more pronounced for extreme market capitalization stocks. These profits persist even when the sample is adjusted for market frictions, risk, seasonality, and irrespective of whether equally-weighted or value-weighted portfolios are employed. The most important factor that drives contrarian profits appears to be investor overreaction to firm-specific information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Towards multidisciplinary assessment of older people: exploring the change process.
- Author
-
Ross F, O'Tuathail C, and Stubberfield D
- Subjects
MEDICAL care for older people ,MEDICAL care ,HOSPITAL wards - Abstract
AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: This paper discusses the process of change that took place in an intervention study of standardized multidisciplinary assessment guidelines implemented in a female ward for older people in a District General Hospital in South London. This study was one of nine implementation projects in the South Thames Evidence-Based Practice Project. BACKGROUND: The relationship between the worlds of research and healthcare practice is uneasy and contested and, as such, is a breeding ground for challenging questions about how evidence can be used to foment change in clinical practice. Recent literature on change highlights the importance of understanding complexity, which informed our approach and analysis. METHODS: A multifaceted approach to change that comprised evidence-based guidelines, leadership (project leader) and change management was evaluated before and after the implementation by telephone interviews with patients, a postal survey of community staff and interviews with ward staff. A diagnostic analysis of current assessment practice informed the change process. The project leader collected data on adherence. RESULTS: This paper draws on descriptive and qualitative data and addresses the links between contextual issues and the processes and pathways of change, informed by theoretical ideas from the change literature. Key themes emerged: working through others and across boundaries, managing uncertainty and unanticipated challenges. Adherence of ward staff to using the multidisciplinary assessment guidelines was high, with evidence of some dissemination to community staff at follow-up. Three years after the project finished the multidisciplinary assessment is still part of routine clinical practice. CONCLUSIONS: The analysis contributes to understanding about the nursing leadership of change within an interprofessional arena of practice. It highlights the importance of understanding the context in relation to the impact and sustainability of change and thus the utility of conducting a diagnostic analysis in the early stages of implementation. This has implications for developing approaches to change in nursing and interprofessional practice in other settings. RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE: Using research to change practice needs clinical leaders who are supported by the organization and have the skills to implement research evidence, manage uncertainty and build trust with a range of other professionals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. The impact of day care on socially disadvantaged families: an example of the use of process evaluation within a randomized controlled trial.
- Author
-
Toroyan, T., Oakley, A., Laing, G., Roberts, I., Mugford, M., and Turner, J.
- Subjects
SOCIAL marginality ,EMPLOYMENT ,INCOME - Abstract
This paper describes a process evaluation that was conducted alongside a randomized controlled trial of out-of-home pre-school day care. The evaluation aimed to: (1) describe the intervention; (2) document the day care received by participating families; (3) describe the social context of the trial; and (4) provide data to assist in the interpretation of trial outcomes.The setting for the trial was an out-of-home day care Centre in Hackney, East London. Process data were collected through the use of questionnaires, interviews, and researcher field-notes. Data from questionnaires were collected from 120 mothers and included data on 143 children. Interviews were undertaken with 21 participating mothers. Staff also completed questionnaires and the Head of the Centre was interviewed. The quality of care provided was assessed using the Early Childhood Environment Rating Scale.Process data collected during the trial suggest that the day care provided was education-led, flexible in catering to families’ needs, and was of a very high quality. The social context of the trial resulted in financial pressures, which may well have influenced the intervention provided. Data collected through in-depth interviews suggested that it may be the flexibility of day care that is particularly important in allowing women to return to paid employment, but that the loss of benefits when starting work may have meant no increase in household income.The paper illustrates the value of conducting a process evaluation alongside a randomized trial, particularly where complex interventions are involved. In this case, where the intervention was not provided by the research team, the evaluation allowed an insight into the content of a multifaceted intervention, which is useful in interpreting the trial's results, and in explaining the possible effects of the social context on the intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Developing metropolitan tourism on the fringe of central London.
- Author
-
Maitland, Robert and Newman, Peter
- Subjects
URBAN tourism ,TOURISM ,CITIES & towns ,TOURISTS - Abstract
The paper examines the growth of a ‘new tourism area’ in Islington, north London — a locality that lacks a large attraction, acknowledged distinctive heritage and has not been planned as a destination. We review supply side changes and link them to the recent literature on economic and spatial trends in cities, particularly the role of amenity. We report on a survey of Islington visitors that shows they are drawn by distinctive qualities of place rather than particular attractions. The visitors have characteristics that distinguish them from visitors to London as a whole, but we speculate that they have similarities to Islington workers and residents in their search for amenity, entertainment and high-level consumption services. In the final section of the paper we explore the consequences of our findings for understanding the growth of urban tourism. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Intra Day Bid-Ask Spreads, Trading Volume and Volatility: Recent Empirical Evidence from the London Stock Exchange.
- Author
-
Cai, Charlie X., Hudson, Robert, and Keasey, Kevin
- Subjects
MARKET volatility ,FINANCIAL markets ,STOCK exchanges - Abstract
With the benefit of very high frequency (25 million 1 minute observations) and recent data (2001) for the UK, this paper explores a number of intra day patterns of stock market behaviour. More specifically, a distinct reverse J shaped bid-ask spread pattern is noted for SETS securities, a declining bid-ask spread pattern for non-SETS securities, a two hump pattern for trading volume and a U-shaped pattern for returns volatility for all securities. In terms of complementing the existing literature, the paper shows that differences in trading systems may affect the bid-ask spread patterns, while differences in market environments (i.e. US and UK markets) seems to affect the trading volume pattern. The paper suggests avenues for future research, in particular, the need to consider what factors are significant in determining intra day patterns for different trading systems and the need for additional cross-market comparisons to identify how institutional factors affect the behaviour of investors on an intra day basis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Critical pragmatism and congestion charging in London.
- Author
-
Banister, David
- Subjects
CONGESTION pricing ,TRAFFIC congestion ,TRAFFIC regulations - Abstract
Discusses the abstract of the article 'Critical pragmatism and congestion charging in London,' by David Banister, which appeared in the June 2003 issue of the 'International Social Science Journal.' Analysis of the process of implementation; Interpretation of the case study in terms of equity and distribution, acceptability, boundary effects, and environmental impacts.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Competition on the London Stock Exchange.
- Author
-
Taylor, N.
- Subjects
STOCK exchanges ,COMPETITION - Abstract
This paper investigates the determinants of the level of competition on the order–driven market organised by the London Stock Exchange. In contrast to previous empirical market microstructure studies, we treat the level of competition as an endogenous variable. The statistical nature of the measures of competitive activity used in this paper necessitate use of a count regression model. Using a sample 50 stocks, we find that users of the system tend to follow the lead of other users (termed the ‘herding effect’) and that competition is greater during the period when the US exchanges are open (termed the ‘US effect’). In addition, the level of competition is positively related to the bid–ask spread pertaining to a particular stock (termed the ‘spread effect’). The latter result is most likely due to traders following a strategy where trade immediacy is traded off against price advantage. Finally, we find that the magnitude of the herding effect, the spread effect, and the fit of the count regression models (termed the ‘fit effect’) vary in a predictable manner across the liquidity of stocks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Understanding urban tourism: London in the early 1990s.
- Author
-
Bull, Paul and Church, Andrew
- Subjects
URBAN tourism ,TOURISM ,HOSPITALITY industry - Abstract
Using London as an example this paper demonstrates that the idea of tourism as ‘pleasure and recreation’ is wholly inadequate for an understanding of the published evidence on tourism in major cities. In the UK this results directly from the definition adopted by the main statistical sources such that tourists become travellers, irrespective of purpose, who stay overnight at their destination. In so doing the paper highlights two areas for future research, the growing trend in short-distance tourism and the increasing importance of visiting friends and relatives. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Sub/Urban Histories Against The Grain: Myth And Embourgeoisement In Essex Noir.
- Author
-
Millington, Gareth
- Subjects
ESSEX (England) in literature ,ENGLISH fiction ,NOIR fiction ,EMBOURGEOISEMENT ,SUBURBANIZATION ,FILM noir -- History & criticism ,WORKING class ,WORKING class in motion pictures ,LONDON (England) in literature ,HISTORY ,THEMES in literature ,ENGLISH fiction -- History & criticism - Abstract
This paper considers how literary and cinematic constructions of Essex noir expose the darker, chaotic sides to working-class embourgeoisement: initially via post-War suburbanisation and later, via Margaret Thatcher's attempt to encourage competitive individualism and entrepreneurship. Noir angles a 'dark mirror' to suburban Essex and develops a distinctive aesthetics of social and cultural change, while also puncturing myths of social mobility and suburban security. The paper points to both affinities and breaks between noir's bleak pessimism and Walter Benjamin's understanding of history as overcoming the concept of progress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Single-handed practices – their contribution to an undergraduate teaching network in the first year of the new curriculum.
- Author
-
Wylie, A M, Stephenson, A, Copperman, J, Wingfield, R, Turner, M, and Steward, C
- Subjects
KING'S College (London, England). School of Medicine ,MEDICAL school curriculum ,TRAINING of medical students - Abstract
Objectives The new curriculum at King’s College School of Medicine and Dentistry, which commenced in September 1996, requires all medical undergraduates to have a general practice placement throughout the 5␣years of their medical education. Design This paper discusses recruitment, training and support of teaching practices for the new curriculum, reviews the distribution of single-handed general practices in the network and, via a selection of monitoring and evaluation procedures, discusses the implications of a policy which is inclusive of single-handed practices. The findings relate to the experience of the first semester of the first year of the new curriculum. It also examines the contributions that single-handed practices have made to the teaching network and the kind of support needed, if single-handed practices are to continue to contribute to the King’s teaching network. Setting King’s College School of Medicine and Dentistry. Subjects Medical undergraduates. Results The findings of this paper revealed that over a third of general practice provision is via single-handed practices in South-east London. Within the undergraduate teaching network, 10% of practices are single-handed. Students are welcomed and receive a learning experience comparable to those students in larger practices. Attendance at training events has proved difficult for some of these tutors, but the extra input from the department, in order to address this deficit, has not been onerous. Indeed, single-handed practices have not been unique with regard to difficulties in attendance at training events. Conclusions The study concludes that single-handed practices can make satisfactory provision for undergraduates in the new curriculum and there is no evidence from this study to suggest otherwise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Health and illness beliefs of Greek Cypriots living in London.
- Author
-
Papadopoulos, Irena
- Subjects
CYPRIOTS ,DISEASES ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Health and illness beliefs of Greek Cypriots living in London This paper describes some of the findings of a qualitative study into the health and illness beliefs of Greek Cypriots living in London. Data were collected through group and individual in-depth interviews and were analysed using the grounded theory approach of constant comparison and saturation. Two of the six themes which were identified are discussed in this paper. The findings provide the reader with important insights into Greek Cypriots' beliefs of health and illness. The paper argues that the understanding of such beliefs from a cultural perspective is vitally important for all those involved in the provision of health care to this group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. What Does the PSC Do?
- Author
-
Quivey, Martha
- Subjects
COMMITTEES ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,NURSING - Abstract
Presents an excerpt from the paper presented by Martha Quivey, the chairman of the Professional Services Committee (PSC) of the International Council of Nurses, explaining the role of the PSC, at the 1985 professional conference of the Royal College of Nursing in London, England.
- Published
- 1985
44. AUTHOR'S RETROSPECTIVE.
- Author
-
Arie, Tom
- Subjects
MENTAL health facilities ,MENTAL health services ,MENTAL health promotion ,OLDER people - Abstract
Describes the origins and the first phase of the psychiatric services provided by Goodmayes hospital in London, England. Extent of the services offered by the hospital in the psychiatric care of the elderly; Challenges posed by operating such service; Impact of the services provided by the said institution on the mental health of the elderly.
- Published
- 1995
45. Covered Interest Parity: A High-frequency, High-quality Data Study.
- Author
-
Taylor, Mark P.
- Subjects
ASSETS (Accounting) ,EFFICIENT market theory ,FOREIGN exchange market ,PURCHASING power parity - Abstract
The covered interest parity theorem states that the covered interest differential between two identical assets denominated in different currencies should be zero. Profitable deviations from the parity represent riskless arbitrage opportunities and so indicate market inefficiency. Previous empirical work on this topic has used data that have not been contemporaneously sampled, and does not therefore constitute a proper test of covered interest parity (since those prices never appeared in the market simultaneously). In this paper the covered interest parity condition is tested using high-frequency, contemporaneously sampled data gathered in the London foreign exchange market. The results overwhelmingly support the market efficiency hypothesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Safer teaching or safer sex? Primary teaching in the age of HIV/AIDS.
- Author
-
Farquhar, Clare
- Subjects
PRIMARY education ,AIDS ,HIV ,HIV infections ,SCHOOL children ,SCHOOL entrance age ,CHILD sexual abuse - Abstract
Both parents and teachers are concerned about whether and how to talk to young children about H/V/AIDS. Yet despite increasing attention to the relevance of HIV/AIDS for teaching at the secondary school level, little (if any) attention has been paid to the implications of HIV/A IDS for younger children. This paper, which was presented at the 1989 British Psychological Society Education Section Conference, argues that HIV/ AIDS raises important issues in relation to children of primary school age which we cannot afford to ignore. The paper draws on a one year study carried Out at Thomas Coram Research Unit (London Institute of Education) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Labour's Nationalisation Programme.
- Author
-
W. A. R.
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT ownership ,INDUSTRIES ,BUSINESS enterprises ,ECONOMIC history - Abstract
The author discusses the conflict over nationalization as an economic policy in London, England. The proposal for nationalization of the British industries is from White Paper titled "The Regeneration of British Industry," by the Labour Party. It is stated that the paper deals mainly with planning agreements of assistance between major companies. The author suggests that the concerned parties should be wise and informed in making decisions about the economy.
- Published
- 1974
48. TROPICAL ECOLOGY GROUP--1962.
- Author
-
Southwood, T. R. E.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,SOCIETIES ,RED locust ,TSETSE-flies ,MOSQUITOES - Abstract
The article highlights a joint meeting of the British Ecological Society's Tropical Ecology Group with the Royal Entomological Society, held at Imperial College in London, England on March 30, 1962. The meeting opened with a paper by P. M. Symmons who spoke on the effect of climate and weather on numbers of the red locust in its outbreak areas. J. P. Glasgow then spoke on the interrelations of tsetse with their habitat. The last paper in the morning session was by Gordon Surtees on the factors limiting mosquito distribution.
- Published
- 1964
49. AUTUMN MEETING AT LONDON SEPTEMBER 19th-20th, 1955.
- Author
-
Hughes, R. Elfyn
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,ECOLOGY ,CALLUNA ,ERICACEAE ,FORAGE plants ,SOCIETIES - Abstract
The article discusses the highlights of the autumn meeting of the British Ecological Society held in the Department of Botany at Bedford College in London, England on September 19 and 20, 1955. Several papers dealing with various aspects of the ecology of Calluna vulgaris were presented on the 19th, including a paper on experimental work to determine the effect of grazing wether sheep on enclosed areas of Calluneta. A discussion of the effects of burning heather is provided.
- Published
- 1956
50. EASTER MEETING AT LONDON 2-3 APRIL 1954.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,ECOLOGY ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. - Abstract
The article reports on the highlights of the Easter Meeting of the British Ecological Society that was held in London, England on April 2-3, 1954. A. R. Clapham, a professor and president of the British Ecological Society, commenced the morning session on April 2, 1954. Several research papers were presented during the meeting, including those from Dr. Eville Gorham, Professor W. H. Pearsall and J. Brereton. On behalf of the Honorary Treasurer, the auditors' account was discussed by E. D. Le Cren during the meeting.
- Published
- 1955
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.