A Colossal Wreck: a Road Trip Through Political Scandal, Corruption, and Anerican Culture Pdf, Epub, Ebook

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

A Colossal Wreck: a Road Trip Through Political Scandal, Corruption, and Anerican Culture Pdf, Epub, Ebook A COLOSSAL WRECK: A ROAD TRIP THROUGH POLITICAL SCANDAL, CORRUPTION, AND ANERICAN CULTURE PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Alexander Cockburn | 498 pages | 09 Oct 2013 | Verso Books | 9781781681190 | English | London, United Kingdom A Colossal Wreck: A Road Trip Through Political Scandal, Corruption, and Anerican Culture PDF Book John Dvorak. Some years ago I visited him at his home in northern California. Alexander Cockburn. Although you belong to those other lands where my husband studied his western books, you will understand. New poetry. Gotham Books. It is because he has crossed the Four Seas to the other and outer countries, and he has learned in those remote places to love new things and new ways. I, therefore, the least of these honorable ones, must yet have their blood in my blood, and their bones are my bones. Law Fare. More from The Irish Times Books. No holds Barred: Trump and his troops push for imperial presidency Guardian. Microsoft joins group seeking to kill off historic climate change lawsuits. Matt Bai. There is wife Hillary "Rodham" Clinton who is already recognized for the "imperious gleam" that provides "social-worker liberalism, otherwise known as therapeutic policing. North American Hi In a rebuke to President Obama, the House on Friday rejected a resolution that would authorize continued military operations in Libya for one year. Posted by beefsox Report as abusive. Europe's far-right bid to take back 'Christian Europe'. Views expressed in the comments do not represent those of Reuters. In this panoramic work, covering nearly two decades of American culture and politics, he explores subjects as varied as the sex life of Bill Clinton and the best way to cook wild turkey. There was none like her in my childhood. As long as she had given my father one living son he could have no legal ground for complaint against her. My mother was wise. His prose could be light, ironic, also savage. A Colossal Wreck: A Road Trip Through Political Scandal, Corruption, and Anerican Culture Writer New US charges against Julian Assange could spell decades behind bars. But when he comes in, wearing the strange foreign dress, I cannot speak these things. To comment you must now be an Irish Times subscriber. Julia Angwin. US deploys aircraft carrier and bombers after 'credible threat' from Iran. But now the day has come when I watch eagerly these strange creatures—these modern women—seeking how I may become like them. The Missing Step. Robin Blackburn called him the man who "inaugurated a style of attack and polemical journalism in the US unlike anything ever seen before". For me something about that core doesn't carry well into the 21st century in the way Chomsky's has. My blood rose to my face. The Nation. Dec 12, Micah rated it really liked it. Mar 17, Ernest Nabokov rated it it was amazing. Amid high-flown political chat, he says Lady Olga and her barrister husband, Robin Hay, while visiting Turkey, were guests at a sumptuous banquet when a fellow diner unzipped his trousers. Highlights for me are his trip to India and his father's story about Basil Murray. Though this collection isn't better than either of the two in this triptych, it's a 5 star book simply for the fact that i got a pleasant reminder why I wanted to start writing in the first place. At a typical lates dinner party in Washington, Americans lined up to watch the pair of literary Brits claw each other over long-forgotten slights. Scott and I got a nice tour of Alex's property, which included a pasture for his horses, and and went for a long walk along the Lost Coast, one of the most beautiful stretches of shoreline I've ever seen. Is Chinese-style surveillance coming to the west? I came into Cockburn's orbit as a Nation intern, where I served as an assistant to the great investigative journalist Allan Nairn. He even let me roam through his library and borrow any book I wanted to I snagged a history of British leftist writers. His word amounts to no more than, as Mr. Clinton Inc. My Letter from Joe Biden. I cannot see how even your mother-in-law will find anything lacking in my work. This was not a fun book to read. Chicago Review. The Last Battle. Father appears in Orwell's Homage to Catalonia. Alexander Cockburn, who died of cancer at the age of 71 on July 21, , was a prose powerhouse who left an admirable body of great columns about all manner of matters political and cultural. God and U. Related articles. The Almighty Black P. Forgot Password? Posted by beefsox Report as abusive. The Secret World of Oil. She is very thin, you remember, and her face seems carved from ivory for its pallor and its calm. The account details entered are not currently associated with an Irish Times subscription. His writing was always eloquent, erudite and original. We must act. In a rebuke to President Obama, the House on Friday rejected a resolution that would authorize continued military operations in Libya for one year. Biden wants to work with the GOP, Warren wants to change the rules and Sanders wants to build a movement.. Readers also enjoyed. But I know of none so small in your generation. Short stories. A Bone to Pick: The good and bad news about food, with wisdom and advice on diets, food safety, GMOs, farming, and more. Intercept Facial recognition will soon be everywhere. Craig Murray What if we covered the climate crisis like we did the start of the second world war? A Colossal Wreck: A Road Trip Through Political Scandal, Corruption, and Anerican Culture Reviews But you? City Lights. By continuing to use this website, you consent to our use of these cookies. Never cease to beguile him with your ingenuity in different dishes. His takedowns of Hitchens are also enjoyable. The Secret World of Oil. It was as if the dull earth leaped to meet the sun. What would he have the reporters do, invent a new word to describe the same action each time it recurs? North American Hi In the age of nascent fascism, it is irresponsible to insist on a politically neutral world where pedagogy is a banal transmission of noncontroversial facts. My pal Scott Handleman was Alex's intern, and after we left that quasi-job with complimentary Nation hat and t-shirt, oh the perks of such noble toil! Commenting on The Irish Times has changed. His opposition to the neoliberalism and imperial adventuring that cloud the two decades covered in this book is too instinctive and heartfelt for that. I, of course, was never allowed in the courts where the men lived. Noam Chomsky - The Future of Capitalism. Inna rated it it was amazing Dec 05, When an old Kim dies, the country finds a new Kim to lead the state. And how the U. The only thing left to do, then, was settle scores with Christopher Hitchens which should piss off the sycophants but I have no doubt will be the legacy. Our national pastime: Press criticism. Gabriella Coleman. Hardcover , pages. Join Why? Rochelle Bilow. Hitchens permanently ascended to the stratosphere of intellectual celebrity for his brilliant strategic ideas like invading Iraq; while Cockburn, after a good run in the s in which even the Wall Street Journal featured his column regularly on its op-ed page probably to remind readers why they hated leftists so much was increasingly exiled to the fringes of the intellectual world. I bowed my head and placed my two hands before me. Oct 18, Graeme rated it it was amazing. Therefore I seldom saw him again. To my brother and to me she was kind, but still formal and undemonstrative, as indeed was proper for one in her position in the family. A fine read, easy to dip in and out. Seven Days in Syria. John Branch. He is like my mother, thin of body, delicate- boned, tall and straight as a young bamboo tree. In everything I have taught you I have considered two persons, the mother of your husband and your husband. His father Claud put out the influential left-wing newsletter The Week and wrote several incredibly funny novels, most famously Beat the Devil, which was made into a John Huston movie of the same name. Christopher Hitchens in particular comes in for a brutal posthumous bit of score-settling. In he settled in Petrolia, a rural hamlet in Humboldt County, Northern California, where he remained until his death. Pete Rose: An American Dilemma. He had no patience for humorless, terminally dour lefties, always among his favorite objects of ridicule. You have been taught to play that ancient harp whose strings have been swept by generations of our women for the delight of their lords. Thompson both, incidentally, far more entertaining and engaging writers than Cockburn. In liberal San Francisco, anti-Trump politicians support police raid on journalist. Fighting Words Roddy Doyle introduces head-turning young Irish writing. This book was as orienting as it was hilarious. Has Freedom of the Press Become an Illusion? Chelsea Manning jailed again as she refuses to testify before grand jury. Page after page of cynical sneering at Clinton and Obama bookend a deafening silence on the eight years of George W. A Colossal Wreck: A Road Trip Through Political Scandal, Corruption, and Anerican Culture Read Online Trump's regime is leading America in an insurrection. But have you ever seen an uglier and less-useful marketing site about any book than what Random House is doing over there? What if the pale wan waters should never feel how the moon draws them? Hitch accused the murderous Germans, then on the run, of giving the left a bad name.
Recommended publications
  • Libertarianism, Culture, and Personal Predispositions
    Undergraduate Journal of Psychology 22 Libertarianism, Culture, and Personal Predispositions Ida Hepsø, Scarlet Hernandez, Shir Offsey, & Katherine White ​ Kennesaw​ State University Abstract The United States has exhibited two potentially connected trends – increasing individualism and increasing interest in libertarian ideology. Previous research on libertarian ideology found higher levels of individualism among libertarians, and cross-cultural research has tied greater individualism to making dispositional attributions and lower altruistic tendencies. Given this, we expected to observe positive correlations between the following variables in the present research: individualism and endorsement of libertarianism, individualism and dispositional attributions, and endorsement of libertarianism and dispositional attributions. We also expected to observe negative correlations between libertarianism and altruism, dispositional attributions and altruism, and individualism and altruism. Survey results from 252 participants confirmed a positive correlation between individualism and libertarianism, a marginally significant positive correlation between libertarianism and dispositional attributions, and a negative correlation between individualism and altruism. These results confirm the connection between libertarianism and individualism observed in previous research and present several intriguing questions for future research on libertarian ideology. Key Words: Libertarianism, individualism, altruism, attributions individualistic, made apparent
    [Show full text]
  • Periodicalspov.Pdf
    “Consider the Source” A Resource Guide to Liberal, Conservative and Nonpartisan Periodicals 30 East Lake Street ∙ Chicago, IL 60601 HWC Library – Room 501 312.553.5760 ver heard the saying “consider the source” in response to something that was questioned? Well, the same advice applies to what you read – consider the source. When conducting research, bear in mind that periodicals (journals, magazines, newspapers) may have varying points-of-view, biases, and/or E political leanings. Here are some questions to ask when considering using a periodical source: Is there a bias in the publication or is it non-partisan? Who is the sponsor (publisher or benefactor) of the publication? What is the agenda of the sponsor – to simply share information or to influence social or political change? Some publications have specific political perspectives and outright state what they are, as in Dissent Magazine (self-described as “a magazine of the left”) or National Review’s boost of, “we give you the right view and back it up.” Still, there are other publications that do not clearly state their political leanings; but over time have been deemed as left- or right-leaning based on such factors as the points- of-view of their opinion columnists, the make-up of their editorial staff, and/or their endorsements of politicians. Many newspapers fall into this rather opaque category. A good rule of thumb to use in determining whether a publication is liberal or conservative has been provided by Media Research Center’s L. Brent Bozell III: “if the paper never met a conservative cause it didn’t like, it’s conservative, and if it never met a liberal cause it didn’t like, it’s liberal.” Outlined in the following pages is an annotated listing of publications that have been categorized as conservative, liberal, non-partisan and religious.
    [Show full text]
  • SPYCATCHER by PETER WRIGHT with Paul Greengrass WILLIAM
    SPYCATCHER by PETER WRIGHT with Paul Greengrass WILLIAM HEINEMANN: AUSTRALIA First published in 1987 by HEINEMANN PUBLISHERS AUSTRALIA (A division of Octopus Publishing Group/Australia Pty Ltd) 85 Abinger Street, Richmond, Victoria, 3121. Copyright (c) 1987 by Peter Wright ISBN 0-85561-166-9 All Rights Reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the prior written permission of the publisher. TO MY WIFE LOIS Prologue For years I had wondered what the last day would be like. In January 1976 after two decades in the top echelons of the British Security Service, MI5, it was time to rejoin the real world. I emerged for the final time from Euston Road tube station. The winter sun shone brightly as I made my way down Gower Street toward Trafalgar Square. Fifty yards on I turned into the unmarked entrance to an anonymous office block. Tucked between an art college and a hospital stood the unlikely headquarters of British Counterespionage. I showed my pass to the policeman standing discreetly in the reception alcove and took one of the specially programmed lifts which carry senior officers to the sixth-floor inner sanctum. I walked silently down the corridor to my room next to the Director-General's suite. The offices were quiet. Far below I could hear the rumble of tube trains carrying commuters to the West End. I unlocked my door. In front of me stood the essential tools of the intelligence officer’s trade - a desk, two telephones, one scrambled for outside calls, and to one side a large green metal safe with an oversized combination lock on the front.
    [Show full text]
  • La Verdad De La Memoria No Radica Tanto En La Exactitud De Los Hechos (Res Factae) Como En El Relato Y En La Interpretación De Ellos (Res Fictae).”1
    1 The Memory of the National and the National as Memory. “…la verdad de la memoria no radica tanto en la exactitud de los hechos (res factae) como en el relato y en la interpretación de ellos (res fictae).”1 (Lechner and Güell 1999: 186) Juan Poblete University of California, Santa Cruz Abstract: My essay seeks to illuminate a different, more encompassing kind of transition than that from dictatorship to post-dictatorship (and its attendant forms of memory of military brutal force and human rights abuses) privileged by studies of political violence and social memory. My focus is twofold: first, to describe a transition from the world of the social to that of the post-social, i.e. a transition from a welfare state-centered form of the nation to its neoliberal competitive state counterpart; and secondly, to analyze its attendant memory dynamics. I am concerned with the double articulation of collective memory under neoliberalism, the deep and recurring violence it has involved at both the social and individual levels, and its self-articulation as a social memory apparatus. Keywords: social, post-social, neoliberal presentism, memory studies, proletarianization. If it is true that every national culture is by definition a form of mediation between the specific and the universal, a framework for understanding the connections between the local and the global, then Chilean culture has been working double shifts for a long time. For the past forty-five years it has been defined by a series of international 2 and global narratives derived, first, from the Cold War struggle and then its post-1989 global neoliberal aftermath.
    [Show full text]
  • Claud Cockburn's the Week and the Anti-Nazi Intrigue That Produced
    55 Fighting Fire with Propaganda: Claud Cockburn’s The Week and the Anti-Nazi Intrigue that Produced the ‘Cliveden Set,’ 1932-1939 by An Cushner “The public nervous system may be soothed by false explanations. But unless people are encouraged to look rather more coolly and deeply into these same phenomena of espionage and terrorism, they will make no progress towards any genuine self-defense against either.” --Claud Cockburn1 “Neville Chamberlain is lunching with me on Thursday, and I hope Edward Halifax.. .Apparently the Communist rag has been full of the Halifax-Lothian-Astor plot at Cliveden. people really seem to believe it.” --Nancy Astor to Lord Lothian2 In 1932, London Times editor Geoffrey Dawson sat at the desk of his former New York and Berlin correspondent, Claud Cockbum. A grandson of Scottish Lord Heniy Cockbum, the twenty-eight year old journalist had been born in China while his father was a diplomat with the British Legation during the Boxer Rebellion. Dawson attempted to dissuade Cockbum from quitting the Times, and he was sorry to see such a promising young newsman shun his aristocratic roots in order to join with the intellectual Left. After repeatedly trying to convince his fellow Oxford alumnus to reconsider his decision to resign, Dawson finally admitted defeat and sarcastically remarked to Cockbum that “[i]t does seem rather bad luck that you of all people should go Red on us.”3 Dawson had no way of knowing how hauntingly prophetic those words would prove to be. five years later, the strongly anti-communist newspaper editor’s words would come back to haunt him with a vengeance that neither man could have likely predicted.
    [Show full text]
  • Markets Not Capitalism Explores the Gap Between Radically Freed Markets and the Capitalist-Controlled Markets That Prevail Today
    individualist anarchism against bosses, inequality, corporate power, and structural poverty Edited by Gary Chartier & Charles W. Johnson Individualist anarchists believe in mutual exchange, not economic privilege. They believe in freed markets, not capitalism. They defend a distinctive response to the challenges of ending global capitalism and achieving social justice: eliminate the political privileges that prop up capitalists. Massive concentrations of wealth, rigid economic hierarchies, and unsustainable modes of production are not the results of the market form, but of markets deformed and rigged by a network of state-secured controls and privileges to the business class. Markets Not Capitalism explores the gap between radically freed markets and the capitalist-controlled markets that prevail today. It explains how liberating market exchange from state capitalist privilege can abolish structural poverty, help working people take control over the conditions of their labor, and redistribute wealth and social power. Featuring discussions of socialism, capitalism, markets, ownership, labor struggle, grassroots privatization, intellectual property, health care, racism, sexism, and environmental issues, this unique collection brings together classic essays by Cleyre, and such contemporary innovators as Kevin Carson and Roderick Long. It introduces an eye-opening approach to radical social thought, rooted equally in libertarian socialism and market anarchism. “We on the left need a good shake to get us thinking, and these arguments for market anarchism do the job in lively and thoughtful fashion.” – Alexander Cockburn, editor and publisher, Counterpunch “Anarchy is not chaos; nor is it violence. This rich and provocative gathering of essays by anarchists past and present imagines society unburdened by state, markets un-warped by capitalism.
    [Show full text]
  • Religious Liberty’ Is the New Bully Pulpit and Its New Meaning Is Endangering Our Way of Life Marsha N
    Arkansas Law Review Volume 69 | Number 4 Article 1 January 2017 Holier Than You and Me: ‘Religious Liberty’ Is the New Bully Pulpit and Its New Meaning Is Endangering Our Way of Life Marsha N. Freeman Barry University Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.uark.edu/alr Recommended Citation Marsha N. Freeman, Holier Than You and Me: ‘Religious Liberty’ Is the New Bully Pulpit and Its New Meaning Is Endangering Our Way of Life, 69 Ark. L. Rev. 881 (2017). Available at: http://scholarworks.uark.edu/alr/vol69/iss4/1 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks@UARK. It has been accepted for inclusion in Arkansas Law Review by an authorized editor of ScholarWorks@UARK. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. Holier Than You and Me: ‘Religious Liberty’ Is the New Bully Pulpit and Its New Meaning Is Endangering Our Way of Life Marsha B. Freeman* “Your beliefs don’t make you a better person, your behavior does.”1 Many of you have probably seen this quote floating around the internet on all forms of social media. I have it hanging on my office door in the hope that those who enter will take a moment to notice and maybe, if needed, even reflect on it. The problem is that most people likely do not recognize the negative forces within themselves and those who do may be perfectly fine with them. Recent decisions show how the Supreme Court has allowed negative politics to influence its work leading to heretofore unlikely decisions.2 Today’s political climate has induced changes in society impelling legal findings,3 leading to upheavals in how we view everything from corporate entities4 to limitations 5 on personal rights.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction
    Notes INTRODUCTION 1. Graham Greene (ed.), The Old School (London: Jonathan Cape, 1934) 7-8. (Hereafter OS.) 2. Ibid., 105, 17. 3. Graham Greene, A Sort of Life (London: Bodley Head, 1971) 72. (Hereafter SL.) 4. OS, 256. 5. George Orwell, The Road to Wigan Pier (London: Gollancz, 1937) 171. 6. OS, 8. 7. Barbara Greene, Too Late to Turn Back (London: Settle and Bendall, 1981) ix. 8. Graham Greene, Collected Essays (London: Bodley Head, 1969) 14. (Hereafter CE.) 9. Graham Greene, The Lawless Roads (London: Longmans, Green, 1939) 10. (Hereafter LR.) 10. Marie-Franc;oise Allain, The Other Man (London: Bodley Head, 1983) 25. (Hereafter OM). 11. SL, 46. 12. Ibid., 19, 18. 13. Michael Tracey, A Variety of Lives (London: Bodley Head, 1983) 4-7. 14. Peter Quennell, The Marble Foot (London: Collins, 1976) 15. 15. Claud Cockburn, Claud Cockburn Sums Up (London: Quartet, 1981) 19-21. 16. Ibid. 17. LR, 12. 18. Graham Greene, Ways of Escape (Toronto: Lester and Orpen Dennys, 1980) 62. (Hereafter WE.) 19. Graham Greene, Journey Without Maps (London: Heinemann, 1962) 11. (Hereafter JWM). 20. Christopher Isherwood, Foreword, in Edward Upward, The Railway Accident and Other Stories (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1972) 34. 21. Virginia Woolf, 'The Leaning Tower', in The Moment and Other Essays (NY: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1974) 128-54. 22. JWM, 4-10. 23. Cockburn, 21. 24. Ibid. 25. WE, 32. 26. Graham Greene, 'Analysis of a Journey', Spectator (September 27, 1935) 460. 27. Samuel Hynes, The Auden Generation (New York: Viking, 1977) 228. 28. ]WM, 87, 92. 29. Ibid., 272, 288, 278.
    [Show full text]
  • Why America Needs a Second Party by Harold Meyerson INSIDE DEMOCRATIC LEFT Dsaction
    PUBLISHED BY THE DEMOCRATIC SOCIALISTS OF AMERICA Why America Needs A Second Party By Harold Meyerson INSIDE DEMOCRATIC LEFT DSAction ... 11 Why We Need a Second Party Jimmy Higgins Reports ... 16 by Harold Meyerson ... 3 Turning Rage Into Action: Daring To Be Ambitious: New York City DSA Commentary on the Clarence Thomas Hearings Organizes to Elect a Progressive City Council by Suzanne Crowell ... 13 by Miriam Bensman ... 6 Book Review: Guy Molyneux reviews E.J. Dionne's Why Americans Hate Politics ... 14 On TheLefJ Canadian Health Care Speakers Tour Report ... 8 Cover photo by Robert Fox/Impact Visuals EDITORIAL West European social democracies. In bachev is correct to want those "inter­ SOVI ET the Soviet Union, he'd like to see similar esting results" in democracy, economic welfare state guarantees, active labor development, and human rights that market policies, and government in- are inspired by the socialist idea. In tervention in the economy for both this respect, he's in tune with the DREAMER growth and equity. In his heart of citizens of his country since polls con­ hearts, Gorby wants his country to sistently show widespread support by Joanne Barkan look like Sweden in good times. among them for welfare state guaran- Dream on -- James Baker would tees. If George Bush would stop ex­ The coup in the Soviet Union fails. certainly respond. And democratic so- porting his models of misery, what's The train of history is back on the cialists everywhere would have to admit worked best for the West Europeans reform track -- for the moment. Re­ that the economic resources and insti- might -- with time and aid -- work for publics of the former empire declare tutional mechanisms just don't exist the East.
    [Show full text]
  • THE NEOLIBERAL THEORY of SOCIETY Simon Clarke
    THE NEOLIBERAL THEORY OF SOCIETY Simon Clarke The ideological foundations of neo-liberalism Neoliberalism presents itself as a doctrine based on the inexorable truths of modern economics. However, despite its scientific trappings, modern economics is not a scientific discipline but the rigorous elaboration of a very specific social theory, which has become so deeply embedded in western thought as to have established itself as no more than common sense, despite the fact that its fundamental assumptions are patently absurd. The foundations of modern economics, and of the ideology of neoliberalism, go back to Adam Smith and his great work, The Wealth of Nations. Over the past two centuries Smith’s arguments have been formalised and developed with greater analytical rigour, but the fundamental assumptions underpinning neoliberalism remain those proposed by Adam Smith. Adam Smith wrote The Wealth of Nations as a critique of the corrupt and self-aggrandising mercantilist state, which drew its revenues from taxing trade and licensing monopolies, which it sought to protect by maintaining an expensive military apparatus and waging costly wars. The theories which supported the state conceived of exchange as a ‘zero-sum game’, in which one party’s gain was the other party’s loss, so the maximum benefit from exchange was to be extracted by force and fraud. The fundamental idea of Smith’s critique was that the ‘wealth of the nation’ derived not from the accumulation of wealth by the state, at the expense of its citizens and foreign powers, but from the development of the division of labour. The division of labour developed as a result of the initiative and enterprise of private individuals and would develop the more rapidly the more such individuals were free to apply their enterprise and initiative and to reap the corresponding rewards.
    [Show full text]
  • The Real Shame of the Nation the Causes and Consequences of Interstate Inequity in Public School Investments
    The Real Shame of the Nation The Causes and Consequences of Interstate Inequity in Public School Investments Bruce D. Baker, Mark Weber, Ajay Srikanth, Robert Kim*, Michael Atzbi Rutgers University This report presents a first attempt at better understanding interstate variation in the costs associated with achieving common outcome goals across all settings and children. We take advantage of two recently released national data panels, applying methods used previously for inter‐district, within state analyses of the costs of meeting common standards. *William T. Grant Foundation Research Fellow The Real Shame of the Nation The Causes and Consequences of Interstate Inequity in Public School Investments Bruce D. Baker, Mark Weber, Ajay Srikanth, Robert Kim*, Michael Atzbi Rutgers University *William T. Grant Foundation Research Fellow Executive Summary For decades, school finance researchers have explored the impact of funding inequities across local public school districts within states on children’s opportunities to meet state student achievement accountability standards. Due, however, to the variation of both state achievement tests and economic conditions within and between states, there has never been a national study comparing states’ abilities to achieve a common student achievement outcome and assessing the cost associated for each state to do so. In addition, there has never been a study applying a uniform model for determining the fiscal impact of poverty on reaching a particular student achievement outcome across states. This paper presents, for the first time, a new National Education Cost Model (NECM) to better understand the relative adequacy of state investments in public schooling toward achieving common outcome goals.
    [Show full text]
  • Shaping the Inheritance of the Spanish Civil War on the British Left, 1939-1945 a Thesis Submitted to the University of Manches
    Shaping the Inheritance of the Spanish Civil War on the British Left, 1939-1945 A thesis submitted to the University of Manchester for the degree of Master of Philosophy in the Faculty of Humanities 2017 David W. Mottram School of Arts, Languages and Cultures Table of contents Abstract p.4 Declaration p.5 Copyright statement p.5 Acknowledgements p.6 Introduction p.7 Terminology, sources and methods p.10 Structure of the thesis p.14 Chapter One The Lost War p.16 1.1 The place of ‘Spain’ in British politics p.17 1.2 Viewing ‘Spain’ through external perspectives p.21 1.3 The dispersal, 1939 p.26 Conclusion p.31 Chapter Two Adjustments to the Lost War p.33 2.1 The Communist Party and the International Brigaders: debt of honour p.34 2.2 Labour’s response: ‘The Spanish agitation had become history’ p.43 2.3 Decline in public and political discourse p.48 2.4 The political parties: three Spanish threads p.53 2.5 The personal price of the lost war p.59 Conclusion p.67 2 Chapter Three The lessons of ‘Spain’: Tom Wintringham, guerrilla fighting, and the British war effort p.69 3.1 Wintringham’s opportunity, 1937-1940 p.71 3.2 ‘The British Left’s best-known military expert’ p.75 3.3 Platform for influence p.79 3.4 Defending Britain, 1940-41 p.82 3.5 India, 1942 p.94 3.6 European liberation, 1941-1944 p.98 Conclusion p.104 Chapter Four The political and humanitarian response of Clement Attlee p.105 4.1 Attlee and policy on Spain p.107 4.2 Attlee and the Spanish Republican diaspora p.113 4.3 The signal was Greece p.119 Conclusion p.125 Conclusion p.127 Bibliography p.133 49,910 words 3 Abstract Complexities and divisions over British left-wing responses to the Spanish Civil War between 1936 and 1939 have been well-documented and much studied.
    [Show full text]