Final Program

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Final Program Final Program 100th Annual Meeting August 13-16, 2005 Philadelphia Marriott, Philadelphia Loews, and Philadelphia Downtown Courtyard by Marriott Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Comparative Perspectives, Competing Explanations Accounting for the Rising and Declining Significance of Sociology This is the centennial for the Association, so the meeting theme should be sufficiently expansive to address a wide historical sweep, and yet have sufficient focus to provide a framework in which to address key aspects of the social history of the discipline—its contemporary situation and its potential future development. Each of the three elements from the title “Comparative Perspectives, Competing Explanations” is designed to produce a fruitful meeting frame: First, the notion of “comparative perspectives” is itself “accordion-like” and can fit a number of purposes and goals. There is the international aspect, so that we can incorporate a comparison of American sociology with international developments. There is the internal evolution of perspectives inside of the United States, which would include the development and emergence of challenging and oppositional perspectives in the discipline, from the Society for the Study of Social Problems, to Sociologists for Women in Society, to the Association of Black Sociologists, to name but a few organizational manifestations of the challenges of the last half century. There are others that will surely surface from the general call. Second, there is the notion of “competing explanations.” Competing explanations (from psychological to biological to economistic), and their resonance or lack thereof in public policy debates (among the general population, political activists, and community organizers) is the way in which this whole matter of the significance of the discipline—including its variable status with such funding sources as the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, and a full range of private foundations—is segue to: Third, “What could be characterized as the ‘rising and declining significance of Sociology’”? Here, we encourage an explicit look back across the full century to try to account for the various periods in which there was a sense of ascendancy and a receptivity (along a continuum, of course) in the various arenas noted above. The “declining significance of sociology” is deliberatively provocative and could be the source of some scintillating debates and contestation. 2005 Program Committee Troy Duster, President and Committee Chair, New York University Judith D. Auerbach, American Foundation for AIDS Research Patricia Hill Collins, University of Cincinnati Joan H. Fujimura, University of Wisconsin, Madison Sally T. Hillsman, Executive Officer, American Sociological Association Arne L. Kalleberg, Past Secretary, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill John Lie, University of Michigan Ron Lembo, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Caroline Hodges Persell, Vice President, New York University Barbara Risman, North Carolina State University Jill Quadagno, Florida State University David Wellman, University of California, Santa Cruz Franklin D. Wilson, Secretary, University of Wisconsin, Madison 2 Annual Meeting Schedule Table of Contents The official days of the 2005 ASA Annual Meeting are Accessibility Resources and Services...........................................................43 Saturday to Tuesday, August 13-16, 2005. Program Airport Transportation ..................................................................................44 sessions are scheduled on all four days of the meeting at ASA Awards Ceremony .................................................................................4 both hotels. There are also pre-meeting activities ASA Bookstore .............................................................................................39 ASA Information ..........................................................................................40 scheduled on Friday, August 12, and the meeting will ASA Office ...................................................................................................43 officially open with the Opening Plenary Session and Book Panels...................................................................................................11 Welcoming Reception that evening. Business Meeting ............................................................................................5 Cartoon Caption Contest...............................................................................39 Most daytime program sessions are 1 hour and 40 Centennial Sessions ........................................................................................8 minutes in length, followed by a 20-minute break. Chair Conference ..........................................................................................26 Child Care .....................................................................................................42 Exceptions are clearly noted in the detailed program Committee/Task Force/Board Meetings.......................................................36 schedule. The turnover schedule is as follows: Community College Faculty Breakfast ........................................................33 8:30 a.m.-10:10 a.m. Courses..........................................................................................................17 Departmental Alumni Night .........................................................................32 10:30 a.m.-12:10 p.m. Directors of Graduate Study .........................................................................26 12:30 p.m.-2:10 p.m. Emergency Information ................................................................................38 2:30 p.m.-4:10 p.m. Employment Service.....................................................................................41 Exhibits ...................................................................................................40, 46 4:30 p.m.-6:10 p.m. Film Documentaries........................................................................................9 Film/Video Screenings..................................................................................29 The 6:30 p.m. evening time slot is normally allocated First-Time Meeting Attendee Orientation ....................................................32 for Section receptions, member-sponsored activities, and Governance Rosters and Historical Information ........................................239 meetings of other groups. All sessions end by 4:10 p.m. on Honorary Reception......................................................................................33 Hotel Information..........................................................................................43 the fourth day. In Remembrance ...........................................................................................34 Please refer to the Program Schedule for a daily listing Index of Session Organizers .......................................................................331 of all sessions, meetings, and social events. Session Index of Session Participants......................................................................335 Index of Topics ...........................................................................................361 presiders and committee chairs are requested to see that International Scholars Reception..................................................................32 sessions and meetings end on time to avoid conflicts with Membership and Section Information ..........................................................40 Message Center.............................................................................................40 subsequent activities scheduled into the same room and to Minority Fellowship Program Benefit Reception ........................................34 allow participants time to transit between facilities. Open Forum ..................................................................................................23 Other Group Activities..................................................................................35 If you have questions about the ASA Annual Meeting, contact: Plenary Sessions..............................................................................................4 Poster Sessions..............................................................................................16 Attn: Meeting Services Presidential Address........................................................................................4 American Sociological Association Press Office...................................................................................................43 1307 New York Avenue, NW, Suite 700 Program Schedule .........................................................................................48 Washington, DC 20005-4701 Regional Spotlight ........................................................................................10 202-383-9005 Registration Services ....................................................................................38 Regular Sessions ...........................................................................................16 202-638-0882 fax Research Support Forum ......................................................................12, 226 [email protected] Roundtables.............................................................................................15, 16 Section Activities ....................................................................................24,
Recommended publications
  • En 96,63% Se Cumplió Instalación De Mesas Electorales
    PREMIO NACIONAL DE PERIODISMO 1982 / 1989 / 1990 33° El Tigre - Anaco, Sábado 5 de d i c i e m b re de 201 5 Año LVI Edición 3.514 w w w.e l t i e m p o.co m .ve EL PERIÓDICO DEL PUEBLO ORIENTAL PMVP Bs 40,00 Fecha de Marcaje 08/15 Lea este+ d o m i n go Golpe para Dilma Rousseff +Arzobispo Baltazar Porras: el pecado de la revolución es La Corte Suprema de Brasil rechazó dos recursos querer que todo el mundo piense y actúe como ella + contra el proceso para realizarle un juicio político a la Votar es fácil+Hay deportes que no están libres de pecado presidenta de ese país, iniciado por el Congreso PÁG. 9 PREGUNTA DE LA SEMANA: ¿Cree usted que conseguirá el pernil regulado en los establecimientos del Go b i e r n o? Vote en w w w.eltiempo.com.ve ZONA CENTRO LEGISLATIVAS // INVITADO INTERNACIONAL DE OPOSICIÓN DENUNCIÓ QUE EL PODER ELECTORAL NO LE HA ENTREGADO AVAL 400 niños corren peligro por daños Lucena: en 96,63% se cumplió en escuela PÁG. 5 instalación de mesas electorales Para la presidenta del CNE, la jornada de ayer en los centros de tendrán a su cargo los comicios y exhortó a los que no se han votación para completar el ensamblaje de los equipos a ser utilizados acreditado a que se pongan al día. En materia de testigos, dijo que la en las elecciones de mañana, se llevó a cabo en casi 100% en todo el MUD suma 83.286 y el Psuv 81.033, por lo que les hizo un llamado país.
    [Show full text]
  • Princeton University Library September 27, 2013
    Checklist of Western Medieval, Byzantine, and Renaissance Manuscripts in the Princeton University Library and the Scheide Library Princeton University Library September 27, 2013 Contents Introduction, p. 3 Manuscripts Division Robert Garrett Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts, p. 5 Robert Taylor Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts, p. 44 Grenville Kane Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts, p. 48 Princeton Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts, p. 56 Cotsen Children’s Library Cotsen Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts, p. 87 Rare Books Division Manuscripts bound with early printed books, p. 88 The Scheide Library Scheide Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts, p. 88 Introduction The present checklist is not a catalogue, but rather is a checklist intended to serve as a guide to sources of up-to-date cataloging, textual and codicological description, and digital images for western medieval, Byzantine, and Renaissance manuscripts in the Princeton University Library and the Scheide Library. Manuscripts are listed by holding unit, collection, and manuscript number or shelfmark. Links are given for more than well over 2,000 digital images of miniatures, illustrations, and selected diagrams and decoration in the manuscripts, about a third of which are illuminated. In addition, links are provided for digitized grayscale microfilm of a large number of Middle English manuscripts at Princeton and for a group of important manuscripts digitized in the Library since the 1990s. For additional information about the holdings of the Manuscripts Division and to make appointments, potential researchers should contact Don C. Skemer, Curator of Manuscripts, at [email protected]. For information about holdings of the Scheide Library, please contact Paul Needham, Librarian, at [email protected] For information concerning photoduplication and permission to publish and/or broadcast, please send an email to [email protected] A brief overview of the manuscripts and their cataloging follows.
    [Show full text]
  • The Status of Jewish Women's Studies in the United States and Canada: a Survey of University and College Courses As of 1999
    1 THE STATUS OF JEWISH WOMEN'S STUDIES IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA: A SURVEY OF UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGE COURSES AS OF 1999. Tobin Belzer, M.A. Graduate Research Associate HRIJW - Brandeis University with Sylvia Barack Fishman, Susan Kahn, & Shulamit Reinharz The Hadassah Research Institute on Jewish Women Lown 300A, MS 079 Brandeis University Waltham, MA 02454-9110 © Copyright 1999 by Tobin Belzer. All rights reserved. Copyright belongs to the author. Paper may be downloaded for personal use only. 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS Report: Executive Summary 1 Overview: Jewish Women's Studies as of 1999 2 Table 1. Student Demographics and Number of Jewish Women's Studies Courses per Institution 10 List 1. Institutions with both Jewish Studies and Women's Studies departments or programs, by presence or absence of Jewish Women's Studies Courses 13 Qualitative Section 1: Institutional Responses to Professors Who Teach Courses on Jewish Women 15 List 2. Professors who teach Jewish Women's Studies A. Alphabetized by institution 17 B. Alphabetized by name of professor 22 Qualitative Section 2: Professors' Motivations to Teach 28 List 3. Courses in Jewish Women's Studies in Rank Order of Enrollment 31 Qualitative Section 3: Students' Responses to Courses on Jewish Women 44 List 4. Courses in Jewish Women's Studies by Frequency Offered 47 Qualitative Section 4: Challenges and Rewards of Teaching Courses on Jewish Women 54 List 5A. Number of Courses in Jewish Women's Studies by Subject Matter or Discipline (in rank order) 57 Qualitative Section 5: Professors' Views on Integrating Material on Jewish Women 58 3 List 5B.
    [Show full text]
  • CITY of CRESCENT CITY Mayor Blake Inscore Mayor Pro Tem Heidi Kime Council Member Alex Fallman Council Member Jason Greenough Council Member Isaiah Wright
    CITY OF CRESCENT CITY Mayor Blake Inscore Mayor Pro Tem Heidi Kime Council Member Alex Fallman Council Member Jason Greenough Council Member Isaiah Wright AGENDA REGULAR CITY COUNCIL MEETING VIRTUAL VIA ZOOM MONDAY JULY 20, 2020 6:00 P.M. Due to the current public health emergency resulting from COVID-19, the public may access and participate in the public meeting using one or more of the following three methods: (1) participate online via Zoom - details to join the meeting will be on both the City of Crescent City - City Hall Facebook page as well as the City of Crescent City website (www.crescentcity.org): (2 ) watch the meeting via livestream on YouTube (Channel: City of Crescent City, California) and submit comments via [email protected]; or submit a written comment by filing it with the City Clerk at 377 J Street, Crescent City, California 95531 prior to 4:00 pm, July 20, 2020. If you require a special accommodation, please contact City Clerk Robin Patch at 464-7483 ext. 223. Due to lack of items to discuss, there will not be a closed session. OPEN SESSION Call to order Roll call Pledge of Allegiance PUBLIC COMMENT PERIOD Any member of the audience is invited to address the City Council on any matter that is within the jurisdiction of the City of Crescent City. Comments of public interest or on matters appearing on the agenda are accepted. Note, however, that the Council is not able to undertake extended discussion or act on non-agendized items. Such items can be referred to staff for appropriate action, which may include placement on a future agenda.
    [Show full text]
  • Economic Ascendance Is/As Moral Rightness: the New Religious Political Right in Post-Apartheid South Africa Part
    Economic Ascendance is/as Moral Rightness: The New Religious Political Right in Post-apartheid South Africa Part One: The Political Introduction If one were to go by the paucity of academic scholarship on the broad New Right in the post-apartheid South African context, one would not be remiss for thinking that the country is immune from this global phenomenon. I say broad because there is some academic scholarship that deals only with the existence of right wing organisations at the end of the apartheid era (du Toit 1991, Grobbelaar et al. 1989, Schönteich 2004, Schönteich and Boshoff 2003, van Rooyen 1994, Visser 2007, Welsh 1988, 1989,1995, Zille 1988). In this older context, this work focuses on a number of white Right organisations, including their ideas of nationalism, the role of Christianity in their ideologies, as well as their opposition to reform in South Africa, especially the significance of the idea of partition in these organisations. Helen Zille’s list, for example, includes the Herstigte Nasionale Party, Conservative Party, Afrikaner People’s Guard, South African Bureau of Racial Affairs (SABRA), Society of Orange Workers, Forum for the Future, Stallard Foundation, Afrikaner Resistance Movement (AWB), and the White Liberation Movement (BBB). There is also literature that deals with New Right ideology and its impact on South African education in the transition era by drawing on the broader literature on how the New Right was using education as a primary battleground globally (Fataar 1997, Kallaway 1989). Moreover, another narrow and newer literature exists that continues the focus on primarily extreme right organisations in South Africa that have found resonance in the global context of the rise of the so-called Alternative Right that rejects mainstream conservatism.
    [Show full text]
  • Caregiving and the Case for Testamentary Freedom
    Caregiving and the Case for Testamentary Freedom Joshua C. Tate* Almost all U.S. states allow individuals to disinherit their descendants for any reason or no reason, but most of the world’s legal systems currently do not. This Article contends that broad freedom of testation under state law is defensible because it allows elderly people to reward family members who are caregivers. The Article explores the common-law origins of freedom of testation, which developed in the shadow of the medieval rule of primogeniture, a doctrine of no contemporary relevance. The growing problem of eldercare, however, offers a justification for the twenty-first century. Increases in life expectancy have led to a sharp rise in the number of older individuals who require long-term care, and some children and grandchildren are bearing more of the caregiving burden * Assistant Professor of Law, Southern Methodist University. I would like to thank Gregory Alexander, Mark Ascher, Stuart Banner, Joseph Biancalana, Ira Bloom, Ralph Brashier, Alexandra Braun, Meta Brown, Hamilton Bryson, Naomi Cahn, June Carbone, Regis Campfield, Ronald Chester, Barry Cushman, Alyssa DiRusso, John Eason, Robert Ellickson, Mary Louise Fellows, Mark Fenster, Thomas Gallanis, Susan Gary, Joshua Getzler, Edward Halbach, Hendrik Hartog, Jill Hasday, Lisa Hasday, Richard Helmholz, Adam Hirsch, Clare Huntington, Daniel Klerman, Nina Kohn, Andrew Kull, John Langbein, Henry Lischer, John Lowe, Maurizio Lupoi, Grayson McCouch, William McGovern, Mavis Maclean, Ray Madoff, Paula Monopoli, Melissa
    [Show full text]
  • The New Black Conservative: Rhetoric Or Reality?
    University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Faculty Publications: Political Science Political Science, Department of January 2003 THE NEW BLACK CONSERVATIVE: RHETORIC OR REALITY? Byron D. Orey University of Nebraska - Lincoln, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/poliscifacpub Part of the Political Science Commons Orey, Byron D., "THE NEW BLACK CONSERVATIVE: RHETORIC OR REALITY?" (2003). Faculty Publications: Political Science. 16. https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/poliscifacpub/16 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Political Science, Department of at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Publications: Political Science by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. THE NEW BLACK CONSERVATIVE: RHETORIC OR REALITY? Byron D’Andra Orey, Department of Political Science, University of Nebraska, Lin- coln There is [a] class of [black] people who make a business of keeping the troubles, the wrongs, and the hardships of the Negro race before the public. Some of these people do not want the Negro to lose his grievances, because they do not want to lose their jobs. Booker T. Washington1 In recent years there has been growing speculation regarding an increase in the number of African Americans identifying themselves as conservatives. Much of this speculation has been heightened by the increase in the number of African American elites who identify themselves as conservatives. This list includes icons like Clarence Thomas, J.C. Watts, Alan Keyes and Ward Connerly, to name a few. Despite the increase in the number of African American elites who identify themselves as conser- vatives, there has been a dearth of systematic analyses to determine if this phenom- enon has trickled down to the masses.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction and Literature Review
    Abstract SHERWOOD, JESSICA HOLDEN. Talk About Country Clubs: Ideology and the Reproduction of Privilege. (Under the direction of Barbara J. Risman.) This dissertation reports on interviews with members of five exclusive country clubs in the Northeastern United States. At these clubs, membership is extended only by selective invitation after a subjective screening process. The clubs have long histories of racial-ethnic homogeneity, but they now display some demographic diversity while preserving the economic and cultural homogeneity with which members are comfortable, and which they consider an important appeal of the private club. I focus on club members’ explanations around three topics: their clubs’ exclusivity, their racial-ethnic composition, and the status of women members. Subjects minimize the significance of the exclusion they perform by rhetorically pointing to forces beyond their control, and by promoting the American Dream of colorblind, meritocratic equal opportunity. While they use the dominant racial ideology of colorblindness, subjects also show a departure from colorblindness in their active development of and rhetorical emphasis on racial-ethnic diversity in their ranks. Concerning women’s status, club members mostly accept the subordination of women in clubs. To justify it, they rhetorically rely on both the dominant gender ideology and the inequalities in men’s and women’s wealth and domestic responsibilities which originate elsewhere. Club members are called to account for their exclusivity by the American value of egalitarian equal access. But at the same time, other cultural values provide them with the tools needed to successfully explain themselves, even as their talk and actions contribute to the reproduction of class, race, and gender inequalities.
    [Show full text]
  • Fall 2007  Volume Xxiiii No
    FALL 2007 VOLUME XXIIII NO. 3 NNeettwwoorrkknewsnews The Newsletter of Sociologists for Women in Society SSWWSS MMeeeettiinnggss iinn NNYYCC AAuugguusstt 1111--1133 22000077 FFrroomm tthhee BBiigg UUnneeaassyy ttoo tthhee BBiigg AAppppllee By: Manisha Desai The meeting in New York was organized to continue the SWS President focus of the winter meetings on Solidarities Across Borders. I was really pleased with the attendance at our sessions. rom New Orleans to New York was both a dramatic There was standing room only at Doing Gender: 20 Years shift and yet a continuation of the story of the Later which honored Candace West and Don Zimmerman's contemporaryFF crisis of the US state, in particular the increas- classic article in Gender and Society. Similarly the panel, ing privatization and corruption of the state’s security and Straight Up No Chaser: Challenges Women of Color Face in reconstruction roles. While the attack in New York, six the Academy, and Evelyn Nakano Glenn's SWS Feminist years ago, marked the beginning of this crisis, New Orleans Lecture, Yearning for Whiteness: The New Global represented the depth of this crisis. The SWS meeting in Marketing of Skin Whitening Products, were well attended New Orleans showcased how every day men and women in and led to animated discussions. I also took advantage of our New Orleans were building solidarities across borders to location in New York City and organized jointly, with ASA rebuild even as the state had abdicated its responsibilities. and Women Make Movies, a day-long women's film The US model of privatization of state roles was also evident festival.
    [Show full text]
  • The Holy See
    The Holy See BENEDICT XVI GENERAL AUDIENCE St. Peter's Square Wednesday, 5 October 2011 [Video] Psalm 23 Dear Brothers and Sisters, Turning to the Lord in prayer implies a radical act of trust, in the awareness that one is entrusting oneself to God who is good, “merciful and gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness” (Ex 34:6-7; Ps 86[85]:15; cf. Joel 2:13; Jon 4:2; Ps 103 [102]:8; 145[144]:8; Neh 9:17). For this reason I would like to reflect with you today on a Psalm that is totally imbued with trust, in which the Psalmist expresses his serene certainty that he is guided and protected, safe from every danger, because the Lord is his Shepherd. It is Psalm 23 [22, according to the Greco-Latin numbering], a text familiar to all and loved by all. “The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want”: the beautiful prayer begins with these words, evoking the nomadic environment of sheep-farming and the experience of familiarity between the shepherd and the sheep that make up his little flock. The image calls to mind an atmosphere of trust, intimacy and tenderness: the shepherd knows each one of his sheep and calls them by name; and they follow him because they recognize him and trust in him (cf. Jn 10:2-4). He tends them, looks after them as precious possessions, ready to defend them, to guarantee their well-being and enable them to live a peaceful life. They can lack nothing as long as the shepherd is with them.
    [Show full text]
  • Downloadable Results (Pdf)
    Müller British Athletics Championships Manchester Regional Arena - Manchester Regional Arena Friday 4 and Saturday 5 September 2020 Women 's Discus Throw HLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS Final RESULTS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS ATHLETICS A 4 September 2020 TIME TEMPERATURE Start 19:06 14°C 79 % End 19:5714°C 79 % MARK COMPETITOR NAT AGE Record Date WR76.80 Gabriele REINSCH GER 24 9 Jul 1988 NR67.48 Meg RITCHIE GBR 28 26 Apr 1981 SR58.57 Philippa ROLES GBR 26 11 Jul 2004 POSSTART COMPETITOR AGE MARK 1 5 Kirsty LAW 33 57.95 PB SALE H MANCHESTER 2 3 Jade LALLY 33 57.20 SHAFTESBURY B 3 2 Shadine DUQUEMIN 25 52.52 SHAFTESBURY B 4 1 Phoebe DOWSON 26 50.21 BOURNEMOUTH 5 7 Samantha CALLAWAY 18 46.00 NEWHAM E B 6 6 Heather CUBBAGE 19 44.81 SB C OF PORTSMOUTH 7 4 Sophie MACE 21 44.07 WALTON A C 8 8 Sophie LITTLEMORE 24 42.20 SB GATESHEAD 9 9 Taia TUNSTALL 19 39.76 HARROW A C SERIES 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 Phoebe DOWSON BOURNE'MTH 47.55 48.95 X 50.21 50.16 49.81 2 Shadine DUQUEMIN SHAFT'BURY 50.58 49.79 52.52 51.38 49.48 52.04 3 Jade LALLY SHAFT'BURY X 55.13 X 54.10 X 57.20 4 Sophie MACE WALTON 40.36 40.66 42.14 44.07 38.43 38.83 5 Kirsty LAW SALE 50.63 49.54 53.24 53.07 53.70 57.95 6 Heather CUBBAGE PORTSMOUTH 44.81 X 43.30 40.20 41.31 X 7 Samantha CALLAWAY NEWHAM EB 43.90 43.66 45.27 39.73 46.00 45.35 8 Sophie LITTLEMORE GATESHEAD 42.14 41.37 X X 42.20 X 9 Taia TUNSTALL HARROW 39.76 X X GREAT BRITAIN & N.I.
    [Show full text]
  • Bloomsbury Conservation Area Appraisal and Management Strategy
    Bloomsbury Conservation Area Appraisal and Management Strategy Adopted 18 April 2011 i) CONTENTS PART 1: CONSERVATION AREA APPRAISAL 1.0 INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................................ 0 Purpose of the Appraisal ............................................................................................................ 2 Designation................................................................................................................................. 3 2.0 PLANNING POLICY CONTEXT ................................................................................................ 4 3.0 SUMMARY OF SPECIAL INTEREST........................................................................................ 5 Context and Evolution................................................................................................................ 5 Spatial Character and Views ...................................................................................................... 6 Building Typology and Form....................................................................................................... 8 Prevalent and Traditional Building Materials ............................................................................ 10 Characteristic Details................................................................................................................ 10 Landscape and Public Realm..................................................................................................
    [Show full text]