Prototypicality Among Metaphors: on the Relative Frequency of Personification and Spatial Metaphors in Literature Written for Children Versus Adults
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Annual Security Report & Drug and Alcohol Abuse Prevention Program
Annual Security Report2020 & Drug and Alcohol Abuse Prevention Program / Fire Safety Report LOCATION: Ottawa, Kansas Annual Security Report INTRODUCTION For further information on notice of non-discrimination, please contact: Kansas City Office Ottawa University was founded in 1865 after receiving a 20,000-acre land grant of Kansas prairie from the Ottawa Indians in recognition of the service Office for Civil Rights provided by early Baptist missionaries. Ottawa University continues to serve U.S. Department of Education on the frontier of learning through innovative, high-quality, personalized One Petticoat Lane programs of study. 1010 Walnut Street, 3rd floor, Suite 320 Kansas City, MO 64106 Ottawa University is a comprehensive, not-for-profit coeducational institution affiliated with the American Baptist Churches USA. Ottawa’s educational mission brings together residential campuses in Ottawa, Kansas and Sur- Telephone: 816-268-0550 prise, Arizona; and adult campuses in Overland Park, Kansas; Phoenix, FAX: 816-268-0599; TDD: 800-877-8339 Arizona; Brookfield, Wisconsin; as well as online. Email: [email protected] Ottawa University is committed to providing a safe and secure environment for students, faculty, staff and guests to all its campuses. CAMPUS SAFETY AND SECURITY The Annual Security Report (“ASR” or “Report”) is prepared each year by the Ottawa University is committed to providing student, faculty, staff, and Associate Vice President of Compliance and his or her designees, working in visitors with as safe and enjoyable a college experience as possible. Your collaboration with local security officials and local police as necessary. The safety is a joint effort between students, faculty, staff, local police and/or Associate Vice President of Compliance, working with the designees from on-site security, and you. -
TECHNICAL APPENDIX to ENDING CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE and EXPLOITATION: a REVIEW of the EVIDENCE • 2020 About the Authors
TECHNICAL APPENDIX TO ENDING CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE AND EXPLOITATION: A REVIEW OF THE EVIDENCE • 2020 About the authors Lorraine Radford is Emeritus Professor of Social Policy and Social Work at the University of Central Lancashire, UK; Debbie Allnock is Senior Research Fellow at the International Centre, University of Bedfordshire, UK; Patricia Hynes is Reader in Forced Migration in the School of Applied Social Sciences, University of Bedfordshire, UK; Sarah Shorrock is Research Officer at the Institute of Citizenship, Society & Change at the University of Central Lancashire, UK This publication has been produced with financial support from the End Violence Fund. However, the opinions, findings, conclusions, and recommendations expressed herein do not necessarily reflect those of the End Violence Fund. Published by UNICEF Child Protection Section Programme Division 3 United Nations Plaza New York, NY 10017 Email: [email protected] Website: www.unicef.org © United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) December 2020. Permission is required to reproduce any part of this publication. Permission will be freely granted to educational or non-profit organizations. For more information on usage rights, please contact: [email protected] Cover Photo: © UNICEF/UN0156399/Haque Click on section bars to CONTENTS navigate publication 1. Methodology ....................................................................................................................... 4 Background and Purpose...................................................................................................................................4 -
2. We and They
2. We and They Democracy is becoming rather than being. It can easily be lost, but never is fully won. Its essence is eternal struggle. WILLIAM H. HASTIE OVERVIEW Chapter 1 focused on factors that shape an individual’s identity. It also described how those factors are sometimes used to exclude people from membership in various groups. Chapter 2 considers the ways a nation’s identity is defined. That definition has enormous significance. It indicates who holds power in the nation. And it determines who is a part of its “universe of obligation” – the name Helen Fein has given to the circle of individuals and groups “toward whom obligations are owed, to whom rules apply, and whose injuries call for [amends].”1 For much of world history, birth determined who was a part of a group’s “universe of obligation” and who was not. As Jacob Bronowski once explained, “The distinction [between self and other] emerges in prehistory in hunting cultures, where competition for limited numbers of food sources requires a clear demarcation between your group and the other group, and this is transferred to agricultural communities in the development of history. Historically this distinction becomes a comparative category in which one judges how like us, or unlike us, is the other, thus enabling people symbolically to organize and divide up their worlds and structure reality.”2 This chapter explores the power of those classifications and labels. As legal scholar Martha Minow has pointed out, “When we identify one thing as like the others, we are not merely classifying the world; we are investing particular classifications with consequences and positioning ourselves in relation to those meanings. -
A God Worth Worshiping: Toward a Critical Race Theology
Marquette University e-Publications@Marquette Dissertations, Theses, and Professional Dissertations (1934 -) Projects A God Worth Worshiping: Toward a Critical Race Theology Duane Terrence Loynes Sr. Marquette University Follow this and additional works at: https://epublications.marquette.edu/dissertations_mu Part of the Christianity Commons, and the Ethnic Studies Commons Recommended Citation Loynes, Duane Terrence Sr., "A God Worth Worshiping: Toward a Critical Race Theology" (2017). Dissertations (1934 -). 738. https://epublications.marquette.edu/dissertations_mu/738 A GOD WORTH WORSHIPING: TOWARD A CRITICAL RACE THEOLOGY by Duane Terrence Loynes Sr., B.A., M.A., M.A. A Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School, Marquette University, in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Milwaukee, Wisconsin August 2017 ABSTRACT A GOD WORTH WORSHIPING: TOWARD A CRITICAL RACE THEOLOGY Duane Terrence Loynes Sr., B.A., M.A., M.A. Marquette University, 2017 Theologian James Cone has declared that White supremacy is the American Church’s greatest, original, and most persistent sin. Although the Church has engaged in numerous attempts to remedy racism, theology still seems to witness to a God that stands relatively unopposed to the status quo of racial injustice and marginalization. This dissertation begins with the claim that Christian theology still operates from the normativity of whiteness. I will argue that, although the Church has made admirable progress with regard to racial justice, the attempts have been at the surface: the underlying structural logic of White supremacy remains intact. My thesis will be that the systemic problem in North American Christianity of a persistent “White privileged theology” or “normalized whiteness” can best be eliminated by constructing a theological response in classical categories—theodicy, anthropology, and epistemology. -
SENATE BILL No. 172 WHEREAS, the Provisions of This Act Protect The
SENATE BILL No. 172 AN ACT concerning crimes, punishment and criminal procedure; creating the crimes of trespassing on a critical infrastructure facility and criminal damage to a critical infrastructure facility; eliminating the crime of tampering with a pipeline; requiring payment of restitution; amending K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5818, 21-6328 and 21-6604 and repealing the existing sections. WHEREAS, The provisions of this act protect the right to peacefully protest for all Kansans and citizens of the four sovereign nations within the state's borders while also protecting the critical infrastructure located within the state. Now, therefore: Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Kansas: Section 1. K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5818 is hereby amended to read as follows: 21-5818. (a) Tampering with a pipeline is the knowing and unauthorized alteration of or interference with any part of a pipeline Trespassing on a critical infrastructure facility is, without consent of the owner or the owner's agent, knowingly entering or remaining in: (1) A critical infrastructure facility; or (2) any property containing a critical infrastructure facility, if such property is completely enclosed by a fence or other physical barrier that is obviously designed to exclude intruders or is clearly marked with a sign or signs that are posted on the property that are reasonably likely to come to the attention of intruders and indicate that entry is forbidden without site authorization. (b) Tampering with a pipeline is a severity level 6, nonperson felony Aggravated -
Evaluating the Effectiveness of Sex Offender Registration and Notification Policies for Reducing Sexual Violence Against Women
The author(s) shown below used Federal funds provided by the U.S. Department of Justice and prepared the following final report: Document Title: Evaluating the Effectiveness of Sex Offender Registration and Notification Policies for Reducing Sexual Violence against Women Author: Elizabeth J. Letourneau, Ph.D., Jill S. Levenson, Ph.D., Dipankar Bandyopadhyay, Ph.D., Debajyoti Sinha, Ph.D., Kevin S. Armstrong Document No.: 231989 Date Received: September 2010 Award Number: 2006-WG-BX-0002 This report has not been published by the U.S. Department of Justice. To provide better customer service, NCJRS has made this Federally- funded grant final report available electronically in addition to traditional paper copies. Opinions or points of view expressed are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the official position or policies of the U.S. Department of Justice. This document is a research report submitted to the U.S. Department of Justice. This report has not been published by the Department. Opinions or points of view expressed are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the official position or policies of the U.S. Department of Justice. Evaluating the Effectiveness of Sex Offender Registration and Notification Policies for Reducing Sexual Violence against Women Final Report for National Institute of Justice Grant Award # 2006-WG-BX-0002 Elizabeth J. Letourneau, Ph.D. Principal Investigator MUSC Jill S. Levenson, Ph.D. Co-investigator Lynn University Dipankar Bandyopadhyay, Ph.D. Statistician Debajyoti Sinha, Ph.D. Senior Statistician Kevin S. Armstrong Data Manager This document is a research report submitted to the U.S. -
6. Hess and Talbot
Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education March 2019. Vol 18 (1): 89–116. doi:10.22176/act18.1.89 Going for Broke: A Talk to Music Teachers Juliet Hess Michigan State University, USA Brent C. Talbot Gettysburg College, USA In 1963—a racially-charged time in the United States—James Baldwin delivered “A Talk to Teachers,” urging educators to engage youth in difficult conversations about current events. We concur with Giroux (2011, 2019) that political forces influence our educational spaces and that classrooms should not be viewed as apolitical, but instead seen as sites for engagement, where educators and artists alike can “go for broke.” Drawing upon A Tribe Called Quest’s 2017 Grammy performance of “We the People...” as an example of the role of the arts in troubled times, we consider ways to work alongside youth in schools to respond, consider, and process current events through music. Keywords: James Baldwin, A Tribe Called Quest, activism, music education, social change Let’s begin by saying that we are living through a very dangerous time… The societ[ies] in which we live [are] desperately menaced, not by [outside forces], but from within. To any citizen … who figures [one]self as responsible—and particularly those of [us] who deal with the minds and hearts of young people—must be prepared to “go for broke.” Or to put it another way, [we] must understand that in the attempt to correct so many generations of bad faith and cruelty, when it is operating not only in the classroom but in society, [we] will meet the most fantastic, the most brutal, and the most determined resistance. -
If You Have Issues Viewing Or Accessing This File Contact Us at NCJRS.Gov
If you have issues viewing or accessing this file contact us at NCJRS.gov. I t t JUVENILE ~~ICIDE: ANNOTATED BrpLIOGRAPHY* I J.--~ , I J. Kreisman and R. Seiden University of California (Berkeley) ) *This study was funded by a grant from the State of California Office of Criminal , Justice Planning .\, 1 -1- Adams, K. A. The child who murders: a review of theory and research. ~riminal Justice and Behavior, 1974, !(1):5l-61. In this paper, the author reviews some of the existing literature on "child murderers." The author also examines legal reactions to and treatment of child murderers, and ends with a discussion of treatment and prevention. Bender, L. Children and adolescents who have killed. American Journal of Psychiatry, December 1959, 11~(6):5l0-5i~---- The author presents the results of a brief study of 33 boys and girls who, before they were 16 years of age, had been associated with the death of another person either by causing or being blamed for a death by themselves or others. 14 of these youths were involved in "accidental homicide"--they neither intended nor 1 expected the death that was the consequence of their activities. A majority of these youths became mentally disturbed after the accident, and prior to the accident there 'vas evidence of a very disturbed family background, as well as personal and social disorders. Of the 19 youths who committed intentional homicide, the majority demonstrated evidence of psychotic disturbances before the murders. ., The author cites the following significant psychiatric factors as " "danger symptoms"--organic brain damage, childhood schizophrenia, compulsive fire-setting, reading disability, extremely unfavorable home conditions and life experiences, and past history of exposure to violent death. -
Report of the Oregon Supreme Court Task Force on Racial/Ethnic Issues in the Judicial System
If you have issues viewing or accessing this file contact us at NCJRS.gov. Report of the Oregon Supreme Court Task Force on Racial/Ethnic Issues in the Judicial System May 1994 Office of the State Court Administrator Oregon Judicial Department An act passed by the Oregon territorial legislature in 1849 provided: ~ tBiff to prevent Nf,groes anti 9YluCatioes to come to or reside in Oregon. whereas, situatei as the peopfe of Oreg(Jft are, in the mUfst of an Imfian popuCation, it 'UJouU be hig{y iangerous to a{{o'UJ free negroes ani muCattoes to resUfe in the territory or to intermb( with the ltuiians! instiffing into their mitufs feefings of hostifity against tft.e white race, therefore: 'Be it enactei by the .Legis{ati'lJe .9lssemE{y ofthe territory of Oreg(Jft, that it sha{{ not be Cawfu{ for any negroe or muCattoe to come into or resUfe within the fimits of this territory ... Source: Office of the Secretary of State, Archives Division, Territorial Document #3666, pp. 181-82 153720 u.s. Department of JusticE' National Institute of Justice This document has been reproduced exactly as received from the person or organization originating it. Points of view or opinions stated in :IJ this document are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent ;teD the offiCial position or policies of the National Institute of Justice. tJ)\l Permission to reploduce this copyrighted material has been graf£i:ce of the State Court ~O o """t Adminjstrato~/Oregon Judicial Dept. _. 0 0 85 to the National Criminal Justice Reference Service (NCJRS). -
Slavery in the United States and China: a Comparative Study of the Old South and the Han Dynasty
W&M ScholarWorks Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects 1988 Slavery in the United States and China: A Comparative Study of the Old South and the Han Dynasty Yufeng Wang College of William & Mary - Arts & Sciences Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd Part of the African American Studies Commons, African History Commons, Asian History Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Wang, Yufeng, "Slavery in the United States and China: A Comparative Study of the Old South and the Han Dynasty" (1988). Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects. Paper 1539625472. https://dx.doi.org/doi:10.21220/s2-kcwc-ap90 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects at W&M ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects by an authorized administrator of W&M ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. SLAVERY IN THE UNITED STATES AND CHINA: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF THE OLD SOUTH AND THE HAN DYNASTY A Thesis Presented to The Faculty of the Department of History The College of William and Mary in Virginia In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts by Yufeng Wang 1988 APPROVAL SHEET This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Approved, December 1988 Craig If. Canning Lufdwfell H. Joh: III TABLE OF CONTENTS ABSTRACT............................ iv INTRODUCTION....................... 2 CHAPTER I. HAN SOCIETY AND THE ANTEBELLUM SOUTH........... 9 CHAPTER II. SLAVE ORIGINS AND OWNERSHIP............ -
Kansas Voter Registration and Voting Law Changes Since 1995
68-West–Statehouse | 300 SW 10th Ave. | Topeka, Kansas 66612-1504 (785) 296-3181 [email protected] kslegislature.org/klrd May 24, 2021 KANSAS VOTER REGISTRATION AND VOTING LAW CHANGES SINCE 1995 This memorandum reviews changes to Kansas law since 1995 regarding registering to vote, voting by advance ballot, voting not by advance ballot, and election crimes. A starting point of 1995 was chosen because a major change to the practice of advance voting was enacted that year. In 1995, Kansas law was changed to state, “Any registered voter is eligible to vote by advance voting ballot on all offices and to vote by advance voting ballot on questions submitted on which such elector would otherwise be entitled to vote.” The bill changed “absentee ballot” to “advance ballot” and removed reasons that had been required for absentee voting (absence from the county, sickness, disability, religious belief or practice, or service as a judge or clerk on an election board). (1995 SB 232 [Ch. 192]; KSA 25-1119) Table of Contents Election Laws, General Registering to Vote Procedures and Locations Signature, Identification, and Other Information Required Voter Registration Lists Deadlines Voting by Advance Ballot Applications Advance Ballot Application on Behalf of Another Person Returning Advance Ballot Applications Returning an Advance Ballot Replacement Ballots Correcting Deficiencies Advance Voting in Person Other Procedures Voting Providing Identification Voting Procedures for Voters with Disability Voting Procedures for Federal and Overseas Voters -
Social Experimentation in the Face of Formidable Fables
Social Experfmentation in the Face of Formidable Fables Dennis ]. Coyle and Aaron Wildavsky* The ways to prevent poverty are well known to us all. Allow every baby a chance to be born wanted, raised in good health, educated to full capacity, accepted upon individual merit, welcomed to a range of job choices according to capacity and interest, paid a good wage, insured at adequate levels against the economic hazards of the industrial economy, and assured a comfortable house in a supportive neighborhood, and opportunities for cultural enrichment, participation in the decisions affecting his own life, and survival into a respected and secure old age. In this age, these are not utopian goals. -- Senator Fred Harris, 1970 Once upon a time there was a Little Red Hen who scratched about and uncovered some grains of wheat. She called her barnyard neighbors and said, "If we work together and plant this wheat, we will have some fine bread to eat. Who will help me plant the wheat? .... Not I," said the Cow. "Not I," said the Duck. "Guaranteed annual bread," said the Goose. "Then I will," said the Little Red Hen--and she did... She baked five loaves of fine bread and held them up for her neighbors to see. "I want some," said the Cow. "I want some," said the Duck. "I want some," said the Pig. "I demand my share," said the Goose. When the Farmer came to investigate the commotion he said, "You must not be greedy, Little Red Hen. Look at the oppressed Cow. Look at the underprivileged Pig.