AWI-1997-Q.Pdf
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Crime, Law Enforcement, and Punishment
Shirley Papers 48 Research Materials, Crime Series Inventory Box Folder Folder Title Research Materials Crime, Law Enforcement, and Punishment Capital Punishment 152 1 Newspaper clippings, 1951-1988 2 Newspaper clippings, 1891-1938 3 Newspaper clippings, 1990-1993 4 Newspaper clippings, 1994 5 Newspaper clippings, 1995 6 Newspaper clippings, 1996 7 Newspaper clippings, 1997 153 1 Newspaper clippings, 1998 2 Newspaper clippings, 1999 3 Newspaper clippings, 2000 4 Newspaper clippings, 2001-2002 Crime Cases Arizona 154 1 Cochise County 2 Coconino County 3 Gila County 4 Graham County 5-7 Maricopa County 8 Mohave County 9 Navajo County 10 Pima County 11 Pinal County 12 Santa Cruz County 13 Yavapai County 14 Yuma County Arkansas 155 1 Arkansas County 2 Ashley County 3 Baxter County 4 Benton County 5 Boone County 6 Calhoun County 7 Carroll County 8 Clark County 9 Clay County 10 Cleveland County 11 Columbia County 12 Conway County 13 Craighead County 14 Crawford County 15 Crittendon County 16 Cross County 17 Dallas County 18 Faulkner County 19 Franklin County Shirley Papers 49 Research Materials, Crime Series Inventory Box Folder Folder Title 20 Fulton County 21 Garland County 22 Grant County 23 Greene County 24 Hot Springs County 25 Howard County 26 Independence County 27 Izard County 28 Jackson County 29 Jefferson County 30 Johnson County 31 Lafayette County 32 Lincoln County 33 Little River County 34 Logan County 35 Lonoke County 36 Madison County 37 Marion County 156 1 Miller County 2 Mississippi County 3 Monroe County 4 Montgomery County -
The Brain That Changes Itself
The Brain That Changes Itself Stories of Personal Triumph from the Frontiers of Brain Science NORMAN DOIDGE, M.D. For Eugene L. Goldberg, M.D., because you said you might like to read it Contents 1 A Woman Perpetually Falling . Rescued by the Man Who Discovered the Plasticity of Our Senses 2 Building Herself a Better Brain A Woman Labeled "Retarded" Discovers How to Heal Herself 3 Redesigning the Brain A Scientist Changes Brains to Sharpen Perception and Memory, Increase Speed of Thought, and Heal Learning Problems 4 Acquiring Tastes and Loves What Neuroplasticity Teaches Us About Sexual Attraction and Love 5 Midnight Resurrections Stroke Victims Learn to Move and Speak Again 6 Brain Lock Unlocked Using Plasticity to Stop Worries, OPsessions, Compulsions, and Bad Habits 7 Pain The Dark Side of Plasticity 8 Imagination How Thinking Makes It So 9 Turning Our Ghosts into Ancestors Psychoanalysis as a Neuroplastic Therapy 10 Rejuvenation The Discovery of the Neuronal Stem Cell and Lessons for Preserving Our Brains 11 More than the Sum of Her Parts A Woman Shows Us How Radically Plastic the Brain Can Be Appendix 1 The Culturally Modified Brain Appendix 2 Plasticity and the Idea of Progress Note to the Reader All the names of people who have undergone neuroplastic transformations are real, except in the few places indicated, and in the cases of children and their families. The Notes and References section at the end of the book includes comments on both the chapters and the appendices. Preface This book is about the revolutionary discovery that the human brain can change itself, as told through the stories of the scientists, doctors, and patients who have together brought about these astonishing transformations. -
Edward Taub ADDRESS: Department of Psychology 712 CPM University
CURRICULUM VITAE NAME: Edward Taub ADDRESS: Department of Psychology 712 CPM University of Alabama at Birmingham Birmingham, AL 35294-0018 Tel. No.: (205) 934-2471 Fax: (205) 975-6140 Email: [email protected] EDUCATION: B.A., Brooklyn College M.A., Columbia University Ph.D., New York University HONORS: 2012. The Estabrook Distinguished Research Scientist Award, Kessler Foundation. 2011, B.F. Skinner Lecture, Assoc. for Behavioral Analysis International (ABAI) President – Section J (Psychology), AAAS, 2009 CI therapy named by Soc. Neuroscience as 1 of 10 most exciting current lines of research in neuroscience (2005) Distinguished Scientific Award for the Applications of Psychology of the American Psychological Association (2004) CI therapy named by Soc. Neuroscience as 1 of top 10 Translational Neuroscience Accomplishments of 20th century (2003) Neal Miller Distinguished Research Lecture, American Psychological Association (2003) Leonard Diller Award, Division of Rehabilitation Psychology American Psychological Association (2001) Humboldt Fellow, Germany (2000 - 2005) William James Award, Amer. Psychol. Soc. (1997) Ireland Prize for Scholarly Distinction, Annual Award at Univ. Alabama at Birmingham (1997) Distinguished Scientist of 1996 Award, Association for Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback Scientist of Year Award – National Animal Interest Alliance (1993) Pioneering Research Contributions Award (1989), Association for Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback Distinguished Research Award, Biofeedback Society of America (1988) Guggenheim Fellow (1983-1985) President, Biofeedback Society of America (1978) Fellow, five societies Executive Board, four societies PROFESSIONAL HISTORY: Professor to University Professor, Department of Psychology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 1986-present Guest Professor to Standing Guest Professor, University of Konstanz, 1995-2004 1 Guest Professor to Standing Guest Professor, University of Jena, 1996-2004 Visiting Professor - Universities of Tuebingen, Muenster, Hamburg, Humboldt Univ.1993-2002. -
Counter Information #42 March 1995
social struggles, such as claim- EVICTED - BUT ants’ resistance and opposi- tion to the M77. THE CENTRE We're still battling to re- open Broughton Street. 200 LIVES ON! demonstrated outside the A Centre activist reports: closed Centre on 10 Decem- 70 POLICE forcibly ended our ber. Ont Februarythe drum- tJ\\ 6 month occupation of ming at our demo drowned out Edinburgh’s Broughton St. the Council meeting! Both Centre on 1 December, demos were called without C‘ 1§\‘\tll\’ arresting 21 people. 80 people permission, in defiance of the l resisted the surprise eviction Criminal justice Act. Ni‘(mt for 8 hours. Labourcontrolled The struggle for self-man- Lothian Region were aged community spaces is an determined to shut a self- important part of the struggle managed community centre foraself-managedworldl Viva involved in direct action Ia Centre! struggles. The Centre is in the basement ofthe St Ten Yearsof Counter Information 1984 -94 But the Centre lives on! We Stephen Centre, St Stephen St (enter by lane at left of building). Open Mon March/April/May 1995 No.42 Free/Donation immediately found new tempo- - Friday 12 - 4 pm, meetings Tues rary premises, and continue to 6.30pm. tel 0131557 5846. Mail to give advice and solidarity on ben- The Centre, c/0 Peace & Justice, St Johns, Princes St, Edinburgh. Sup- efits and poll/council tax has- port eviction defendants -meet 9.30am sles, and to act as a base for Sheriff Court, Chambers St. 17 May. OVER the last 6 months, it site on Nov.7th. 400 Anti-CJA Centre supporters resist eviction in Edinburgh on 1 Dec. -
Durham E-Theses
Durham E-Theses Animal rights & human identity: a polemical quest for authenticity O'Neill, Pamela Susan How to cite: O'Neill, Pamela Susan (2000) Animal rights & human identity: a polemical quest for authenticity, Durham theses, Durham University. Available at Durham E-Theses Online: http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/4474/ Use policy The full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that: • a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in Durham E-Theses • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. Please consult the full Durham E-Theses policy for further details. Academic Support Oce, Durham University, University Oce, Old Elvet, Durham DH1 3HP e-mail: [email protected] Tel: +44 0191 334 6107 http://etheses.dur.ac.uk Pamela Susan O'Neill, University of Durham, Department of Anthropology. Thesis submitted for the degree of Master of Philosophy in Social Anthropology Thesis Title: Animal Rights & Human Identity: A Polemical Quest for Authenticity Abstract This thesis examines the hypothesis that 'The conflict between animal advocates and animal users is far more than a matter of contrasting tastes or interests. Opposing world views, concepts of identity, ideas of community, are all at stake' (Jasper & Nelkin 1992, 7). It is based on a year of anthropological fieldwork with a group of animal rights activists. -
Animal Research Facilities Protection Act of 1989”
Historic, Archive Document Do not assume content reflects current scientific knowledge, policies, or practices. I kroosc r- i W^l ANIMAL RESEARCH FACILITY PROTECTION KF27 LfB w.d f? y .A33277 1990f - 9 /ggg Nyiloi JOINT HE GlfsjQ Pftpp BEFORE THE SUBCOMMITTEE ON DEPARTMENT OPERATIONS, RESEARCH, AND POREIGN AGRICULTURE AND THE SUBCOMMITTEE ON LIVESTOCK, DAIRY, AND POULTRY OF THE COMMITTEE ON AGRICULTURE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ONE HUNDRED FIRST CONGRESS SECOND SESSION FEBRUARY 28, 1990 Serial No. 101-52 Printed for the use of the Committee on Agriculture U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 17-873 WASHINGTON I 1991 For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, Congressional Sales Office REF U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402 United States Department of WAL' Agriculture GEOI CHAI GLEh % LEOh JERR DAN CHAI HAR( CHAI ROBI HARI JIM C TIMO RICH DAVI JIM J TIM t National Agricultural Library CLAU BEN : MIKE BILL Texas JILL L. LONG, Indiana GARY CONDIT, California ROY DYSON, Maryland H. MARTIN LANCASTER, North Carolina Professional Staff Dianne Powell, Staff Director Vernie Hubert, Legislative Director Daniel E. Brinza, Chief Counsel Charles Hilty, Minority Staff Director James A. Davis, Press Secretary Subcommittee on Department Operations, Research, and Foreign Agriculture GEORGE E. BROWN Jr., , California, Chairman CHARLES ROSE, North Carolina PAT ROBERTS, Kansas LEON E. PANETTA, California E. THOMAS COLEMAN, CHARLES W. STENHOLM, Missouri Texas SID MORRISON, Washington DAN GLICKMAN, Kansas FRED GRANDY, Iowa CHARLES HATCHER, Georgia JAMES T. WALSH, JIM OLIN, Virginia New York HAROLD L. VOLKMER, Missouri JIM JONTZ, Indiana Subcommittee on Livestock, Dairy, and Poultry CHARLES W. STENHOLM, Texas, Chairman JIM OLIN, Virginia STEVE GUNDERSON, BEN NIGHTHORSE Wisconsin CAMPBELL, Colorado LARRY J. -
Henry Spira Papers [Finding Aid]. Library of Congress. [PDF Rendered
Henry Spira Papers A Finding Aid to the Collection in the Library of Congress Manuscript Division, Library of Congress Washington, D.C. 2017 Contact information: http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/mss.contact Additional search options available at: http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms017017 LC Online Catalog record: http://lccn.loc.gov/mm00084743 Prepared by Colleen Benoit, Karen Linn Femia, Nate Scheible with the assistance of Jake Bozza Collection Summary Title: Henry Spira Papers Span Dates: 1906-2002 Bulk Dates: (bulk 1974-1998) ID No.: MSS84743 Creator: Spira, Henry, 1927-1998 Extent: 120,000 items; 340 containers plus 6 oversize ; 140 linear feet ; 114 digital files (3.838 GB) Language: Collection material in English Location: Manuscript Division, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. Summary: Animal welfare advocate and political activist. Correspondence, writings, notes, newspaper clippings, advertisements, printed matter, and photographs, primarily relating to Spira's work in the animal welfare movement after 1974. Selected Search Terms The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in the Library's online catalog. They are grouped by name of person or organization, by subject or location, and by occupation and listed alphabetically therein. People Douglas, William Henry James. Fitzgerald, Pegeen. Gitano, Henry, 1927-1998. Grandin, Temple. Kupferberg, Tuli. Rack, Leonard. Rowan, Andrew N. Singer, Peter, 1946- Singer, Peter, 1946- Ethics into action : Henry Spira and the animal rights movement. 1998. Spira, Henry, 1927-1998--Political and social views. Spira, Henry, 1927-1998. Trotsky, Leon, 1879-1940. Trull, Frankie. Trutt, Fran. Weiss, Myra Tanner. Organizations American Museum of Natural History. -
Internship at Peta, Berlin: a Perfect Experience for Anyone Interested in Animal Protection
INTERNSHIP AT PETA, BERLIN: A PERFECT EXPERIENCE FOR ANYONE INTERESTED IN ANIMAL PROTECTION In this chronicle, I will describe Scandinavia and Southern Europe, many areas in which the organization my curricular internship at PETA’s PETA Germany covers animal rights works. Germany office in Berlin, realized issues all over Eastern Europe. The under Krishna Singh1 ’s tutorship organization also has other affiliates: Communication from May 22nd till June 8th of. PETA France, PETA Netherlands, According to the country’s context or This document first describes the the issue at stake, PETA deals with organization itself and its areas of the question of how to communicate work (1) as well as its welcoming and about animal rights issue. To this end, friendly office in Berlin (2) and goes it builds relations with politicians, on describing the different tasks lobbies, journalists, scientists, vegan and projects I participated in and start-ups, celebrities (vegans and the experience I gained through this non-vegans). Among other things, amazing internship (3). PETA tries to inform politicians about 1. PEOPLE FOR THE ETHICAL difficult situations concerning non- human animals and incite them to TREATMENT OF ANIMALS (PETA)’s PETA Switzerland, PETA Asia/Pacific PRESENTATION and PETA Australia. ‘People for the Ethical Treatment of PETA’s goal is ‘to uncover animal Animals ‘(PETA) was first founded in abuse, educate the public, and the USA in 1980 by Ingrid Newkirk encourage people to make lifestyle and Alex Pacheco. With more than changes so that animals can live 6.5 million members and supporters, their lives free from exploitation2’ PETA USA is now the largest animal . -
WHEN PETA COMES to CAMPUS: a STUDY of ISSUES MANAGEMENT at a LAND-GRANT UNIVERSITY by MICHELLE HAMILTON Bachelor of Science In
WHEN PETA COMES TO CAMPUS: A STUDY OF ISSUES MANAGEMENT AT A LAND-GRANT UNIVERSITY By MICHELLE HAMILTON Bachelor of Science in Animal Science Murray State University Murray, Kentucky 2010 Submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate College of the Oklahoma State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE May, 2014 WHEN PETA COMES TO CAMPUS: A STUDY OF ISSUES MANAGEMENT AT A LAND-GRANT UNIVERSITY Thesis Approved: Dr. Traci L. Naile Thesis Adviser Dr. D. Dwayne Cartmell II Dr. Angel N. Riggs ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The pursuit of education has always been a top priority for me and with it the goal of a graduate degree. Here is to all of the people who made it possible: To my mother and father for instilling the insatiable appetite for education in me from an early age, for the courage to chase my dreams – no matter how far they take me from home, and for believing in me every step of the way. To Jackie, my sister and best friend, thank you for the encouragement to always follow my heart and be true to myself. McCauley, thank you for always looking at me through the rose-colored glasses only a baby sister has for a big sister. It’s that look that always reminds to be the best I can. To the AQHA Marketing gals, thanks for all the laughs when I was ready to meltdown in the midst of this adventure. C.J.B, thank you for going on late-night Diet Coke and ice cream runs and for not strangling me when I did have those meltdowns. -
Democracy, Dialogue, and the Animal Welfare Act
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by University of Michigan School of Law University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform Volume 51 2018 Beyond Rights and Welfare: Democracy, Dialogue, and the Animal Welfare Act Jessica Eisen Harvard Law School Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mjlr Part of the Animal Law Commons, Law and Philosophy Commons, and the Science and Technology Law Commons Recommended Citation Jessica Eisen, Beyond Rights and Welfare: Democracy, Dialogue, and the Animal Welfare Act, 51 U. MICH. J. L. REFORM 469 (2018). Available at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mjlr/vol51/iss3/2 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform at University of Michigan Law School Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform by an authorized editor of University of Michigan Law School Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. BEYOND RIGHTS AND WELFARE: DEMOCRACY, DIALOGUE, AND THE ANIMAL WELFARE ACT Jessica Eisen* ABSTRACT The primary frameworks through which scholars have conceptualized legal pro- tections for animals—animal “rights” and animal “welfare”—do not account for socio-legal transformation or democratic dialogue as central dynamics of animal law. The animal “rights” approach focuses on the need for limits or boundaries preventing animal use, while the animal “welfare” approach advocates balancing harm to animals against human benefits from animal use. Both approaches rely on abstract accounts of the characteristics animals are thought to share with humans and the legal protections they are owed as a result of those traits. -
Perspectives
PERSPECTIVES several organizations that were set up to SCIENCE AND SOCIETY continue the campaign. In both the United States and Europe, the debate about animal experimentation waned Animal experimentation: with the advent of the First World War, only to re-emerge during the 1970s, when anti- the continuing debate vivisection and animal-welfare organizations joined forces to campaign for new legislation to regulate animal research and testing. In the Mark Matfield United States, the public debate re-emerged in a more dramatic fashion in 1980, when an The use of animals in research and there was considerable protest from some activist infiltrated the laboratory of Dr Edward development has remained a subject of members of the audience and that, after one Taub of the Institute of Behavioural Research public debate for over a century. Although animal had been injected, an eminent med- at Silver Spring, Maryland (BOX 1). This attack there is good evidence from opinion surveys ical figure summoned the magistrates to on Taub’s research was organized by a tiny that the public accepts the use of animals in prevent the demonstration from continuing. animal-rights group called People for the research, they are poorly informed about the The Royal Society for the Prevention of Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), which way in which it is regulated, and are Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA) brought a pros- has since grown to dominate the campaign in increasingly concerned about laboratory- ecution for cruelty, and several of the doctors the United States. animal welfare. This article will review how present at the demonstration gave evidence public concerns about animal against Magnan, who returned to France to The anatomy of the campaign experimentation developed, the recent avoid answering the charges. -
2020-04-20-Pawpac-Letter-Animal-Markets.Pdf
April 20, 2020 The Honorable Gavin Newsom, California State Governor 1303 10th Street, Suite 1173 Sacramento, CA 95814 The Honorable Dr. Nadine Burke Harris, California Surgeon General California Health and Human Services 1600 Ninth Street, Room 460 Sacramento, CA 95814 Dear Governor Newsom and Dr. Burke Harris, We urge you to end the commercial wildlife 1 trade and sale for human consumption in California, including a ban on the import of nonnative birds, reptiles and amphibians. We also earnestly ask you to establish—with all the legal power vested in you—the rigorous enforcement of such bans and existing laws against the illegal trade of wild animals. With public health now teetering on the threat of the next pandemic, swift action is needed. _________________________________ 1 For this document, the term ‘wildlife’ means wild animals in the wild or bred in captivity. 2 The latest figures from Johns Hopkins University show that COVID-19 is responsible for 2.4 million cases and 165,000 deaths worldwide, including nearly 1,200 in California. Prohibitions and absolute strict enforcement against illegal wildlife trade and wildlife markets will help to prevent future zoonotic pandemics. We are grateful for your leadership in California and the nation during this crisis. We urge you now to put the prevention of future pandemics at the top of your priority list, even as you, your team and our state, city and county officials and industry professionals struggle in real time to save lives. Surgeon General Dr. Burke Harris and Governor Newsom, we ask you now to take swift action to: 1.