Results for 'Alison Assister'

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  1.  10
    A community of practice approach to enhancing academic integrity policy translation: a case study.Alison Lockley, Amanda Janssen, Penelope A. S. Wurm & Alison Kay Reedy - 2021 - International Journal for Educational Integrity 17 (1).
    IntroductionAcademic integrity policy that is inaccessible, ambiguous or confusing is likely to result in inconsistent policy enactment. Additionally, policy analysis and development are often undertaken as top down processes requiring passive acceptance by users of policy that has been developed outside the context in which it is enacted. Both these factors can result in poor policy uptake, particularly where policy users are overworked, intellectually critical and capable, not prone to passive acceptance and hold valuable grass roots intelligence about policy enactment.Case (...)
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  2.  26
    Danish sperm donors and the ethics of donation and selection.Alison Wheatley - 2018 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 21 (2):227-238.
    There has been a great deal of discussion about the ethical implications of donating sperm and of the ways in which donated tissue is presented, selected, and sold for use in assisted reproduction. Debates have emerged within the academic sphere, from donor offspring and recipients, and in broader popular culture, including questions about the commodification of human tissue and the eugenic potential of selecting donors from particular demographic categories. However, the voices of donors themselves on this subject have been largely (...)
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  3.  11
    Animal-Assisted Intervention for trauma: a systematic literature review.Marguerite E. O'Haire, Noémie A. Guérin & Alison C. Kirkham - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  4. Despising an Identity They Taught Me to Claim.Alison Bailey - 1999 - In Chris J. Cuomo & Kim Q. Hall (eds.), WHITENESS: FEMINIST PHILOSOPHICAL NARRATIVES.
    This essay is a personal philosophical reflection on particular dilemma privilege-cognizant white feminists face in thinking through how to use privilege in liberatory ways. Privilege takes on a new dimension for whites who resist common defensive or guilt-ridden responses to privilege and struggle to understand the connections between ill-gotten advantages and the genuine injustices that deny humanity to peoples of color. The temptation to despise whiteness and its accompanying privilege is a common response to white privilege awareness and it is (...)
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  5.  14
    ‘Maybe what I do know is wrong…’: Reframing educator roles and professional development for teaching Indigenous health.Alison Francis-Cracknell, Mandy Truong & Karen Adams - 2023 - Nursing Inquiry 30 (2):e12531.
    Settler colonisation continues to cause much damage across the globe. It has particularly impacted negatively on Indigenous peoples’ health and wellbeing causing great inequity. Health professional education is a critical vehicle to assist in addressing this; however, non‐Indigenous educators often feel unprepared and lack skill in this regard. In this qualitative study, 20 non‐Indigenous nursing, physiotherapy and occupational therapy educators in Australia were interviewed about their experiences and perspectives of teaching Indigenous health. Findings from the inductive thematic analysis suggest educators (...)
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  6.  8
    Understanding the challenges faced by Michigan’s family farmers: race/ethnicity and the impacts of a pandemic.Dorceta E. Taylor, Lina M. Farias, Lia M. Kahan, Julia Talamo, Alison Surdoval, Ember D. McCoy & Socorro M. Daupan - 2022 - Agriculture and Human Values 39 (3):1077-1096.
    Michigan is a critical agricultural state, and small family farms are a crucial component of the state’s food sector. This paper examines how the race/ethnicity of the family farm owners/operators is related to farm characteristics, financing, and impacts of the pandemic. It compares 75 farms owned/operated solely by Whites and 15 with People of Color owners/operators. The essay examines how farmers finance their farm operations and the challenges they face doing so. The article also explores how the Coronavirus-19 pandemic affected (...)
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  7.  10
    Book review: Alan Partington, Alison Duguid and Charlotte Taylor, Patterns and Meanings in Discourse: Theory and Practice in Corpus-Assisted Discourse Studies. [REVIEW]Fang Wang - 2015 - Discourse Studies 17 (6):783-784.
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  8.  10
    D. J. A. Ross, Illustrated Medieval Alexander-Books in French Verse, ed. Alison Stones and Maud Pérez-Simon, with the assistance of Martine Meuwese. (Manuscripta Illuminata 4.) Turnhout: Brepols, 2019. Pp. 639; many color plates and 10 tables. €120. ISBN: 978-2-5035-8105-7. [REVIEW]Kathy Krause - 2021 - Speculum 96 (1):248-250.
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  9. Review of Alison L. LaCroix Ideological Origins of American Federalism. [REVIEW]H. G. Callaway - 2011 - Law and Politics Book Review 21 (10):619-627.
    Alison L. LaCroix is Assistant Professor of Law at the University of Chicago Law School, where she specializes in legal history, federalism, constitutional law and questions of jurisdiction. She has written a fine, scholarly volume on the intellectual origins of American federalism. LaCroix holds the JD degree (Yale, 1999) and a Ph.D. in history (Harvard, 2007). According to the author, to fully understand the origins of American federalism, we must look beyond the Constitutional Convention of 1787 and range over (...)
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  10.  37
    BRUNT ON STOICISM - Brunt Studies in Stoicism. Edited by Miriam Griffin and Alison Samuels. With the assistance of Michael Crawford. Pp. vi + 521. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013. Cased, £110, US$199. ISBN: 978-0-19-969585-0. [REVIEW]Brad Inwood - 2014 - The Classical Review 64 (1):111-113.
  11. A Plurality of Pluralisms: Collaborative Practice in Archaeology.Alison Wylie - 2015 - In Flavia Padovani, Alan Richardson & Jonathan Y. Tsou (eds.), Objectivity in Science: New Perspectives From Science and Technology Studies. Cham: Boston Studies in the Philosophy and History of Science, vol. 310. Springer. pp. 189-210.
    Innovative modes of collaboration between archaeologists and Indigenous communities are taking shape in a great many contexts, in the process transforming conventional research practice. While critics object that these partnerships cannot but compromise the objectivity of archaeological science, many of the archaeologists involved argue that their research is substantially enriched by them. I counter objections raised by internal critics and crystalized in philosophical terms by Boghossian, disentangling several different kinds of pluralism evident in these projects and offering an analysis of (...)
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  12. In Incognito: The Principle of Double Effect in American Constitutional Law.Edward C. Lyons - 2005 - Florida Law Review 57 (3):469-563.
    Abstract: In Vacco v. Quill, 521 U.S. 793 (1997), the Supreme Court for the first time in American case law explicitly applied the principle of double effect to reject an equal protection claim to physician-assisted suicide. Double effect, traced historically to Thomas Aquinas, proposes that under certain circumstances it is permissible unintentionally to cause foreseen evil effects that would not be permissible to cause intentionally. The court rejected the constitutional claim on the basis of a distinction marked out by the (...)
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  13.  24
    Colliding sacred values: a psychological theory of least-worst option selection.Neil Shortland & Laurence Alison - 2019 - Thinking and Reasoning 26 (1):118-139.
    This paper focuses on how Soldiers make hard choices between competing options. To understand the psychological processes behind these types of decisions, we present qualitative data collected from...
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  14. Critical distance : stabilising evidential claims in archaeology.Alison Wylie - 2011 - In Philip Dawid, William Twining & Mimi Vasilaki (eds.), Evidence, Inference and Enquiry. Oxford: Oup/British Academy.
    The vagaries of evidential reasoning in archaeology are notorious: the material traces that comprise the archaeological record are fragmentary and profoundly enigmatic, and the inferential gap that archaeologists must cross to constitute them as evidence of the cultural past is a peren­nial source of epistemic anxiety. And yet we know a great deal about the cultural past, including vast reaches of the past for which this material record is our only source of evidence. The contents of this record stand as (...)
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  15. Arguments for Scientific Realism: The Ascending Spiral.Alison Wylie - 1986 - American Philosophical Quarterly 23 (3):287 - 297.
    Although I have little sympathy for Nagel's instrumentalism, his "dictum" on the debates over scientific realism (as Boyd refers to it) is disconcertingly accurate; it does seem as if "the already long controversy...can be prolonged indefinitely." The reason for this, however, is not that realists and instrumentalists are divided by merely terminological differences in their "preferred mode[s] of speech", indeed, this analysis appeals only if you are already convinced that realism of any robust sort is mistaken. The debates persist, instead, (...)
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  16.  14
    Cultural pragmatism: In search of alternative thinking about cultural competence in mental health.Jonathan Yahalom & Alison B. Hamilton - 2024 - Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 44 (1):59-73.
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  17.  56
    The reaction against analogy.Alison Wylie - 1985 - Advances in Archaeological Method and Theory 8:63-111.
  18. Doing Social Science as a Feminist: The Engendering of Archaeology.Alison Wylie - 2001 - In Angela N. H. Creager, Elizabeth Lunbeck & Londa L. Schiebinger (eds.), Feminism in Twentieth-Century Science, Technology, and Medicine. University of Chicago Press. pp. 23-45.
     
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  19.  22
    Mesmerism and popular culture in early Victorian England.Alison Winter - 1994 - History of Science 32 (97):317-343.
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  20.  26
    A Short History of Western Political Thought.Alison Webster - 2015 - The European Legacy 20 (4):422-424.
  21.  19
    The “Invisible Hand” and British Fiction, 1818–1860: Adam Smith, Political Economy, and the Genre of Realism.Alison Webster - 2014 - The European Legacy 19 (4):534-535.
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  22.  15
    Exempt Research: Procedures in the Intramural Research Program of the National Institutes of Health.Alison Wichman, Deloris Mills & Alan L. Sandler - 1996 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 18 (2):3.
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  23.  13
    A Forensics of the Mind.Alison Winter - 2007 - Isis 98 (2):332-343.
    This essay discusses the yoked history of witnessing in science and the law and examines the history of attempts, over the past century, to use science to improve the surety of witness testimony. It examines some of these projects, particularly in the 1960s and 1970s. The essay argues that modern psychology offers a particularly problematic form of expertise because its focus is a task central to the jury’s mandate, the evaluation of a witness and his or her testimony. It concludes (...)
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  24.  76
    The promise and perils of an ethic of stewardship.Alison Wylie - 2005 - In Lynn Meskell & Peter Pels (eds.), Embedding ethics. New York: Berg. pp. 47--68.
  25.  29
    The Interplay of Evidential Constraints and Political Interests: Recent Archaeological Research on Gender.Alison Wylie - 1992 - American Antiquity 57 (1):15.
    In the last few years, conference programs and publications have begun to appear that reflect a growing interest, among North American archaeologists, in research initiatives that focus on women and gender as subjects of investigation. One of the central questions raised by these developments has to do with their "objectivity" and that of archaeology as a whole. To the extent that they are inspired by or aligned with explicitly political (feminist) commitments, the question arises of whether they do not themselves (...)
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  26.  20
    Questions of Evidence, Legitimacy, and the (Dis)Unity of Science.Alison Wylie - 2000 - American Antiquity 65 (2):227.
    The recent Science Wars have brought into sharp focus, in a public forum, contentious questions about the authority of science and what counts as properly scientific practice that have long structured archaeological debate. As in the larger debate, localized disputes in archaeology often presuppose a conception of science as a unified enterprise defined by common goals, standards, and research programs; specific forms of inquiry are advocated (or condemned) by claiming afiliation with sciences so conceived. This pattern of argument obscures much (...)
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  27.  52
    Feminism in philosophy of science: Making sense of contingency and constraint.Alison Wylie - 2000 - In Miranda Fricker & Jennifer Hornsby (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Feminism in Philosophy. Cambridge University Press. pp. 166--184.
  28.  77
    Socially Naturalized Norms of Epistemic Rationality: Aggregation and Deliberation.Alison Wylie - 2006 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 44 (S1):43-48.
    In response to those who see rational deliberation as a source of epistemic norms and a model for well-functioning scientific inquiry, Solomon cites evidence that aggregative techniques often yield better results; deliberative processes are vulnerable to biasing mechanisms that impoverish the epistemic resources on which group judgments are based. I argue that aggregative techniques are similarly vulnerable and illustrate this in terms of the impact of gender schemas on both individual and collective judgment. A consistently externalist and socially naturalized approach (...)
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  29.  69
    ‘Simple’ analogy and the role of relevance assumptions: Implications of archaeological practice.Alison Wylie - 1988 - International Studies in the Philosophy of Science 2 (2):134 – 150.
    There is deep ambivalence about analogy, both as an object of philosophical fascination and in contexts of practice, like archaeology, where it plays a seemingly central role. In archaeology there has been continuous vacillation between outright rejection of analogical inference as overtly speculative, even systematically misleading, and, when this proves un-tenable, various stock strategies for putting it 'on a firmer foundation'. Frequently these last are accomplished by assimilating analogy to more tractible (better warranted, more readily controllable) forms of inference, salvaging (...)
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  30.  65
    Doing Philosophy As a Feminist: Longino on the Search for a Feminist Epistemology.Alison Wylie - 1995 - Philosophical Topics 23 (2):345-358.
  31.  14
    Understanding film theory.Christine Etherington-Wright - 2011 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan. Edited by Ruth Doughty.
    This book addresses a very real gap in existing introductory texts that define, explore, and apply key theoretical concepts within the field of film studies.' Alison L. McKee, Assistant Professor, Department of Television-Radio-Film-Theatre, San Jose State University, USA 'This is the book that film students have long been waiting for: a clear, well-written and accessible introduction to film theory. Lucid theoretical exposition and case study film analysis offer readers the most intelligible summary of theory that I have yet encountered.' (...)
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  32. Good Science, Bad Science, or Science as Usual?: Feminist Critiques of Science.Alison Wylie - 1997 - In Lori D. Hager (ed.), Women in Human Evolution. Routledge. pp. 29-55.
    I am often asked what feminism can possibly have to do with science. Feminism is, after all, an explicitly partisan, political standpoint; what bearing could it have on science, an enterprise whose hallmark is a commitment to value-neutrality and objectivity? Is feminism not a set of personal, political convictions best set aside (bracketed) when you engage in research as a scientist? I will argue that feminism has both critical and constructive relevance for a wide range of sciences, and that feminism (...)
     
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  33. What Knowers Know Well: Women, Work and the Academy.Alison Wylie - 2011 - In What Knowers Know Well: Women, Work, and the Academy. Springer Verlag. pp. 157-179.
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  34. Feminism and Social Science.Alison Wylie - 1996 - In Edward Craig (ed.), Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy: Genealogy to Iqbal. New York: Routledge. pp. 588-593.
  35.  39
    Feminist Critiques of Science: The Epistemological and Methodological Literature.Alison Wylie, Kathleen Okruhlik, Leslie Thielen-Wilson & Sandra Morton - 1989 - Women's Studies International Forum 12 (3):379-388.
    Feminist critiques of science are widely dispersed and often quite inaccessible as a body of literature. We describe briefly some of the influences evident in this literature and identify several key themes which are central to current debates. This is the introduction to a bibliography of general critiques of science, described as the “core literature,” and a selection of feminist critiques of biology. Our objective has been to identify those analyses which raise reflexive (epistemological and methodological) questions about the status (...)
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  36.  33
    The Philosophy of Ambivalence: Sandra Harding onThe Science Question in Feminism.Alison Wylie - 1987 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 17 (sup1):58-73.
    In the past three decades scholars in virtually every humanistic and social scientific research discipline, and in some natural sciences, have drawn attention to quite striking instances of gender bias in the modes of practice and theorizing typical of traditional fields of research. They generally begin by identifying explicit androcentric biases in definitions of the subject domains appropriate to specific scientific fields. Their primary targets, in this connection, have been research that leaves women out altogether, research that ignores women’s contributions (...)
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  37. Editor’s pick: Hypatia.Alison Wylie - 2013 - The Philosophers' Magazine 62 (62):107-111.
    This article is a profile of the journal Hypatia for TPM: its founding, its mission, and central themes that figure in its close to 30 year publication history. When the first issues of Hypatia appeared in the mid-1980s they were the culmination, in the mid-1980s, of a decade-long process of visionary debate in the Society for Women in Philosophy (SWIP) about what form a journal of feminist philosophy should take, and extended discussion of how to make it a reality. The (...)
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  38. Agnotology in/of Archaeology.Alison Wylie - 2008 - In R. Proctor & L. Londa Schiebinger (eds.), Agnotology: The Making and Unmaking of Ignorance. Stanford University Press. pp. 183-205.
     
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  39. Women and Violence: Feminist Practice and Quantitative Method.Alison Wylie & Lorraine Greaves - 1995 - In Sandra D. Burt & Lorraine Code (eds.), Changing Methods: Feminists Transforming Practice. Broadview Press. pp. 301-325.
  40. Interdisciplinary Practice.Alison Wylie - 2013 - In William Rathie, Michael Shanks, Timothy Webmoor & Christopher Witmore (eds.), Archaeology in the Making: Conversations Through a Discipline. Routledge. pp. 93-121.
    In commenting on the state of affairs in contemporary archaeology, Wylie outlines an agenda for archaeology as an interdisciplinary science rooted in ethical practices of stewardship. In so doing she lays the foundations for an informed and philosophically relevant “meta-archaeology.”.
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  41. On "Heavily Decomposing Red Herrings": Scientific Methodology in Archaeology and the Ladening of Evidence with Theory.Alison Wylie - 1992 - In Lester Embree (ed.), Metaarchaeology: Reflections by Archaeologists and Philosophers. Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science. pp. 269-288.
    Internal debates over the status and aims of archaeology—between processualists and post or anti-processualists—have been so sharply adversarial, and have generated such sharply polarized positions, that they obscure much common ground. Despite strong rhetorical opposition, in practice, all employ a range of strategies for building and assessing the empirical credibility of their claims that reveals a common commitment to some form of mitigated objectivism. To articulate what this comes to, an account is given of how archaeological data may be ‘laden (...)
     
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  42.  13
    Matters of Fact and Matters of Interest.Alison Wylie - 1989 - In Stephen Shennan (ed.), Archaeological Approaches to Cultural Identity. Unwin Hyman. pp. 94-109.
  43. Philosophical Feminism: Challenges to Science.Alison Wylie & Kathleen Okruhlik - 1987 - Resources for Feminist Research 16:12-15.
  44.  11
    Putting shakertown back together: Critical theory in archaeology.Alison Wylie - 1985 - Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 4 (2):133-147.
  45. A Philosopher at Large.Alison Wylie - 2003 - In Thomas Lennon (ed.), Cartesian Views. Brill. pp. 165-177.
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  46.  18
    An Analogy by Any Other Name is Just as Analogical: A Commentary on the Gould-Watson Dialogue,.Alison Wylie - 1982 - Anthropological Archaeology 1:382-401.
  47. An Expanded Behavioral Archaeology: Transformation and Redefinition Twenty Years On.Alison Wylie - 1995 - In James M. Skibo, William H. Walker & Axel E. Nielsen (eds.), Quest for the King. University of Utah Press. pp. 198-209.
     
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  48. Afterword: On Waves.Alison Wylie - 2006 - In Pamela L. Geller & Miranda K. Stockett (eds.), Feminist Anthropology: Past, Present, and Future. University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 167-176.
     
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  49.  29
    Bootstrapping in Un-Natural Sciences: Archaeological Theory Testing.Alison Wylie - 1986 - PSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1986:314 - 321.
    Several difficulties have been raised concerning applicability of Glymour's model to developing and "un-natural" sciences, those contexts in which he claims it should be most clearly instantiated. An analysis of testing in such a field, archaeology, indicates that while bootstrapping may be realized in general outline, practice necessarily departs from the ideal in at least three important respects 1) it is not strictly theory contained, 2) the theory-mediated inference from evidence to test hypothesis is not exclusively deductive and, 3) structural (...)
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  50.  4
    Contextualizing Ethics: Comments on ‘Ethics in Canadian Archaeology’ by Robert Rosenswig.Alison Wylie - 1997 - Canadian Journal of Archaeology 21:115-120.
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