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Results: 434
Interview with Katharine Strozier
Katharine Strozier
Jan 01, 0001
In her December 6, 1980 interview with Rebecca Myers, Katharine Strozier shares the details of her life at Winthrop from the time she was in Training School until the time she graduated. Included are the memories of her life...
Published by: Winthrop University
Asthma
Aaron S et al. Re-evaluation of diagnosis in adults with physician-diagnosed asthma. JAMA (1) Reviewed by Akhilesh Jha Asthma diagnosis is based on classical symptoms together with variable airflow limitation (2). Accuracy...
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Asthma
Aaron S et al. Re-evaluation of diagnosis in adults with physician-diagnosed asthma. JAMA (1) Reviewed by Akhilesh Jha Asthma diagnosis is based on classical symptoms together with variable airflow limitation (2). Accuracy...
Family and funerals
Katharine Woodthorpe
Jan 01, 0001
This article explores a number of relational features of a contemporary funeral: content, participation, and commercial choice. In so doing, it uses Finch and Mason’s concept of reflexive relationalism to show that the...
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Death, Dying and Devolution
Katharine Woodthorpe
Jan 01, 0001
This brief reviews policy areas associated with death, dying and bereavement within the context of devolution. It focuses on the national and regional delegation of power, resources and authority across the UK and the...
Family and funerals
Katharine Woodthorpe
Jan 01, 0001
This article explores a number of relational features of a contemporary funeral: content, participation, and commercial choice. In so doing, it uses Finch and Mason’s concept of reflexive relationalism to show that the...
Published by:
Lyon's Wagnerian Diva
Katharine Ellis
Jul 16, 2018
AbstractIt seems historiographically implausible to ascribe the reputation of fin-de-siècle Lyon as France's Bayreuth to the impact of a single middle-ranking soprano...
Published by:
Perspectives of UK adolescents on the youth climate strikes

The school climate-strike movement has become a powerful force, shaping how people engage with climate change. Here we use a qualitative interview methodology to give voice to adolescents in the United Kingdom. We show how...

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The norms associated with climate change
A growing body of research points to the role social norms may play in both maintaining carbon intensive lifestyles and soliciting changes towards more sustainable ways of living. However, despite highlighting the importance of...
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"Will polar bears melt?". A qualitative analysis of children's questions about climate change
Climate change poses a grave threat to future generations, yet relatively little research examines children’s understandings of the issue. This study examines the questions children ask about climate change - rather than their...
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"Will polar bears melt?". A qualitative analysis of children's questions about climate change
Climate change poses a grave threat to future generations, yet relatively little research examines children’s understandings of the issue. This study examines the questions children ask about climate change - rather than their...
Published by:
'Now She's Just an Ordinary Baby'
Katharine Dow
Feb 28, 2018
The birth of Louise Brown, the first baby born through in vitro fertilisation (IVF), in England in 1978 attracted worldwide media attention. This article examines how the contemporary British news media framed this momentous...
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Using bereavement theory to understand memorialising behaviour
Katharine Woodthorpe
Jan 01, 0001
Two major theoretical approaches to bereavement – loosely categorised as psychological models of adaptation and the more socially orientated idea of continuing bonds – are often utilised to make sense of the experience of grief....
Published by:
Adjusting the analytical aperture
The ever-expanding availability of reproductive technologies, the continued roll-out of 'family planning' and maternity services across low- and middle-income settings and the rapid development of the fertility industry mean...
Published by: BioSocieties
Still Singing for our Lives
Katharine L. Smithrim
Nov 19, 2013
Is singing a dying art in Ontario? Much has been speculated about the roles of radio, television, urbanization, and the rise of expert performers in the demise of singing in people's lives. I decided to examine this phenomenon...
Published by: Faculty of Education
Still Singing for our Lives
Is singing a dying art in Ontario? Much has been speculated about the roles of radio, television, urbanization, and the rise of expert performers in the demise of singing in people's lives. I decided to examine this phenomenon...
Published by: Faculty of Education
Death, Dying and Devolution
Katharine Woodthorpe
Jan 01, 0001
This brief reviews policy areas associated with death, dying and bereavement within the context of devolution. It focuses on the national and regional delegation of power, resources and authority across the UK and the...
Using bereavement theory to understand memorialising behaviour
Katharine Woodthorpe
Jan 01, 0001
Two major theoretical approaches to bereavement – loosely categorised as psychological models of adaptation and the more socially orientated idea of continuing bonds – are often utilised to make sense of the experience of grief....
Published by:

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