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Results for 'Gina Fairley'

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  1.  115
    Outside in / inside out contemporary Philippine art: Observing, artists, artworks, scenes and markets.GinaFairley -2012 -Thesis Eleven 112 (1):63-86.
    This paper explores the contemporary art landscape of the Philippines, mapping its multiplicity across local terrains and within definitions of regionality and the art market. It discusses the ruptures that have caused this landscape to shift intermittently, spawning new networks and value structures that are less defined by the frame of ‘nation-based identity’ favoured in the past, and instead locates difference within the experimentation, historiographies, and pace of this contemporary ‘art scene’. It highlights flashpoints and uses case studies across the (...) last five years in particular to illustrate that Philippine artists, art scenes and art markets are highly reflective of cross-civilizational cultural flows, alert to global trends and of their own currency within regional markets. This paper does not seek to provide a comprehensive overview but rather draws a map of some potent changes and significant players in this contemporary landscape. (shrink)
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  2. LittleGina's Rememory# 2: An Soudin (In Secret).Gina Athena Ulysse -2010 -Feminist Studies 36 (1):174-179.
     
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  3.  81
    Recommendations for sex/gender neuroimaging research: key principles and implications for research design, analysis, and interpretation.Gina Rippon,Rebecca Jordan-Young,Anelis Kaiser &Cordelia Fine -2014 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
  4.  54
    Does promoting research advance planning in a general elderly population enhance completion of a research directive and proxies' predictive ability? a randomized controlled trial.Gina Bravo,Lise Trottier,Marie-France Dubois,Marcel Arcand,Danièle Blanchette,Anne-Marie Boire-Lavigne,Maryse Guay,Paule Hottin,Julie Lane,Suzanne Bellemare &Karen Painter -2016 -AJOB Empirical Bioethics 7 (3):183-192.
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  5.  97
    Philosophy of education in a new key: A collective writing project on the state of Filipino philosophy of education.Gina A. Opiniano,Liz Jackson,Franz Giuseppe F. Cortez,Elizer Jay de los Reyes,Marella Ada V. Mancenido-Bolaños,Fleurdeliz R. Altez-Albela,Rodrigo Abenes,Jennifer Monje,Tyrene Joy B. Basal,Peter Paul E. Elicor,Ruby S. Suazo &Rowena Azada-Palacios -2022 -Educational Philosophy and Theory 54 (8):1256-1270.
  6.  39
    Hemispheric asymmetry: Verbal and spatial encoding of visual stimuli.Gina Geffen,John L. Bradshaw &Norman C. Nettleton -1972 -Journal of Experimental Psychology 95 (1):25.
  7.  31
    El desierto como basurero en El alemán de Atacama de Roberto Ampuero: ecoliteratura en los tiempos de globalización.Gina Canepa -2007 -Polis 17.
    El desarrollo creciente de la novela negra neo-detectivesca en Chile es una prueba más de que atravesamos por un cambio artístico fundamental. Tecnológica y estéticamente impecables, las variantes de esta novela suelen ser producidas por escritores rigurosamente profesionales. Sin embargo y a pesar de los factores mencionados, ésta no está exenta de popularidad y éxito de ventas. Elalemán de Atacama de Roberto Ampuero es la segunda de la saga de su detective ficcional Cayetano Brulet. Como otras de sus novelas, ésta (...) conlleva una reflexión sobre el entreguismo de la nación-estado, los efectos devastadores de la economía global, la precariedad de los grupos étnicos y la destrucción ecológica. (shrink)
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  8.  14
    Insights for the age of Aquarius: a handbook for religious sanity.Gina Cerminara -1973 - Wheaton, Ill.: Theosophical Pub. House.
    General semantics reveals ambiguities in the Bible.
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  9.  19
    Family life and autistic children with sensory processing differences: A qualitative evidence synthesis of occupational participation.Gina Daly,Jeanne Jackson &Helen Lynch -2022 -Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Autistic children with sensory processing differences successfully navigate and engage in meaningful family daily occupations within home and community environments through the support of their family. To date however, much of the research on autistic children with sensory processing differences, has primarily been deficit focused, while much of the caregiver research has focused on issues of distress, burden, effort, and emotional trauma in coping with their child's diagnosis. This study aimed to conduct a qualitative evidence synthesis, using a meta-ethnographic approach (...) to explore the gap identified in understanding successful occupational experiences of family participation and daily family routines when supporting an autistic child with sensory processing differences and to offer an alternative strengths-based perspective. Inclusion criteria were studies which were peer-reviewed qualitative design, published from 2000 to 2021, and that concerned parents/caregivers' perspectives of family occupations of children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder. Studies were electronically searched in eight databases from October to December 2021 and 23 studies were identified which met the inclusion criteria. Noblit and Hare's seven step approach for conducting analysis in meta-ethnography was used, and three themes identified: sensory processing differences in daily life, what is hard about hard, and orchestrating family life. Results identified the centrality of sensory experiences in understanding family life. Living with unpredictability while orchestrating certainty through routines was core to successful participation. This review provides insights into how parents negotiate the complexities of constructing family life when living with an autistic child. The results can inform the design of future interventions that specifically address the relationship between meaningful participation in family occupations and daily routines and sensory processing in autistic children.Systematic review registrationhttps://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/display_record.php?ID=CRD42022298938, identifier: CRD42022298938. (shrink)
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  10. Reconceiving Virtue: A Mengzian Adaptation of Eudaimonic Virtue Ethics in Response to Contemporary Criticisms.Gina Lebkuecher -2024 - Dissertation, Loyola University, Chicago
    The primary question my dissertation aims to answer is: how might eudaimonic virtue ethics be reimagined to respond to contemporary criticisms from disability scholars, feminists, and empirical psychology? To answer this, I introduce the Eudaimonic View of Virtue, or EV, and propose a Mengzian adaptation of the EV (EV-M) in response to these criticisms. The EV captures the four core claims to which eudaimonic virtue ethical theories are committed: (i) virtues, in the sense of excellent character traits or dispositions, are (...) the foundation of ethics or ethical action (i.e., aretaicism); (ii) virtue is at least partially constitutive of human well-being/flourishing (i.e., eudaimonism); (iii) virtue or virtuous activity consists in the good performance of human function or fulfilling human nature (i.e., naturalism); and (iv) practical wisdom, in the sense of understanding how to live well, is required for achieving full virtue. For the EV, reason and emotions are both pivotal parts of virtue. However, there is disagreement among contemporary and historic eudaimonic virtue ethicists about what specific roles reason and emotion play—whether for Aristotle (the founder of the Western eudaimonic virtue ethics tradition) or in virtue ethical theory more broadly. The EV can be divided into (broadly) rational and emotional versions. I critically evaluate contemporary EV-based accounts in light of critiques from disability scholars, feminists, and psychologists, revealing rational versions’ vulnerability to the first two avenues of critique and emotional versions’ susceptibility to the third. In contrast to Aristotelian virtue ethics, which defines human nature through rational activity, Mengzi defines human nature through its potential for moral goodness; moreover, his moral psychology does not contain a rigid rational-emotional divide. This helps the Mengzian version of the EV evade criticisms from feminist and disability perspectives. Additionally, the EV-M’s emphasis on the interdependence of society and individuals—through its focus on rituals and social roles—provides an avenue of response to the psychology critique. The EV-M thus serves as a resilient foundation for an improved EV. (shrink)
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  11. La différence comment l'écrire? Comment la vivre.Gina Stoiciu &Odette Brosseau -forthcoming -Humanitas.
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  12.  20
    Wet sneakers, bottom lines, and other obstacles to spirituality.Gina Vega -2002 -Teaching Business Ethics 6 (1):5-14.
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  13.  32
    The Death of a Research Subject.Gina Bari Kolata -1980 -Hastings Center Report 10 (4):5-6.
  14.  36
    Liberalism, Neutrality, and the Gendered Division of Labor.Gina Schouten -2019 - Oxford University Press.
    This volume defends a particular set of progressive political interventions on the basis of their being legitimate exercises of coercive political power, specifically focusing on the gendered division of labour, which is widely regarded as the predominant form of gender injustice.
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  15.  97
    (1 other version)The good supervisor: supervising postgraduate and undergraduate research for doctoral theses and dissertations.Gina Wisker -2005 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    The Good Supervisor engages readers in dialogue and active reflection on the strategies of effective supervision of PhDs, postgraduate and undergraduate research. Accessibly written, it encourages supervisors to reflect on and enhance their research supervision practice with a diversity of students on a variety of research projects: Postgraduate and undergraduate levels, international and distance students practice and professional research research leading to creative process and products/creations the PhD by publication supervising your colleagues interpersonal skills managing diversity in learning styles, gender, (...) age and culture. The book is also useful for students undertaking research. There is special focus on research skills development.and on supporting students through and beyond the examination process. (shrink)
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  16.  87
    The Stereotype Threat Hypothesis: An Assessment from the Philosopher's Armchair, for the Philosopher's Classroom.Gina Schouten -2015 -Hypatia 30 (2):450-466.
    According to Stereotype Threat Hypothesis, fear of confirming gendered stereotypes causes women to experience anxiety in circumstances wherein their performance might potentially confirm those stereotypes, such as high-stakes testing scenarios in science, technology, engineering, and math courses. This anxiety causes women to underperform, which in turn causes them to withdraw from math-intensive disciplines. STH is thought by many to account for the underrepresentation of women in STEM fields, and a growing body of evidence substantiates this hypothesis. In considering the plausibility (...) of STH as an explanation for women's disproportionate attrition from undergraduate philosophy programs, one is struck by dissimilarities between STEM and philosophy that appear to undermine the applicability of STH to the latter. In this paper, I argue that these dissimilarities are either merely apparent or merely apparently relevant to the plausibility of STH as an explanation for gender disparities in philosophy. I argue further that, if research from STEM uncovers promising strategies for confronting stereotype threat, we should think about how to apply those strategies in our introductory philosophy classrooms. (shrink)
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  17.  70
    Contemplative Leadership: The Possibilities for the Ethics of Leadership Theory and Practice.Gina Grandy &Martyna Sliwa -2017 -Journal of Business Ethics 143 (3):423-440.
    In this paper, we offer a conceptualization of leadership as contemplative. Drawing on MacIntyre’s perspective on virtue ethics and Levinas’ and Gilligan’s work on the ethics of responsibility and care, we propose contemplative leadership as virtuous activity; reflexive, engaged, relational, and embodied practice that requires knowledge from within context and practical wisdom. More than simply offering another way to conceptualize the ethics of leadership, this research contributes to understanding the ethics of leadership in practice. Empirically, we analyze the narratives of (...) those in positions of formal authority and other organizational members in churches. We illustrate contemplative leadership as driven by a good purpose, derived from the unique organizational and broader societal context in which leadership occurs, and grounded in an ethical concern for the other. Contemplative leadership accounts for the complexity of experience and is discerned in mundane and everyday practices. We conclude with the implications for leadership theory, practice, and education. (shrink)
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  18.  11
    Between Cultures: Children of Immigrants in America.Gina J. Grillo -2004 - Center for American Places.
    As the grandchild of Italian immigrants, photographerGina J. Grillo has a personal impetus in her photographic studies of ethnic and immigrant life in the United States. In Between Cultures, Grillo explores the struggles immigrant children face as they develop their cultural identity in an environment completely new and foreign to them. Following the tradition of the pioneering photographers Jacob Riis and Lewis Hine, Grillo portrays the immigrant experience through children's eyes, unearthing a complex and poignant world. She begins (...) with images of newly arrived immigrant families at O'Hare International Airport during their first few hours in the United States, and then follows them through the gates and into Chicago's urban life: through her chronicle of citizenship ceremonies, cultural celebrations, weddings and dances, and other everyday scenes of immigrant life, Grillo captures the crucial elements that shape not only the characters of the children, but also the neighborhoods in which they reside. For adults, emigration to America is filled with both hope and fear, yet it is tempered by a mature understanding. For children, however, this same journey unfolds in the unrelenting present as they must constantly negotiate their individual identities and allegiances to culture, country, and kin. With moving quotations and drawings by immigrant children woven into Grillo's visual sequence, Between Cultures is a unique meditation on the development of individual identity through the reconciliation of multiple cultural heritages. (shrink)
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  19.  39
    Need versus salvage: A healthcare professional's perspective.Gina D. Bien,Lisa M. Kinoshita &Allyson C. Rosen -2008 -American Journal of Bioethics 8 (2):21 – 23.
  20.  34
    The conduct of Canadian researchers and Institutional Review Boards regarding substituted consent for research.Gina Bravo,Marie-France Dubois &Mariane Paquet -2004 -IRB: Ethics & Human Research 26 (1):1-8.
  21.  28
    Mass Screening for Neural Tube Defects.Gina Bari Kolata -1980 -Hastings Center Report 10 (6):8-10.
  22.  3
    L’aide médicale à mourir pour les personnes atteintes d’un trouble neurocognitif majeur : analyse des commentaires de participants à une enquête.Gina Bravo,Marcel Arcand &Lise Trottier -2021 -Canadian Journal of Bioethics / Revue canadienne de bioéthique 4 (2):36-54.
    We recently conducted a Quebec-wide postal survey designed to assess major stakeholders’ attitudes toward extending medical assistance in dying (MAiD) to non-competent patients with dementia. This paper reports the results of qualitative analyses of the comments left by the respondents at the end of the questionnaire. The questionnaire was mailed to randomly selected representatives of four stakeholder groups: adults 65 years old and over (n=621), informal caregivers of persons with dementia (n=471), nurses (n=514) and physicians (n=653) caring for such patients (...) at the time of the survey. A total of 1,050 questionnaires were returned, of which 420 included comments. Comments were coded into categories, themes and subthemes, and the frequency of categories compared across the four stakeholder groups. Coding enabled identification of 23 themes and five sub-themes clustered into seven major thematic categories. These relate to: 1) the respondent, 2) the survey and questionnaire, 3) persons with dementia, 4) their informal caregivers, 5) the healthcare system, 6) the legal framework governing end-of-life care, and 7) society in general. These categories were identified in all stakeholder groups, although to a varying degree for five of the seven categories. This study highlights the host of factors that may influence a person’s attitude toward extending MAiD to non-competent patients with dementia. It also illustrates how making systematic use of free-text comments can provide valuable insight into attitudes toward complex social policy issues and extend understanding of postal survey findings. (shrink)
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  23.  20
    Hegel's Pyjamas: Refashioning World History in Light of Postcolonial Criticism.Gina Altamura &J. M. Fritzman -forthcoming -Philosophical Frontiers: Essays and Emerging Thoughts.
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  24.  14
    (1 other version)More than 27 Cents a Day.Gina Bramucci &Shannon Mulholland -2011-03-04 - In Fritz Allhoff, Scott F. Parker & Michael W. Austin,Coffee. Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 193–204.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Coffee Talk Smallholder Farmers Mills, Middlemen, and Markets Abandoning the Bean Doing Things Direct Moving Beyond Fair Trade.
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  25. A Study of Goethe.BarkerFairley -1948 -Philosophy 23 (86):275-277.
     
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  26.  17
    Betty J. Birner. Language and Meaning. Reviewed by.Neil Kristian HamiltonFairley -2018 -Philosophy in Review 38 (4):126-128.
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  27.  38
    De Se Attitudes and Computation.Neil HamiltonFairley -2020 -Theoria 87 (1):207-229.
    There has been debate between those who maintain that indexical expressions are not essential and those who maintain that such indexicals cannot be dispensed with without an important loss of content. This version of the essentialist view holds that thoughts must also have indexical elements. Indexical thoughts appear to be in tension with the computational theory of mind. In this case we have the following inconsistent triad: De se thoughts are essential. De se thoughts are indexical, they have a character. (...) Computations can only take the syntactic type into account, they cannot take tokens into account. If is correct, then it seems we cannot make sense of a thought which uses a character such that its referent could vary from tokening to tokening. I argue that need not cause a problem, while maintaining the CTM. I claim that computations need not be sensitive to the features of a tokened symbol in the way that character demands. This job may be performed by a non‐modular part of the mind. Resolving the triad in this way provides a reason to accept that indexicals in thought are possible. (shrink)
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  28. Nietzsche and Goethe.BarkerFairley -1934 - The Manchester University Press.
  29.  11
    nietzsche And Goethe.BarkerFairley -1934 -Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 18 (2):298-314.
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  30.  1
    Nietzsche and the Poetic Impluse.BarkerFairley -1935 - The Manchester University Press.
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  31.  35
    Our Own Master Race: Eugenics in Canada, 1885-1945. Angus McLaren.Gina Feldberg -1992 -Isis 83 (4):695-696.
  32. Filed Under: Uncategorized by admin Jul. 11, 2012.Gina Kolata -forthcoming -Cogito.
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  33.  25
    Premium Increases in State Health Insurance Programs: Lessons from a Case Study of the Massachusetts Medicaid Buy-in Program.Gina A. Livermore,Nanette Goodman,Fred Hooven &Lobat Hashemi -2007 -Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 44 (4):428-442.
  34.  20
    Embodying Asian/American Sexualities.Gina Maséquesmay &Sean Metzger (eds.) -2009 - Lexington Books.
    Embodying Asian/American Sexualities is an accessible reader designed for use in undergraduate and graduate American studies, ethnic studies, gender and sexuality studies, and performance studies classes as well as for a general public interested in related issues. It contains both overviews of the field and scholarly interventions into a range of topics, including history, literature, performance, and sociology.
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  35.  26
    L'émergence du domaine d'étude de la communication interculturelle.Gina Stoiciu -2008 -Hermes 51:33.
    Cette réflexion sur le champ de recherche en communication interculturelle part du principe que les avancées théoriques s'élaborent au travers d'une dynamique ancrée autant dans le contexte des pratiques de recherche que dans l'évolution interne du champ de recherche. Tout d'abord, on tente de délimiter les moments clés qui ont présidé à l'émergence de ce nouveau domaine des deux côtés de l'Atlantique. Une fois établi que la communication interculturelle est un nouveau champ de recherche où se constituent un langage, des (...) théories et des méthodologies qui lui sont propres, la deuxième étape consistera à dresser la carte de son territoire, autrement dit, à préciser quels sont les objets, les approches et les postures méthodologiques qui coexistent dans ce champ.This reflection on the field of intercultural communication research assumes that theoretical advances are developed through a dynamic rooted both in the context of research practices in the internal evolution of the field of research. Firstly, we try to define the key moments that led to the emergence of this new field on both sides of the Atlantic. Once established as intercultural communication is a new field of research which is a language, theories and methodologies that are unique, the second step is to map its territory, ie to specify which objects are the methodological approaches and postures that exist in this field. (shrink)
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  36.  93
    The case for egalitarian consciousness raising in higher education.Gina Schouten -2022 -Philosophical Studies 179 (9):2921-2944.
    Many college teachers believe that teaching can promote justice. Meanwhile, many in the broader American public disparage college classrooms as spaces of left-wing partisanship. This paper engages with that charge of partisanship. Section 1 introduces the charge. Then, in Sect. 2, I consider what teaching for justice should aim to do. I argue that selective institutions of higher education impose positional costs on members of a generation who do not attend them, and that those positional costs accrue not only in (...) terms of distributive equality but also in terms of civic equality. Teaching for justice, I argue, should be understood as an attempt to lessen those costs. But the civic equality costs that selective higher education imposes can be meaningfully lessened only by a radical version of teaching for justice: educational consciousness raising for institutional reform. This sets up a high hurdle for any defense against the partisanship charge, because the kind of teaching for justice we have most justice-related reason to engage in seems especially susceptible to that charge. Section 3 gives a public reasons case in favor of teaching for justice so understood. Because civic equality is a commitment we all ought to share as free and equal citizens, teaching for justice aimed at restoring civic equality enjoys a public reasons justification. Still, an all-things-considered assessment of our permissions or obligations to engage in this teaching project awaits a careful thinking through of the case against it. (shrink)
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  37.  49
    An asymmetric inhibition model of hemispheric differences in emotional processing.Gina M. Grimshaw &David Carmel -2014 -Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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  38.  40
    Tea With Milk? A Hierarchical Generative Framework of Sequential Event Comprehension.Gina R. Kuperberg -2021 -Topics in Cognitive Science 13 (1):256-298.
    Inspired by, and in close relation with, the contributions of this special issue, Kuperberg elegantly links event comprehension, production, and learning. She proposes an overarching hierarchical generative framework of processing events enabling us to make sense of the world around us and to interact with it in a competent manner.
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  39.  7
    Confucian relational personhood and oppressed agents.Gina Lebkuecher -forthcoming -Asian Philosophy:1-23.
    Classical Confucians, contemporary feminists, and comparative philosophers have argued that roles and relationships constitute our agency and autonomy. These philosophers argue that who we are, including our desires, intentions, and values, can be explained by our relationships—e.g. to family, peers, or friends—and roles—e.g. as teacher or daughter. However, some argue relational views fail to robustly explain autonomy in a way that captures the harms of oppression. I argue that Classical Confucian understandings of relational agency, which endorse a weak source normativity (...) and emphasize the importance of normative ‘checks’ on relationships and roles, can help answer this worry. Rituals, relationships, and roles help to shape, direct, and express natural attitudes and affects in accordance with normatively primary understandings of relational human nature and harmony. Classical Confucianism can thus shed light on the construction of relational agency and offer insight into how oppressed subjects may undermine oppression. (shrink)
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  40.  11
    The Role of Foreign News Coverage in Adolescent Political Socialization.Gina Garramone &Charles Atkin -1984 -Communications 10 (1-3):43-62.
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  41.  21
    Genetic influences on the environment.Gina Grimshaw &M. P. Bryden -1994 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 17 (4):750-751.
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  42.  14
    Gender Differences in Peer Influence on Autistic Traits in Special Needs Schools—Evidence From Staff Reports.Gina Nenniger,Verena Hofmann &Christoph M. Müller -2021 -Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Children and adolescents with an intellectual disability and autistic traits often attend special needs schools where they are surrounded by peers with diverse characteristics. Given the role that peers can play in social development, we examined whether autistic traits development in students with ID and high levels of such characteristics are influenced by the level of autistic traits among the schoolmates they like most. Furthermore, we investigated the degree to which this peer influence susceptibility depends on students’ gender. A longitudinal (...) design, with data collection points at the beginning and the end of a school year, was used. Staff reported on 330 students with high levels of autistic traits who attended 142 classrooms in 16 Swiss special needs schools. Results showed that students’ future individual level of autistic traits was not predicted by the autistic traits level of preferred peers, controlling for individual autistic traits at T1, level of general functioning, gender, and age. However, the peer effect was significantly moderated by students’ gender, indicating that girls but not boys were susceptible to peer influence. These findings are discussed in terms of implications for understanding autistic traits development and directions of support for children and adolescents in their peer context. (shrink)
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  43.  54
    Measuring Intimate Partner Violence and Traumatic Affect: Development of VITA, an Italian Scale.Gina Troisi -2018 -Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  44.  33
    Making medical decisions for an incompetent older adult when both a proxy and an advance directive are available: which is more likely to reflect the older adult’s preferences?Gina Bravo,Modou Sene &Marcel Arcand -2018 -Journal of Medical Ethics 44 (7):498-503.
    ObjectivesTo investigate which of two sources of information about an older adult’s wishes—choices made in an advance directive or proxy’s opinion—provides better insight into the older adult’s preferences measured in hypothetical clinical situations involving decisional incapacity.MethodsSecondary analyses of data collected from 157 community-dwelling, decisionally competent adults aged 70 years and over who attended a group information session on advance directives with their proxy. Older adults were invited to complete a directive introduced during the session, designed to express healthcare preferences. An (...) average of 3 months later, older adults were asked during an interview whether they would want to receive each of four medical interventions and what their goals of care would be should they develop one of three sudden health events, assuming that they had severe dementia. Proxies were asked to guess the older adult’s answers in each of the seven scenarios.ResultsEighty per cent of the older adults completed the directive. Choices they made in the directive were more in line with the preferences they stated during the interview than were their proxies’ guesses at their answers. However, concordance was relatively low, with percentages of agreement ranging from 43% to 83% across scenarios.ConclusionsFindings suggest that a directive might provide better insight into a person’s wishes than the person’s proxy, although neither source is perfect. A multifaceted decision-making model that includes both sources of information might better serve the interests of older adults who have lost the capacity to make decisions on their own.Trial registration numberISRCTN89993391; Post-results. (shrink)
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  45.  40
    Exploring Societal and Ethical Views of Nanotechnology REUs.Gina M. Eosco,Meghnaa Tallapragada,Katherine A. McComas &Merrill Brady -2014 -NanoEthics 8 (1):91-99.
    Little previous research has examined attitudes about societal and ethical issues (SEI) among interns participating in research experience for undergraduate programs (REUs) in nanotechnology, thus neglecting an important population for understanding the burgeoning views of the next generation of nanotechnology researchers. This study surveyed a sample of interns (N = 85) participating in the National Nanotechnology Infrastructure Network’s (NNIN) REU program during the summer of 2012. Our questions focused on interns’ experiences with education on ethical issues, as well as their (...) attribution of responsibility for considering ethical issues, motivations to talk about ethical issues, and comfort level of discussing ethical issues with faculty, mentors, lab staff, and other REU students. Among key findings was that lab culture related to the extent to which REU interns felt comfortable discussing ethical issues. In addition, those who reported more discussions about ethical issues with their mentors were more likely to consider themselves as responsible for considering ethical issues. We conclude with recommendations and future research directions. (shrink)
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  46.  116
    Restricting Justice: Political Interventions in the Home and in the Market.Gina Schouten -2013 -Philosophy and Public Affairs 41 (4):357-388.
  47.  391
    Fetuses, Orphans, and a Famous Violinist.Gina Schouten -2017 -Social Theory and Practice 43 (3):637-665.
    In this paper, I urge feminists to re-center fetal moral status in their theorizing about abortion. I argue that fundamental feminist normative commitments are at odds with efforts to de-emphasize fetal moral status: The feminist commitment to ensuring care for dependents supports surprising conclusions with regard to the ethics of abortion, and the feminist commitment to politicizing the personal has surprising conclusions regarding the politics of abortion. But these feminist insights also support the conclusion that, conditional on fetal moral status, (...) care for unwanted fetuses would be a social obligation that only derivatively falls to women who are unwillingly pregnant. (shrink)
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  48.  18
    The Anticipatory Politics of Improving Childhood Survival for Sickle Cell Disease.Gina Jae -2018 -Science, Technology, and Human Values 43 (6):1122-1141.
    Crediting scientific discovery for prolonging life is pervasive in biomedical histories of the genetic blood disorder, sickle cell disease. This includes the preventive strategies, such as newborn screening, that have underwritten the success of its life-extending interventions. Newborn screening is a technology that relies not only upon intact health infrastructures but also expertise and enhanced vigilance on the part of caregivers to anticipate complications while they are still open to circumvention. This paper posits that even after overcoming institutional barriers to (...) make newborn screening equitably available, care and vigilance are resources that are themselves subject to what I term anticipatory politics, where structural conditions also stratify expectations for the future, including the affective appeal of medical innovations. This paper elaborates the paradigm of anticipatory politics through an ethnographic examination of newborn screening to connect the comprehensive care practices that have improved survival for sickle cell disease, and as the burden of mortality shifts to young adulthood, to expose how those who are resourced to care for these futures preferentially stand to benefit from preventive interventions. (shrink)
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  49.  146
    Fair Educational Opportunity and the Distribution of Natural Ability: Toward a Prioritarian Principle of Educational Justice.Gina Schouten -2012 -Journal of Philosophy of Education 46 (3):472-491.
    In this article, I develop and defend a prioritarian principle of justice for the distribution of educational resources. I argue that this principle should be conceptualized as directing educators to confer a general benefit, where that benefit need not be mediated by improved academic outcomes. I go on to argue that it should employ a metric of all-things-considered flourishing over the course of the student's lifetime. Finally, I discuss the relationship between my proposed prioritarian principle and the meritocratic principle that (...) it is presumed to supplement. (shrink)
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  50.  107
    Political liberalism and autonomy education: Are citizenship-based arguments enough?Gina Schouten -2018 -Philosophical Studies 175 (5):1071-1093.
    Several philosophers of education argue that schooling should facilitate students’ development of autonomy. Such arguments fall into two main categories: Student-centered arguments support autonomy education to help enable students to lead good lives; Public-goods-centered arguments support autonomy education to develop students into good citizens. Critics challenge the legitimacy of autonomy education—of the state imposing a schooling curriculum aimed at making children autonomous. In this paper, I offer a unified solution to the challenges of legitimacy that both arguments for autonomy education (...) face. I first defend a particular construal of liberal legitimacy, and then consider each legitimacy challenge in light of that construal. I argue that the legitimacy challenges confronting both types of argument can be overcome. Further, I explain why we should pursue both arguments, rather than resting the entire case for autonomy education on one or the other. I conclude that each argument—if it can justify autonomy education at all—can justify autonomy education consistent with the requirements of liberal democratic legitimacy. (shrink)
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