Monthly Archives: March 2025

Bibliography: Human Rights (Part 356 of 406)

Walsh, Frank (1988). Public Relations & the Law. This monograph synthesizes the laws and regulations that form the basis of the right to representation in the court of public opinion by all who would seek to influence public and private decisions. It expresses the framework of human and social values that underlie this constitutional freedom and that give public relations and other management communication disciplines their force and importance in a democratic society. Intended to be a desk-top reference for the practitioner, this monograph provides an overview of the law and its application to public relations. When available, guidelines by government agencies or regulations have been included. The areas of the law that are covered in the monograph are privacy, copyright, advertising and corporate speech, defamation, and financial public relations. An appendix provides a reference to the Public Relations Society of America's (PRSA) code of professional standards. (MS)…

Ashton, Patricia (1980). Strategies for Educational Progress in the Eighties. Those concerned about promoting children's academic achievement must first be concerned about insuring all children the right to adequate food, shelter, security, and love. When these elemental needs have been met, students are then free to respond to their need to know and understand. If schools can respond to children's needs to belong, to be appreciated and valued, to acquire meaningful skills, to contribute to important human endeavors–then the eighties will be a decade of significant educational progress. Major efforts needed to achieve these goals include: (1) school programs aimed at the development of social responsibility; (2) specifications of long range educational goals and development of appropriate instruments for evaluation of goal attainment; (3) curriculum materials that are developmentally appropriate; (4) development of effective teacher-student relationships; (5) research aimed at solving school problems; and (6) professional education of teachers. (CJ)… [PDF]

Rader, Brian F. (1979). The Political Scientist as an Academic Humanist. The paper discusses possibilities for political scientists to work with an adult non-campus public through grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities. Humanities are defined in terms of those academic disciplines concerned with the records, interpretation, and evaluation of human knowledge. The author describes his success with six different grant proposals and thirty different programs in eastern Oklahoma towns and cities. His focus has been to teach political concepts through the interdisciplinary approaches of literature and politics. The programs have dealt with the quality of life in rural America, future problems, problems of the aged and youth, Cherokee history, and consumer rights. The works of William Faulkner and of Arna Bontemps are featured. The author concludes that the political scientist's training in analyzing man and his environment provide him with a unique perspective as a facilitator of humanities programs. (KC)…

Nilsen, Alleen; Nilsen, Don (2003). Changing Words in a Changing World: A Source-Based and Process Approach to Teaching Vocabulary. A source-based approach to teaching vocabulary means starting with basic concepts that have been in human languages since their beginnings and then working with lexical and metaphorical extensions of these basic words. The purpose is not so much to teach children history, as it is to find groups of words. When words are taught in related groups, the meanings reinforce each other and children gain insights into language as a system. Fundamental principles of the source-based approach include the following: words have multiple meanings; right answers are better than wrong answers; teachers should move from the known to the unknown; thinking skills are more important than memorization skills; language is a social phenomenon; and teachers need to recognize the difference between coincidental puns and metaphorical extensions. Includes three suggested readings and a sample chart from a lesson. (PM)… [PDF]

Unterhalter, E. (2005). Global Inequality, Capabilities, Social Justice: The Millennium Development Goal for Gender Equality in Education. International Journal of Educational Development, v25 n2 p111-122 Mar. The Millennium Development Goal (MDG) for gender equality in education by 2005 has been criticised for its grandiose ambition, its failure to adequately conceptualise the nature of gender inequality or the diverse forms this takes, the inadequate policies developed to put the goal into practice and the limited measurements used for monitoring. The paper argues for a strategic defence of the MDG as an opportunity to think more widely about what the contents of rights in education are and how gender equality might be advanced. Drawing on the capability approach of Amartya Sen and Martha Nussbaum it considers gender equality in education in relation to wellbeing and agency freedom and achievement. Utilising Thomas Pogge's taxonomy of institutional conditions for human flourishing the paper considers how global, national and local policy might better measure gender equality in pursuit of the MDG…. [Direct]

Gregory, Anne; Strambler, Michael J.; Weinstein, Rhona S. (2004). Intractable Self-Fulfilling Prophecies Fifty Years After Brown v. Board of Education. American Psychologist, v59 n6 p511-520 Sep. The civil rights struggle for equal educational opportunity has yet to be achieved at the start of the 21st century. Inequality persists but problem and remedy are refrained from integrating schools, to ensuring equal access in resegregated settings, to closing the performance gap. As seen through ecological theory (R. S. Weinstein, 2002b), complex, multilayered, and interactive negative self-fulfilling prophecies create or perpetuate educational inequities and unequal outcomes. Society has failed to grapple with its entrenched roots in the achievement culture of schools. If this insidious dynamic is to be changed, an educational system that sorts for differentiated pathways must be replaced with one that develops the talents of all. Psychology has a critical role to play in promoting a new understanding of malleable human capabilities and optimal conditions for their nurturance in schooling…. [Direct]

Baucus, David; Baucus, Melissa (2005). The Changing Shape of Corporate Universities. Innovate: Journal of Online Education, v1 n5 Jun-Jul. About seven years ago, technological innovation gave rise to the e-learning industry and the growth of corporate universities. Early in the evolution of the industry, corporate universities represented a reasonable deployment of learning technologies. They enabled companies to deliver the right content to target markets (e.g., employees, partners, and customers) and to reduce training costs by substituting technology for labor. Recent trends, however, suggest that human resource (HR)-based corporate universities have lost some of their luster. Chief financial officers (CFOs) and business managers are exercising more influence over the use of learning technologies in core business operations by employing enterprise, organization, and workflow models. In this article, the authors describe changes in the e-learning industry and corporate universities that serve to embed learning into the explicit activities of the workplace. (Contains 1 exhibit.)… [PDF]

Bennett, William J. (1987). Sex and the Education of Our Children. Schools, teachers, and principals must help develop good character by putting children in the presence of adults of good character who live the difference between right and wrong. Sex education is about character; in a sex education course issues of right and wrong should occupy center stage. In too may cases, however, sex education in American classrooms is a destructive experience. Statistics such as the number of teenage pregnancies illustrate how boys and girls are mistreating one another sexually. Many sex education courses offer the illusion of action, relaying only technical information and possible outcomes\ are devoid of moral content. This kind of teaching displays a conscious aversion to making moral distinctions; it encourages students not to make the \right\ decision, but the \comfortable\ decision. Most American parents value postponing sex and raising children in the context of marriage. Despite this fact, some say that teenage sex is such a pervasive reality that… [PDF]

Cunningham, Phyllis, Ed.; Ohliger, John, Ed. (1989). Radical Thinking in Adult Education. Occasional Paper No. 1. These five papers represent original research on various issues important to the field of adult education that draws on Syracuse University's collection of adult education materials. "Back to the Future with C. Wright Mills and the Center for the Study of Liberal Education for Adults" (Ollie Owen) provides background on Mills, the Center, and the situation in which they interacted. "Adult Education and Feminist Theory: Radical Thinking in Adult Education" (Jane Hugo) traces Hugo's personal history of involvement in feminist thought, outlines feminist theory, and explores the problems of implementing that theory in adult education work and in the graduate study of the field. "On the Idea of an Emancipatory Pedagogy" (Brent Snow) examines feminist theory, the approaches of Freireans, and the approaches of human potential activists. "Eva vom Baur Hansl: Brain-Ideas vs. Life-Ideas" (Bernita Bowen) discusses the extensive materials in the Hansl…

Terpstra, Jake (1984). Licensing of Children's Services. The purpose of licensing is to provide protection in circumstances in which people are vulnerable and to mandate that positive services will be provided. The common denominator of human vulnerability in licensed children's services is the fact that the children are in the care of someone other than their families. Licensed services include family day care homes, day care centers, child placing agencies, family foster homes, and child care institutions. Licensing mandates a basic level of quality because it is the floor below which it is not legal to operate. Licensing is selective in that it usually follows children who are placed by public agencies or children whose care is paid for by public agencies. Licensing also increases following tragedies and scandals that receive public attention. Strong arguments exist for administering licensing at the state level, but state level licensing means that there is variation in standards from state to state. Licensing for child placing… [PDF]

Riscalla, Louise Mead (1975). Legislative Backlash: The Dilemma and Alternatives. Distinctions must be made between the positive intent of certain legislation and the negative backlash which this legislation can create for those persons it is intended to help and protect. Recent laws have been passed, for example, requiring physicians to obtain a patient's consent before treatment can begin and to provide sufficient information to the patient so that he can make an intelligent decision. Problems arise, however, when the patient does not have the capacity to consent or if the patient is institutionalized and, therefore, conditioned to obey officers in charge, or is of \lower\socioeconomic status and lacks knowledge of legal recourse. The field of children's legislation, also, provides a wealth of examples to support the thesis that the intent and reality of certain legislation are not congruent. Children are now entitled to due process in the school system and can abuse enlightened parents, teachers, and other professionals concerned with their education if youth… [PDF]

Gordon, David T., Ed.; Gravel, Jenna W., Ed.; Schifter, Laura A., Ed. (2009). A Policy Reader in Universal Design for Learning. Harvard Education Press Universal Design for Learning (UDL) stands at the forefront of contemporary efforts to create access to education curricula for all students, including those with disabilities. This policy reader comprises a notably wide range of articles that address the challenges and opportunities facing policy makers as they consider UDL's implications for federal, state, and local policy. It includes essays that place UDL in the context of the education field as a whole and that examine how UDL might inform pressing contemporary discussions about accountability and access to the curriculum. The volume also sheds light on various assistive technologies. It concludes by considering contemporary assessments of student learning and teacher effectiveness, and points to how they might be improved through UDL and by expanding opportunities for learning to more young people. A timely and much-needed volume, "A Policy Reader in Universal Design for Learning" brings UDL to the center of… [Direct]

Puolimatka, Tapio (2005). Augustine and Education in Critical Thinking. Journal of Beliefs & Values, v26 n2 p191-200 Aug. Augustine's concept of the deep self provides a basis for a complex and many-faceted account of critical thinking. He uncovers the moral sources of thinking in the inner depths of the self and shows that critical thinking presupposes radical self-reflection ready to face the truth about oneself. Self-knowledge assumes transparency, consciousness of the corrupt desires and prejudices that distort one's thinking. Unresolved guilt endangers transparency and thereby makes it difficult to become aware of the vices distorting one's perspective on reality. That is why human beings need divine grace that gives them the courage to face their corruption. For Augustine, the problem of critical thinking is part of a larger problem about how the human self and identity are formed, which factors influence the process, and how a person comes to know herself. Augustine writes an open account of his life in order to clarify this problem. His intention is to make sense of the nature of his self by… [Direct]

(1995). Code of Ethics and Standards of Practice. As Approved by Governing Council, April 1995, Effective July 1, 1995. The American Counseling Association (ACA) is an educational, scientific, and professional organization whose members are dedicated to the enhancement of human development. In line with this dedication to human development, the principles that define the ethical behavior required of ACA members are presented here. All members are required to adhere to the ACA Code of Ethics, as well as the ACA Standards of Practice (also listed here). The ACA Code of Ethics, which serves as the basis for processing ethical complaints initiated against members, opens with rules regarding the counseling relationship, including client welfare, client rights, dual relationships, sexual intimacies with clients, multiple clients, fees and bartering, termination and referral, and computer technology. The next section centers on confidentiality issues, and addresses such concerns as privacy, disclosure, records, research and training, and consultation. Professional responsibility is then covered, with codes…

James, Olive C. R., Ed.; Matson, Hollis N., Ed. (1990). University Commission on Human Relations: Focusing on Racism & Other Forms of Discrimination. Final Report. Volume IV: Collected Campus Policies. For this report on human relations and discrimination at the San Francisco State University (SFSU), campus policies impacting on students, faculty, and the university as a whole were collected. The first section reprints policies affecting students and contains a statement of student rights and responsibilities, student disciplinary procedures, grade appeal practices and procedures, student grievance procedures, and review by the Board of Appeals. Policies relating to faculty concerns include: a code of faculty conduct; academic freedom; academic affirmative action; qualifications for tenure track faculty; hiring of tenure track faculty; and temporary faculty. Policies relating to the university as a whole focus on: disabled students, faculty, and staff; sexual harassment; non-academic affirmative action; academic equity goals; and self-evaluation of compliance with the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, Section 504. Also included are the "SFSU Faculty Manual" and the "SFSU…

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Bibliography: Human Rights (Part 357 of 406)

Olmsted, Barney; And Others (1979). Job Sharing in the Public Sector. Job sharing is defined as "two people sharing the responsibilities of one full-time position with salary and benefits prorated"; the concept focuses on positions usually offered only as full-time jobs, often in professional and managerial categories. This book presents an overview of current job sharing and permanent part-time employment practices in city, county, state and federal agencies. The first chapter of the book defines job sharing, discusses the background of job sharing in light of the changing needs of workers, and points out potential benefits of job sharing, such as more efficient use of human resources, aid in recruiting employees, and maintaining quality in human services programs. The second chapter overviews considerations affecting successful implementation of job sharing, such as cost factors, union cooperation, lay-off rights for part-timers, establishing quotas, personnel ceilings, reversibility, recruitment, and CETA. The third chapter explains how… [PDF]

Johnson, Paul G., Ed.; Machacek, Rosemary, Ed. (1984). Perspectives: Women in Nebraska History. Seventeen essays direct attention to the lives and achievements of outstanding women in Nebraska history. Most of the women described in the essays did their major work in literature, the arts, education, or some other related human service. Only two essays are not focused on specific women–"Union Maids in Omaha Labor History, 1887-1945," which depicts the role of Nebraska women in the labor movement, and "The Community Builder: Architects of Nebraska," which emphasizes the role that women played in establishing social and civic order, education, and artistic endeavors in their communities. Two essays focus on Native Americans Angel DeCora Dietz (a Winnebago artist and teacher) and the LaFlesche sisters (activists for Indian rights). Remaining essays focus on the lives of other outstanding women, including Dorothy Creigh, writer and authority on the human drama of Nebraska; Leta S. Hollingworth, internationally known psychologist; Virginia Faulker and Bernice…

(2002). Issues of HRD. Symposium. This document contains three papers from a symposium on issues of human resource development (HRD). "The Complex Roots of Human Resource Development" (Monica Lee) discusses the roots of HRD within the framework of the following views of management: (1) classic (the view that managers must be able to create appropriate rules and procedures for others, be good judges of people, and able to take independent action); (2) scientific (the view that, with the right training, anyone can acquire good management techniques); (3) processual (the view assuming that the economic advantage will come to those who are best able to spot opportunities, learn rapidly, and create appropriate commitment among colleagues); and (4) phenomenological (the view that management is mainly about the "study of being"). "HRD Literature: Where Is It Published?" (Larry M. Dooley) explores whether HRD professionals are continuing to publish primarily in the same five journals identified… [PDF]

Branden, Nathaniel (1990). What Is Self-Esteem?. By \self-esteem\ is meant more than an innate sense of self-worth that presumably is a human birthright. Self-esteem is individuals' experience that they are appropriate to life and to the requirements of life. More specifically, self-esteem is confidence in the ability to think; confidence in the ability to cope with the challenges of life; and confidence in the right to be happy, the feeling of being worthy, deserving, entitled to assert one's needs and wants and to enjoy the fruits of one's efforts. Self-esteem is not a free gift, but a possession over time which represents an achievement. To say that self-esteem is a basic human need is to say that it makes an essential contribution to the life process; that it is indispensable to normal and healthy development; and that it has survival-value. If individuals do not believe in themselves the universe is a frightening place. The change from a manufacturing society to an information society and other social changes create demands…

Acikgoz, Firat; Sert, Olcay (2006). Interlingual Machine Translation: Prospects and Setbacks. Online Submission, Translation Journal v10 n3. This study, in an attempt to rise above the intricacy of \being informed on the verge of globalization,\ is founded on the premise that Machine Translation (MT) applications searching for an ideal key to find a universal foundation for all natural languages have a restricted say over the translation process at various discourse levels. Our paper favors not judging against the superiority of human translation vs. machine translation or automated translation in non-English speaking settings, but rather referring to the inadequacies and adequacies of MT at certain pragmatic levels, lacking the right sense and dynamic equivalence, but producing syntactically well-formed or meaning-extractable outputs in restricted settings. Reasoning in this way, the present study supports MT before, during, and after translation. It aims at making translators understand that they could cooperate with the software to obtain a synergistic effect. In other words, they could have a say and have an essential… [PDF]

(1988). Age Discrimination in Employment Act–Waiver of Rights. Hearing before the Subcommittee on Labor of the Committee on Labor and Human Resources, United States Senate, One Hundredth Congress, Second Session. This congressional hearing addresses the issue of the waiver of rights under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA). It reviews an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission rule permitting employees to waive their rights under the ADEA without federal supervision. Testimony includes statements, prepared statements, articles, publications, and communications from the Assistant Secretary of Labor, Solicitor of Labor, United States Senators, private citizens, and individuals representing the United States Activities Board, University of Wisconsin Law School, American Association of Retired Persons, United States Chamber of Commerce, California Employment Council, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Boston College Law School, Polaroid Corporation, Union Carbide Corporation, AT&T, and IBM. (YLB)… [PDF]

(1982). Annual Evaluation Report of Federally-Funded Educational Programs, FY 1982. This summary evaluation report is designed to (1) give an indication of how Oklahoma achieves the goals of Federal programs; (2) increase understanding of various Federal programs; and (3) show the degree of achievement of the goals of the State-Federal Programs Division. The following programs are described: Adult Basic Education; Arts in Education Program; Basic Skills Improvement; Career Education; Civil Rights Technical Assistance and Training Programs; Compensatory Education; Dissemination Capacity Building; Educational Improvement, Resources, and Support; Gifted and Talented Education; Human Relations; Indian Education; K-12 Traffic Safety Education; School Bus Driver Training Program; School Lunch Section; School Plant Services Section; Special Education Programs and Projects; State Leadership; Transition Program for Refugee Children; and Women into the Superintendency Position. Each brief evaluation report contains information on the program's purpose, state allocation of…

Crow, Karen, Comp.; Martin, Joan, Ed. (1978). Consumer Education: Consumer Education I and Consumer Education II. Course Objectives, Content Analysis, Supporting Objectives and Content Generalizations. Consumer education course objectives, content analysis, supporting objectives, and content generalizations are presented in this teacher's guide for Consumer Education 1 and 2 for the San Diego Unified School District. Course objectives are aimed at several areas of consumer and family studies: consumer education, cultural awareness, human potential (including sex stereotyping), and career education. A grid is included to summarize and show quickly how each course objective relates to these four emphases. A course rationale, description, objectives, and goals are given for Consumer Education 1 and 2. Areas studied under content analysis include: life styles; decision making–consumer behavior; consumer in the economy; rights and responsibilities; money management; savings; borrowing; buying (food marketplace, clothing, transportation, housing and home furnishings); environment; and employment and employability. Suggested time sequences are also listed. These same areas are then… [PDF]

(1998). Confidentiality and Informed Consent. An Introductory Packet. This packet contains materials that constitute an introduction to issues of confidentiality and informed consent in therapy or educational placement. Procedural safeguards for special education assignment have been designed to ensure that parents are involved in decisions regarding the testing and placement of their child. Issues of informed consent enter as the rights of parents and children are considered. This packet contains: (1) an overview of confidentiality and informed consent issues; (2) a discussion of "The Confidentiality Dilemma"; (3) a discussion of "Minor Consent"; (4) an overview of some basic resources, including references, models, experts to consult, agencies and resource organizations, and Internet resources; (5) a sample digest from the ERIC system; and (6) an excerpt from "Overcoming Confidentiality Barriers in Human Services Collaboration for At-Risk Youth" by William E. Davis. (Concluding article contains 26 references.) (SLD)… [PDF]

(1993). International Charter of Physical Education and Sport. The International Charter of Physical Education and Sport was adopted by the General Conference of the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in 1978 and amended in 1991. The charter's purpose is to place the development of physical education and sport at the service of human progress. The charter's individual articles address the following concerns: (1) the fundamental right to physical education and sport; (2) physical education and sport as an essential element of lifelong education; (3) meeting individual and social needs; (4) the importance of qualified personnel; (5) adequate facilities and equipment; (6) research and evaluation; (7) protection of the ethical and moral values of physical education and sport; (8) promotion through information and documentation; (9) influence of mass media; (10) role of national institutions; and (11) international cooperation as a prerequisite for the universal and well-balanced promotion of physical…

Burgenbauch, Susan; Cooney, Joe (1981). Preparation for the World of Work: Training Sessions. This guide is designed to provide counselors and training instructors with the materials to teach clients the human survival skills necessary for job success. Ten one-hour training sessions which offer an action-oriented approach emphasizing conceptual skills such as planning, communication, and decision making include: (1) the importance of effective communication in work situations; (2) practice in interpersonal relationship skills; (3) methods for resolving conflict on the job; (4) employer expectations and the roles and responsibilities of the employees; (5) job survival techniques; (6) identification of job goals and methods for achieving them; (7) practice in daily planning and goal setting while on the job; (8) information on employee benefits and rights; (9) ways to plan and budget; and (10) money management. The purpose, length of time needed, materials needed, step-by-step procedures, worksheets, and transparencies for the presentation of each lesson are provided. (JW)…

(1985). Handicapped Children's Protection Act of 1985. Hearing before the Subcommittee on the Handicapped. United States Senate, Ninety-Ninth Congress, First Session on S. 415. To Amend the Education of the Handicapped Act to Authorize the Award of Reasonable Attorneys' Fees to Certain Prevailing Parties, and to Clarify the Effect of the…Act on Rights, Procedures, and Remedies under Other Laws Relating to the Prohibition of Discrimination. The document records testimony presented at a hearing on the Handicapped Children's Protection Act of 1985, which gives federal judges discretion to award to prevailing parents reasonable attorneys' fees associated with bringing their case to court. Prepared statements are presented from officials representing the American Association on Mental Deficiency, Consortium for Citizens with Developmental Disabilities, Council for Exceptional Children, Wisconsin Coalition for Advocacy, American Civil Liberties Union, Human Resources Center, and Florida Protection and Advocacy Agency. Statements of attorneys, parents, and senators are also presented. It is explained that the bill is a response to the U.S. Supreme Court's 1984 decision in Smith v. Robinson which ruled that P.L. 94-142 does not allow the award of attorneys' fees to parents who, after exhausting all available administrative procedures, prevail in a civil court action to protect their child's right to a free and appropriate… [PDF]

(1965). TOWARD QUALITY INTEGRATED EDUCATION–BLUEPRINT FOR FURTHER ACTION. PROPOSALS FOR DISCUSSION. RECOMMENDATIONS ARE PRESENTED WITH REFERENCE TO SCHOOL REORGANIZATION AND QUALITY INTEGRATED EDUCATION AS THE RESULT OF 9 MONTHS OF INTENSIVE STUDY AND PLANNING BEGINNING WITH THE ISSUANCE IN MAY 1964, OF THE REPORT OF THE STATE EDUCATION COMMISSIONER'S ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON HUMAN RELATIONS AND COMMUNITY TENSION. REPRESENTED IS A SYNTHESIS OF THE CURRENT EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM, WITH PLANNED IMPROVEMENT, AND SYNOPSES OF THE SEPARATE REPORTS AND STUDIES OF MANY DIFFERENT COMMITTEES, THE COMMITTEE ON THE "600" SCHOOLS, THE COMMITTEE ON REORGANIZATION OF HIGH SCHOOLS, THE EDUCATIONAL PARK COMMITTEE, THE JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL 6-7-8 COMMITTEE, THE CABINET DIVISIONAL COMMITTEE ON INTEGRATION, AND OTHERS. THEY FLOW AS WELL FROM THE THINKING EXPRESSED BY MANY PARENTS AND CIVIC, COMMUNITY, AND CIVIL RIGHTS GROUPS DURING A LONG SERIES OF CONFERENCES. ALSO PRESENTED IS A TABLE ANALYZING THE ETHNIC COMPOSITION OF SCHOOLS FROM 1958 TO 1965….

LOHMAN, JOSEPH D. (1966). A SOCIOLOGICAL APPROACH TO UNDERSTANDING DISADVANTAGED YOUTH. THE EFFECTS OF THE REVOLUTION IN POPULATION, CIVIL RIGHTS, AND TECHNOLOGY ON VARIOUS GROUPS, SUCH AS ADOLESCENTS, THE LOWER CLASSES, AND MINORITY GROUPS, ARE DISCUSSED. THE TOTAL EFFECT OF THIS REVOLUTION HAS BEEN TO DRIVE THE AMERICAN SOCIETY APART, FORCING IT TO MANIFEST ITSELF IN LOCAL SUBCULTURES WHICH ARE FORMED BY THE PROBLEM-SOLVING TENDENCY OF HUMAN GROUPS WHEN CONFRONTED WITH SPECIFIC AND RECURRENT PROBLEMS. INDIVIDUALS, INCLUDING THE CULTURALLY DISADVANTAGED, MUST BE EVALUATED IN TERMS OF THE VALUES, ATTITUDES, AND PERSPECTIVES OF THEIR SUBCULTURE. THE SCHOOL HAS AN OBLIGATION TO ADJUST ITS GOALS AND PHILOSOPHY IN RELATION TO THE NEEDS OF THE GROUP IT IS SERVING, RATHER THAN TO IMPOSE THE SAME VALUES AND ATTITUDES UPON ALL GROUPS. REASONS FOR THE EXISTENCE OF THE "WAR ON POVERTY" IN AN AFFLUENT SOCIETY AND OBSERVATIONS OF WHY IT IS PARTIALLY UNSUCCESSFUL ARE GIVEN. (PS)… [PDF]

Beers, Roger; And Others (1976). Who's Minding the Shore? A Citizens' Guide to Coastal Management. This citizen's guide is designed to illustrate the ways that citizens can participate in their state's development of a coastal management program. The Provisions of the Coastal Zone Management Act are discussed and the requirements of an effective management program are considered. Some background information outlining the ecological factors affecting coastal ecosystems is included along with a discussion of the pressures put on these systems by human development – offshore oil production and residential subdivisions. Recreational, commercial, and industrial coastal zone activities are considered with respect to their role in management of these areas. An analysis of public and private property ownership rights are examined along with the allowable extent of state regulation. Appendices include: (1) a listing of State Coastal Management Program Managers; (2) Key Federal and State Statutes which bear on the Coastal Zone; (3) Federal Sources of Information; and (4) Suggestions for…

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