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Bibliography: Human Rights (Part 350 of 406)

(1998). Accommodating Adults with Disabilities in Adult Education Programs: Project Final Report. This final report and associated materials describe a 3-year research and demonstration project whose purpose was to provide adult educators and adults with disabilities with validated accommodations useful in instruction and assessment. These accommodations were intended to help individuals with disabilities understand their legal rights, meet their educational needs, and better function in employment and community settings. The three phases of the project involved: first, a descriptive phase involving a national survey of adult education programs, a state survey of enrollees, and a case study of one local program; second, the product development phase, which resulted in a procedural guide based on the Ecology of Human Performance model, and adult educator and learner handbooks; and, third, the field testing and dissemination phase, which involved field testing of the materials at 10 sites in 8 states. Appended are project technical reports, analysis of survey and interview… [PDF]

Geake, John (2004). How Children's Brains Think: Not Left or Right but Both Together. Education 3-13, v32 n3 p65-72. The burgeoning interest over recent decades about the human brain, and possible implications for education, has, perhaps not surprisingly, fostered a suite of urban myths about brain functioning. The prize for the barmiest goes to the one about using only 10% of the brain, but there are plenty more that deserve dishonourable mention. The most insidious from an educational perspective is that children engage exclusively in either left- or right-brain thinking. Regrettably, such nonsense is commonly pedalled in CPD presentations, at quite some expense to schools and LEAs, by enthusiasts who apparently lack the scientific background to interrogate the relevant neuroscience literature at the depth necessary to convey both the real complexities of brain functioning, and the caveats on extrapolating from laboratory to classroom. The brain processes which do underpin thinking, learning, creating and feeling are far more interesting and wondrous than is recognised in such over-simplistic… [Direct]

Harrist, R. Steven; Richardson, Frank C. (2006). Self and Other: Tensions within Modern Liberal Individualism and Moral Education. Forum on Public Policy Online, v2006 n1 Fall. Contemporary moral education of children in America derives from multiple sources including parents, schools, religious institutions, and the media. Thus, children are commonly confronted with inconsistent, perplexing moral demands. This paper focuses on a bewildering mixed message children receive regarding ethics: American society strongly conveys that both relentless self-interest and genuine selflessness are moral imperatives. For example, the economic system promotes self-indulgent consumerism and competition while at the same time children are admonished to respect and even to love others. These contradictory messages emerge from an ethical framework, often termed "liberal individualism," which offsets an emphasis on self-interest with an ethical view of human beings as having dignity and inherent rights. The tension between the ethical poles of radical self-interest and significant commitment to others can be deeply confusing and problematic in practice. In this… [PDF]

Foot, Hugh C. (2006). Student Research and Ethics. Psychology Teaching Review, v12 n1 p82-86. Ethical codes of practice have largely ignored student project work, although there has been some discussion that it ought to be treated as a special case and handled by less stringent ethical review. However, if ethical review is about safeguarding the interests and rights of those who volunteer to participate, then there can be no case for accepting less stringent ethical criteria just because the researcher is a student. In this debating point article two issues are addressed. First, the principle must be established that student research is conducted under competent supervision and it is therefore the supervisor's role to ensure that the student discounts any methodological strategy which places the participants at unacceptable risk. Second, and perhaps more controversially, the question of ethical review is raised for student classroom or field exercises which involve collecting data from human participants to meet practical coursework requirements. The proposal is made that… [PDF] [Direct]

Abdrakhmanov, Asan; Abdullayeva, Gulzira; Kalimoldayeva, Ardak; Khan, Natalya; Nazkhanova, Galiya (2023). The Level of Legal Consciousness in Pedagogical College Students. International Journal of Learning and Change, v15 n2 p170-189. The issue of legal personality formation within consciousness of students in pedagogical institutions is of great importance. The aim of the article was to determine legal consciousness initial condition of pedagogical college students and to propose ways to improve it. The relevance of the study is determined by the fact that pedagogical college students form a possibility of transferring moral and psychological patterns, which includes their legal consciousness in their future professional activity. The key basis within the research structure is represented with definition of legal consciousness initial values and development of methods aimed at its correcting. The initial values and their impact on programs of students' legal consciousness formation are determined. It was found that flexible strategy of legal consciousness level increase can provide full integration of the present aspect into legal framework of teaching process…. [Direct]

Cravedi, Kathleen Gardner; And Others (1985). Elder Abuse: A National Disgrace. A Report by the Chairman of the Subcommittee on Health and Long-Term Care of the Select Committee on Aging. House of Representatives, Ninety-Ninth Congress, First Session. This report presents the results of efforts of the Subcommittee on Health and Long-Term Care to examine the extent of elder abuse in the United States. The executive summary presents details of the actions taken by Congress to pass legislation (H.R. 7551) to help control unwarranted violence against the aged and by the states to pass elder abuse-related laws and procedures to gain compliance with the anticipated new law. The procedures taken by the subcommittee to gain information in the area of elder abuse are outlined, e.g., collecting, reviewing, and tabulating letters and case histories received by the subcommittee over a 4-year period; reviewing all Congressional hearings and reports on elder abuse; and conducting survey and telephone interviews of state human services departments. Section I of the report presents case histories submitted by the states describing physical, financial, psychological, and sexual abuse and violations of rights and self-neglect. SEction II discusses… [PDF]

Kitao, Kenji; Kitao, S. Kathleen (1985). Effects of Social Environment on Japanese and American Communication. The social backgrounds of Japanese and Americans differ in ways that impede complete communication. The Japanese people, historically controlled by the forces of nature, have formed groups as the minimum functioning social units. The individual is only part of the group, and individual rights and obligations have not been clearly developed. Disagreement, if expressed, is expressed ambiguously. Relationships are vertical, and people must determine the level of politeness to use in interactions. To maintain harmonious relationships, good speakers place themselves below the listeners, sometimes not saying enough and expecting the listener to understand by inference. Since the subject of a sentence is often not stated, speakers may give their opinions as someone else's or someone else's opinions as their own. In contrast, native English-speaking peoples historically have not been as dependent on each other for survival; individualism and privacy are well-developed, and individual rights… [PDF]

Lovin, Robin W. (1978). Rights to What? A Brief Look at \Affirmative Discrimination.\. The movement to undo the damage of American racism and to establish the conditions for genuine racial equality has lost its momentum, both in the academic community and in the Congress. The prevailing academic caution with regard to busing and affirmative action is best articulated by Nathan Glazer in his book \Affirmative Discrimination,\ which details the problems inherent in equal opportunity programs. His argument centers around the idea that quotas, racial percentages, and group rights not only discriminate against the individual, but are also un-American. Although the rights of individuals are important, individualism alone cannot provide the basis for institutional changes necessary to eradicate the effects of past discrimination and set the stage for genuine equality in the future. To end discrimination, we need women and minorities in positions of power, competence and control, not because these positions represent opportunities for individuals, but because this is the best…

Arbur, Rosemarie (1976). Literary Foremothers Rediscovered: Knight, Fuller, Stanton, and Sojourner Truth. The literary works of four American women who lived before 1900 deserve to be introduced, if not reintroduced, to the study of literature in the United States, because of their literary merit, variety, and valuable contributions to American literary history. In a journal edited from a diary kept during a round-trip horseback journey from Boston to New York, Sarah Kemble Knight (1666-1727) wrote in the tradition of Puritan diarists, with a delightful sense of humor. The able literary critic, Margaret Fuller (1810-1850), composed distinctly original essays and literary reviews, while her contemporary, Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815-1902), formulated many of the feminist principles which Susan B. Anthony (a close friend) and other feminists made famous, edited the "History of Woman Suffrage," and explained her radical feminism in an autobiography. In a speech delivered at an 1851 women's rights convention, Sojourner Truth (1797-1883) eloquently pointed out the flaws in the… [PDF]

Chen, Shun-Ling (2006). Freedom as in a Self-Sustainable Community: The Free Software Movement and Its Challenge to Copyright Law. Policy Futures in Education, v4 n4 p337-347. Copyright law, together with the market logic it carries, penetrates deeply into our daily life. The copyright regime is so restrictive that it turns a normal learning process into a series of potential copyright violations. The Free Software Movement (FSM) represents a substantial community effort to counter this trend. It seeks to supersede the copyright regime by offering the "Copyleft" licensing mode, which facilitates the formation of a cooperative, resource-sharing community. The FSM has been so successful that it has challenged the utilitarian values presumed in copyright law, has fuelled widespread reassessment of copyright law, and has influenced many who engage in various creative activities. Claiming to bear similar values, Creative Commons (CC) provides licensing models for people to waive some rights granted to them. However, CC differs from the FSM in significant ways. Most notably, the flexible CC licensing model weakens the firm philosophical and political… [Direct]

Bashaw, W. L. (1972). Ethical Issues in the Use of Humans for Research. The APA Ethical Principles, the University of Georgia policy, standard research texts, and research literature on specific methodologies, all in relation to ethical issues in human research, are discussed. The 10 APA principles state, in essence, that the investigator is responsible for what happens, that confidentiality and the protection of the welfare and dignity of the subjects must be maintained, that the subject has the right to decide if he wishes to participate and has the right to drop out if he wishes, and that subjects should not be subjected to any form of discomfort, harm, danger or mental stress except when they have been informed of the risks and have agreed to participate, and if the researcher is taking special precautions. The University of Georgia policy, which is based on 13 principles, maintains that personality manipulation is dangerous, that the researcher is responsible for what happens, that the personal integrity of the subject must be respected, that…

Thorne, Ashley; Turscak, Marilee; Wood, Peter (2014). Beach Books: 2013-2014. What Do Colleges and Universities Want Students to Read Outside Class?. National Association of Scholars Assigning a summer reading to entering freshmen is a growing trend at hundreds of American colleges and universities. Colleges typically pick one book and ask students to read it outside their courses. Many invite the author to help kick off the year by speaking on campus at convocation. Most colleges see the key purpose of a common reading program as an opportunity to build community on campus. Many also declare that common reading is important because it sets academic expectations, begins conversations, inspires social activism, and encourages critical thinking. This years' annual "Beach Books" reports is the most comprehensive and the only one to categorize the books according to their main subjects and track trends in genres, publication dates, and additional themes. The study for the academic year 2013-2014 covers 341 colleges and universities and the 231 books they assigned. The authors present the results of their study in terms of findings, facts, and gaps. Their… [PDF]

Hurlbert, C. Mark (1988). The Rhetoric of Possessive Individualism. Although rhetoric is traditionally viewed through its relationships with law, politics, philosophy, and religion, other disciplines, such as economics, also shape contemporary rhetorics, and these rhetorics influence current writing pedagogies. "Product" and "process" theories of composition can be examined in light of the rhetoric of "possessive individualism"–the view that the right to possession is the keystone of human freedom. In the "product" approach to composition, students rely on their own abilities and application for success (i.e. good grades). Because ownership is linked to honor or disgrace in possessive individualism, grades define students, and their relationships to the meaning of their writing is undermined. "Process" approaches seek to eliminate this aspect of the "product" approach by inviting students to join the discourse community of the composition classroom as equal members. But the…

Cloud, Kathleen (1996). The Private Revolution: Women, the Family and Human Capital. Changes in women's lives and voices are both cause and effect of larger economic, social, and political processes. Women today live longer, have fewer children, are more likely to be literate; they are also likely to have some control over fertility, to work outside the home during part of their life, and to have political and legal rights more often than at any previous time in history. These shifts in social, demographic, and political conditions are linked to massive economic changes. The growth in the quality of human capital is a major contribution to economic development. Within constraints on women's ability to invest in land and physical capital, women have rationally invested in the quality of human capital through having fewer children and shaping the quality of their families' lives. Women have a stronger tendency than men to prefer child quality to quantity. Evidence for this position comes from findings on women's fertility preferences and the links between women's… [PDF]

(1970). Hearings Before the Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs of the United States Senate, Ninety-First Congress, Second Session on Nutrition and Human Needs. Part 1–Hunger and the Income Gap. Hearings Held Washington, D.C., March 2, 3, 4, and 6, 1970. These hearings before the Senate Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs are organized in several parts, of which this document is the first. These hearings begin with opening statements by a number of Senators. Following these, presentations are made by such witnesses as the following: Rev. Jesse Jackson, national director, Operation Breadbasket, Southern Christian Leadership Conference; Hon. John V. Lindsay, mayor of New York City, N.Y., accompanied by Commissioner Mitchell Ginsberg, administrator, Human Resources Administration, New York, N.Y.; Hon. Peter Flaherty, mayor of the city of Pittsburgh, Pa.; Prof. Alvin L. Schorr, professor of social policy, Brandeis University, Waltham, Mass.; Dr. George A. Wiley, executive director, National Welfare Rights Organization, accompanied by Mrs. Jeanette Washington, member of the executive committee; Robert Harris, executive director, Commission on Income Maintenance Programs; Hon. John G. Veneman, Under Secretary, Department of… [PDF]

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Bibliography: Human Rights (Part 351 of 406)

Freire, Paulo (1998). Pedagogy of Freedom. Ethics, Democracy, and Civic Courage. This translation of Paulo Friere's last book is a utopian text that suggests that, among other things, education is a specifically human act of intervening in the world. Chapter 1 presents introductory reflections. Chapter 2, There Is No Teaching without Learning, includes a discussion of Methodological Rigor; Research; Respect for What Students Know; A Capacity To be Critical; Ethics and Aesthetics; Words Incarnated in Example; Risk, Acceptance of What Is New, and Rejection of Discrimination; Critical Reflection on Practice; and Cultural Identity. Chapter 3, Teaching Is Not Just Transferring Knowledge, discusses Awareness of Our Unfinishedness; Recognition of One's Conditioning; Respect for the Autonomy of the Student; Common Sense; Humility, Tolerance, and the Struggle for the Rights of Educators; Capacity To Apprehend Reality; Joy and Hope; Conviction That Change Is Possible; and Teaching Requires Curiosity. Chapter 4, Teaching Is a Human Act, focuses on Self-Confidence,…

Feldman, Frances Lomas (1971). Human Services in Rural Alaska: Highlights from the Evaluation of the Rural Areas Social Services Project. The Social and Rehabilitation Service granted the Alaska Division of Public Welfare funds to train and employ qualified Native village people as paraprofessionals who could provide the social services needed while living right in the village. The Rural Areas Social Services Project (RASS), a demonstration and training project aimed at bringing public welfare services to Alaska's rural areas, was planned. Awarded $328,300 for the first year, operations began in December 1968. The project was awarded $426,500 for the second year. Nineteen Native human services workers and 2 supervisors were incorporated into the budget. The proposal also provided for evaluative research, which was implemented in July 1969. The Regional Research Institute in Social Welfare (School of Social Work, University of Southern California) and an investigator planned and conducted the evaluation. Evaluation was done by observations, field reconnaissance, and interviews with villagers and Human Services aides…. [PDF]

(1978). Kindergarten: Home and Family. The curriculum guide presents a working draft of the kindergarten component of a K-6 social studies program developed by the Allegany County Board of Education in Maryland. Goals and activities relating to ethnic heritage studies; family life; and career, consumer, citizenship, and environmental education are included in each of the seven guides. The overall objective is to help teachers assist their students in gaining the understanding needed to deal with the problems of living in a complex society. Specific goals are to develop students' knowledge of social science concepts and skills and to acquire democratic social attitudes. The kindergarten unit emphasizes the student's understanding of himself and his immediate environment in terms of the home and family. It is presented in two sections. Section I lists six concepts: basic human needs and how they are met; the form and function of government and citizens' rights and responsibilities; various ethnic, racial, and cultural…

Schwindt, Robert C.; Tsai, Ping-Lun (2000). The Use of Internet Courses in HRD Programs. Innovative Session 3. [Concurrent Innovative Session at AHRD Annual Conference, 2000.]. Faculty members at 58 institutions belonging to the Academy of Human Resource Development (AHRD) were surveyed to identify trends in the use of Internet courses in graduate human resource development (HRD) programs. Of the 27 institutions that submitted valid responses, 10 offered Internet courses in HRD and 17 did not. Of the 17 that did not, 2 planned to add Internet courses in the future. Among the reasons given for not offering Internet courses were the following: not enough time to develop courses; lack of experience to develop Internet courses; lack of time to deliver and administer courses; lack of equipment; and insufficient student demand. The following policies and procedures related to Internet courses were in place by at least some of the schools offering Internet courses in HRD: technical support; instructional design support; intellectual property right of developer; release time to develop courses; and smaller course loads for teaching Internet courses. The… [PDF]

MacDougall, James C. (2004). Irreconcilable Differences: The Education of Deaf Children in Canada. Education Canada, v44 n1 p16, 19, 26 Win. Samuel Johnson said it was the greatest human calamity, Helen Keller said she would rather be blind, and A.G. Bell feared that unless extraordinary measures were taken, a new and toxic variety of the human race would emerge. Deafness, the invisible disability, affects only one person in one thousand, but for as long as history has been recorded it is a topic that has been plagued with controversy. For the past 300 years, the question of the "right way" to educate deaf children has been at the center of a bitter educational dispute. Before that time, education was not an issue, as virtually every society took the term "deaf and dumb" quite literally. The idea that deaf children were capable of education constituted a dramatic breakthrough, but it came with a heavy price as it was based on two very divergent ideas: communication through sign language or teaching the deaf to speak. This article addresses some of these issues in the following sections: (1) Some… [Direct]

(1996). In Support of Civil Rights: Taking On the Initiative. LEAP (Leadership Education for Asian Pacifics, Inc.) Special Report, Proposition 209, "The California Civil Rights Initiative.". Proposition 209 is a statewide constitutional amendment initiative in California, which, if passed in November 1996, will eliminate all statewide affirmative action programs. It is argued that, contrary to its title, this amendment is an extreme and unnecessary measure that will actually undermine further advances in civil rights. There are differing opinions about affirmative action in the Asian Pacific community, but much of the discussion has focused on college admissions with many Asian Pacific Americans believing that affirmative action penalizes their ethnic group for academic achievement. However, it is important to look at the whole spectrum of affirmative action and to remember that success in the classroom does not equal success in the workplace. Proposition 209 deceives voters into thinking that they are voting for civil rights when they are actually voting to nullify some rights as we know them. Under Proposition 209 the following types of educational programs will be… [PDF]

Joslin, Andrea; Lucero, Maria Guajardo; Pappas, Georgia; Steele-Inama, Marley (1996). The 1996 LARASA Directory of Latino Agencies, Organizations, and Associations. This directory includes information on 155 Latino organizations, cross-community agencies, and professional and employee groups that serve the Latino population in Colorado. Each listing includes name and address, a mission statement, available services, and events sponsored by the organization. The directory also lists media sources, including Latino newspapers and magazines published in Colorado, national Hispanic print media, and Hispanic radio and television stations; organizations offering scholarships to Latino students; and Internet sites relevant to the Latino community. An index lists organizations and resources by issue area: advocacy, civil rights, community development, culture, economic development, information clearinghouses, education, the elderly, emergency services, employment and training, health, housing, immigration, job placement, migrant farmworkers, public policy, social and human services, technical assistance, women, and youth. (LP)… [PDF]

Graves, Curtis M.; Hodges, Jane A. (1986). Famous Black Americans: Folder Games for the Classroom. Few are aware of the extensive contributions of Blacks to every field of human endeavor, and few children have the experience of a hands-on learning activity that exposes them to prominent Black individuals. This book provides evidence of the many ways in which Blacks have invented, explored, and discovered, and the brief biographical material it contains is intended to arouse the interest of students at any grade or ability level. The book is interdisciplinary and therefore can be used in any classroom setting. Biographies and pen and ink drawings of 52 famous Blacks are featured and include women and men from literature, education, politics, science, and mathematics, civil rights movement, military, the humanities, and sports. A folder game and other activities accompany each biography. (BZ)…

Motomatsu, Nancy; Patterson, Bobbie (1981). Sex Differences and Brain Development: A Bibliography. This bibliography cites references dealing with background material on the functions of the human brain and current research on sex differences in brain development. A list of 10 books published since 1974 is followed by a more extensive annotated bibliography of 29 articles, and a bibliography of 19 reports, complete with ERIC reference numbers and instructions for retrieving the documents. Sample forms and instructions for ordering ERIC documents are included. The articles explore such topics as sex differences in cognitive functioning, brain hemispheric differences, cultural differences in information processing, symmetry and perceptual comprehension of children, spatial ability, dyslexia, left- and right-handedness, creativity, and age differences. Many articles focus on research with children and the implications of such research results for educators. (NRB)… [PDF]

Hess, Fritz (1979). Educational Finance at the Crossroads. This paper is an indepth survey of American educational finance from its origins to the present and with projections for the future. It discusses the influence of and impact on school finance of some of the following: demographic patterns, changes in the American economy, Sputnik and civil rights events, federal intervention, the courts, local government, and local taxpayers. The paper delves into different approaches to reform, both conservative and revolutionary, and then discusses the status of educational finance in the state of New York. It concludes that the productive capacity of education, like that of the rest of the economy, may be suffering. No amount of funding, the paper says, can compensate for deficiencies in human productivity. An extensive bibliography follows. (Author/LD)…

(1971). All About OSHA: The Who, What, Where, When, Why and How of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970. The pamphlet summarizes the operations of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and the provisions of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970. OSHA's mission is to assure safe and healthful working conditions and to preserve human resources. Employers and employees who are covered by the act and employer and employee responsibilities and rights are described. The functions of OSHA include establishing standards and inspection procedures, which are described in detail. Sources of additional information about OSHA are suggested. Assistance for small businesses through long-term loans and the role of the States in developing and operating their own job safety and health programs are described. The pamphlet concludes with a listing of regional and area OSHA offices. (Author/NH)… [PDF]

Proctor, Robert W.; Urcuioli, Peter J.; Vu, Kim-Phuong L. (2005). A Simon Effect in Pigeons. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, v134 n1 p93-107 Feb. Pigeons pecked left versus right keys contingent upon the color presented at 1 of those locations. Spatial-response latencies were shorter when the color appeared at the same location as the required response than at the opposite location. This Simon effect occurred when the stimulus on the alternative key was constant, varied from trial to trial, or changed when the color cue appeared and when the reinforcement probability for correct responses was the same on corresponding as on noncorresponding trials. Humans performing the same task by touching the keys also showed the Simon effect. These findings demonstrate that for pigeons, too, a relevant symbolic cue activates a spatial code that produces faster responses at the location corresponding with the activated code…. [Direct]

Jacqueline J. Weber (2023). Staff Training in Assent and Assent Withdrawal Behavior in Children with Disabilities. ProQuest LLC, Ph.D. Dissertation, Endicott College. In recent years, there have been calls to action regarding the integration of compassionate care and assent into behavior analytic practice. Assent, in medical and educational interventions, is associated with an absence of coercion and with a willingness to engage. It is a core foundational value of humane and compassionate intervention across human service professions. A recent review of the research literature (Morris et al., 2021) revealed that attention to assent in Applied Behavior Analytic (ABA) research is scarce. Critiques of the field have implied an inadequate focus on assent in clinical practice as well. There are definitional and measurement challenges associated with assent that are barriers to the integration of it into clinical work. In this study, instructors were trained to identify individualized indices of assent and withdrawal of assent for learners in their care. The focus on individualized indices represents an advance and reflects the highly tailored nature of… [Direct]

Disler, Mark R. (1987). Statement of Mark R. Disler, Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Civil Rights Division, before the Committee on Labor and Human Resources, United States Senate, Concerning Grove City Legislation. Testimony concerning the Supreme Court decisions in the case of Grove City College v. Bell (1984) is presented in this document. The Courts ruling that Federal aid to a student constitutes funding only of the college's student air program, nor the entire institution, reflected the more persuasive reading of the Title IX Education Amendments, according to the U.S. Department of Justice. The administration has supported specific legislation to address civil rights issues in response to Grove City and has opposed the Civil Rights Restoration Act of 1987 (S. 557) for the following reasons: (1) the Act's expansion of mandatory abortion coverage, (2) its insufficient protection of religious tenets, and (3) the expanded federal authority it would grant over a wide range of activities. Legislation addressing the Grove City decision should contain abortion neutral language which would ensure that recipients of federal aid are neither required to provide or pay for abortions or… [PDF]

(1994). Prevention of Health Problems among Gay and Lesbian Youth. Making Health and Human Services Accessible and Effective for Gay and Lesbian Youth. This third report of the Massachusetts Governor's Commission on Gay and Lesbian Youth deals with problems faced by gay and lesbian youth as they attempt to access health and human services. To gather information, the Commission held five hearings across Massachusetts in the autumn of 1992. This report focuses on the testimony of gay and lesbian teenagers as compelling evidence of the need for change in the manner of provision of health and human services in Massachusetts public and private organizations. Problems faced by gay and lesbian teenagers are discussed in sections on: (1) suicide; (2) HIV/AIDS and sexually transmitted diseases; (3) violence; (4) runaway, homeless, and throwaway gay and lesbian youth; (5) substance abuse; (6) teen pregnancy; (7) minority gay and lesbian youth; (8) youth expressing nonconventional gender identities and behaviors; and (9) gay and lesbian youth and service provision. The Commission made recommendations for health and human services improvements…

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