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Articles 1 - 30 of 412
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Our Authors, Robert L. Moxley
Acknowledgements, Robert L. Moxley
Acknowledgements, Robert L. Moxley
Journal of Rural Social Sciences
No abstract provided.
Black Farmers And The Economic And Social Conditions Where They Live: Some Policy Implications, Robert A. Hoppe, Herman Bluestone
Black Farmers And The Economic And Social Conditions Where They Live: Some Policy Implications, Robert A. Hoppe, Herman Bluestone
Journal of Rural Social Sciences
Black farmers tend to live in southern counties where nonfarm employment opportunities are limited. These counties have grown slowly, much more slowly than southern metropolitan areas. In counties with concentrations of black farmers, blacks face severe economic and social conditions. They have a higher incidence of poverty, less education, and higher unemployment than other blacks in the South. In addition, blacks in these counties lag far behind whites in socioeconomic status. Economic growth and socioeconomic conditions in counties with black farmers vary considerably by region. Strategies to address the black farm crisis must consider both the characteristics of black farmers, …
Family Economic Organization And The Practice Of Subsistence Cropping: The Case Of Swaziland, Vernaline Watson
Family Economic Organization And The Practice Of Subsistence Cropping: The Case Of Swaziland, Vernaline Watson
Journal of Rural Social Sciences
An understanding of interrelationships between agronomic systems and the larger social organizational structures that sustain them is deemed crucial in devising appropriate strategies for increased crop production in Africa and other nonwestern settings. This paper focuses on Swaziland, in southern Africa, where effort is under way to promote surplus, commercial cropping among small-scale indigenous farmers. The persistence of subsistence type cropping by these farmers is shown to relate to traditional patterns of family economic organization, specifically division of labor and ties of economic interdependence among family members. Implications for agronomic policy are discussed.
The Rural South In Crisis: New Challenges For Rural Development, Lionel J. Beaulieu
The Rural South In Crisis: New Challenges For Rural Development, Lionel J. Beaulieu
Journal of Rural Social Sciences
Rural society has been subjected to a series of forces during the course of the last two decades. Since the advent of the 1980s, the economic viability of many farm operations has been severely jeopardized. Although attention has been directed primarily to the Midwest farm belt, farm stress has, in many respects, been greater in the South than in any other region of the country. Moreover, the crisis is not strictly an agricultural one, for a large number of communities across the rural landscape, especially in the South, have been subjected to crises of their own. While the so-called "rural …
Is Structural Differentiation In Localities A Single Or Multidimensional Phenomenon? Alternative Measures And Relation To Population, Terry J. Tomazic, Robert L. Moxley
Is Structural Differentiation In Localities A Single Or Multidimensional Phenomenon? Alternative Measures And Relation To Population, Terry J. Tomazic, Robert L. Moxley
Journal of Rural Social Sciences
Several measures of structural differentiation for various institutionalized areas of county development are compared. Evidence regarding the hypotheses that differentiation is a system-wide, unidimensional phenomenon and that it is related to population are investigated. Scalable dimensions are found to exist among county administrative characteristics, medical special ties, commercial services, and educational institutions. Guttman scales formed from the complexity of such development are often used along with population size as operational measures of locality differentiation. The four scales and population size are analyzed together using the Guttman-Lingoes Multiple Scalogram Analysis for three different points in time. It is concluded that the …
Effects Of Alternate Income-Generating Strategies Of Small Farm Households: A Modified Farming Systems Approach, E. Yvonne Beauford, H. Max Miller
Effects Of Alternate Income-Generating Strategies Of Small Farm Households: A Modified Farming Systems Approach, E. Yvonne Beauford, H. Max Miller
Journal of Rural Social Sciences
The growing dependence of small farm households upon nonfarm income involves important changes in sources of income, in levels and techniques of production, and in assessments of economic well-being. Based on a sample of small-farm households drawn from the four rural development regions of Georgia, this research examines these changes by focusing on household income, tracing patterns of decision-making related to its production, and attempts to evaluate the consequent economic well-being of small-farm households. The primary analytic technique is discriminant analysis, with 28 variables representing three elements of the farming system--the household, the household's resources and farming enterprises. Findings suggest …
Rural Sociological Research In The South: An Historical Overview, Alvin L. Bertrand
Rural Sociological Research In The South: An Historical Overview, Alvin L. Bertrand
Journal of Rural Social Sciences
The history of rural sociological research in the South is examined in terms of eras: Early History, The Depression Years, the War Years, the Great Society, and the New Rural Sociology. Although following national patterns, southern rural sociological research has maintained a regional character, attuned to the unique problems of the region.
Spruce Run News (December 1987), Spruce Run Staff
Spruce Run News (December 1987), Spruce Run Staff
Maine Women's Publications - All
No abstract provided.
Women's Center Newsletter (December 1987), University Of Maine Women's Center Staff
Women's Center Newsletter (December 1987), University Of Maine Women's Center Staff
Maine Women's Publications - All
No abstract provided.
Reforming The Juvenile Correctional Institution: Efforts Of The U.S. Children's Bureau In The 1930s, Marguerite G. Rosenthal
Reforming The Juvenile Correctional Institution: Efforts Of The U.S. Children's Bureau In The 1930s, Marguerite G. Rosenthal
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
The U.S. Children's Bureau, the federal agency responsible for social policy for children in the early part of this century, delayed studying the problems associated with the institutionalization of juvenile delinquents for nearly twenty-five years. In the 1930's, the Bureau undertook several projects and studies related to training schools for delinquents which were designed to create reform in an area long recognized as harmful to children. This article traces the history of the Bureau's work in the institutional field from 1912-54, analyzes the reasons for the agency's initial reluctance and later activity in this area, discusses the results of these …
Development And Evaluation Of An Infant-Care Training Program With First-Time Fathers, Ronald S. Dachman
Development And Evaluation Of An Infant-Care Training Program With First-Time Fathers, Ronald S. Dachman
Dissertations
We evaluated the effectiveness of a multicomponent package in training infant-care skills to first-time fathers. After developing and socially validating a set of infant-care skills, we assessed the effects of training in a hospital-based program with expectant fathers (Experiment 1) and in a home-based program with fathers having varied degrees of experience with their infants (Experiment 2). In both experiments, a multiple probe design demonstrated that the training package was responsible for producing criterion performance by the expectant and first-time fathers. A one-month generalization probe in Experiment 1 showed that the effects transferred across training conditions (training doll to human …
Congruence Between Type Of Activity And Volition And Its Relationship To Life Satisfaction In Nursing Home Residents, David De Noble
Congruence Between Type Of Activity And Volition And Its Relationship To Life Satisfaction In Nursing Home Residents, David De Noble
Masters Theses
This study examines the relationship between life satisfaction and the volition subsystem of 32 older adults who reside in nursing homes. Specifically, it attempts to measure congruence or the perception of the individual that the inherent characteristics of an activity "fit" his or her sense of personal causation, values and interests. The study examines the relationship between this congruence and life satisfaction.
Results of the study identified positive correlations between congruence and life satisfaction. Correlations between congruence of volition subsystem components and activity were at a statistically significant level (p <.05) for personal causation, values and total volition. Correlations between congruence of volition subsystem components and some specific activities were also found.
Journal Of Sociology & Social Welfare Vol. 14, No. 4 (December 1987)
Journal Of Sociology & Social Welfare Vol. 14, No. 4 (December 1987)
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
CONTENTS
- Policy Gambit: Conservative Think Tanks Take on the Welfare State - DAVID STOESZ
- Reconsidering Drug Involvement Among Youth and Young Adults: Implications for Targeted Primary Intervention - MARK W. FRASER
- Reforming the Juvenile Correctional Institution: Efforts of the U.S. Children's Bureau in the 1930s - MARGUERITE G. ROSENTHAL
- Historical Perspectives on the Care and Treatment of the Mentally Ill - ALBERT R. ROBERTS AND LINDA FARRIS KURTZ
- Sexual Abuse at Charity House: A Case Study of Social Policies in Action - MAUREEN KELLEHER
- Predictors of Job Satisfaction Among Three Racial/Ethnic Groups of Professional Female Human Service Workers - R.L. …
Predictors Of Job Satisfaction Among Three Racial/Ethnic Groups Of Professional Female Human Service Workers, R. L. Mcneely
Predictors Of Job Satisfaction Among Three Racial/Ethnic Groups Of Professional Female Human Service Workers, R. L. Mcneely
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
Three hundred and thirty-six female human service workers were studied to determine whether or not racial/ethnic status was related to job satisfaction among managerial, supervisory and professional employees. Both overall and intrinsic satisfaction were assessed. Two groups were similar in the patterns predictive of their satisfaction but the third group appeared to be influenced by concerns peculiar to those achieving recent professional status.
Mental Practice: Its Effects On Walking Balance In An Elderly Population, Cheryl A. Linden
Mental Practice: Its Effects On Walking Balance In An Elderly Population, Cheryl A. Linden
Masters Theses
The effect of mental practice on improving walking balance in an elderly population was studied. Walking balance was measured by the number of upper extremity equilibrium reactions elicited and placement of feet observed as subjects traversed an activity course. Twenty-three female subjects between the ages of 67-90 were randomly assigned to one of two groups. The experimental group mentally practiced traversing the activity course with the aid of a six minute audio tape. The control group participated in sedentary activities of equal duration. Both groups met for eight sessions. Independent and correlated t-tests indicated no significant difference in walking balance …
The Effects Of Altruism On Activity Productivity In Elderly Women In Skilled-Care Nursing Facilities, Carol J. Getz
The Effects Of Altruism On Activity Productivity In Elderly Women In Skilled-Care Nursing Facilities, Carol J. Getz
Masters Theses
This study investigated altruism as a factor in productivity in elderly women. Eight groups of institutionalized elderly women (n = 33) stenciled personalized (initials) stationery. Groups were randomly assigned to either the non-altruistic condition or the altruistic condition; there was control for time of day and location of the activity. Subjects in the non-altruistic condition made stationery for themselves, while subjects in the altruistic condition made stationery for abused children living in an innercity. The number of pieces of stationery produced and the duration of time engaged in activity were recorded for each subject. Mann-Whitney U tests revealed that subjects …
Invitation: Duval County Legislative Delegation Organizational Meeting
Invitation: Duval County Legislative Delegation Organizational Meeting
Saffy Collection - All Textual Materials
Invitation to an organizational meeting issued by the Duval County Legislative Delegation held on the 15th floor, City Council Chambers Jacksonville City Hall at 10 am. Includes envelope. November 13, 1987.
November 5, 1987 Notes, Edna Louise Saffy
November 5, 1987 Notes, Edna Louise Saffy
Saffy Collection - All Textual Materials
No abstract provided.
Salt, Vol. 8, No. 3, Salt Institute For Documentary Studies
Salt, Vol. 8, No. 3, Salt Institute For Documentary Studies
Salt Magazine Archive
The magazine about the really important people of Maine. On Custom House Wharf, life stays much the same. That’s the way Fonnie like it. Grime, fish, and sweat. Not a place for Yuppies.
Content
- 2 Eating in Maine
- 3 Spend a Semester with the Really Important People of Maine
- 5 View From Pier Road
- 7 Munjoy Hill’s Inside Scoop Renee’s Variety Store in Portland is the place to find out what’s going on around Mun joy Hill.
- 9 Jack of All Trades Al Buzzell’s grandfather told him, “Don’t learn one trade. Learn a dozen.” He took the advice.
- 12 Lost …
Learning In The Community, John Formy-Duval, Ellen Voland
Learning In The Community, John Formy-Duval, Ellen Voland
Service Learning, General
Community educators refer fondly to William Carr's words as "the drawbridge analogy." As community involvement specialists, they are committed to keeping the drawbridge down, so that adults from the mainland can both provide and use resources in the school, and so that young people from the school can go regularly to the mainland, learning to apply and understand-what they have read in their books.
Service: Linking School To Life, Ernest L. Boyer
Service: Linking School To Life, Ernest L. Boyer
Service Learning, General
The current folklore has it that teenagers are selfish, lazy, and undisciplined. The image of an apathetic, self-indulgent generation simply does not square with reality. It doe-s, however, mask the real youth problem in this nation. Former U.S. Commissioner of Education Harold Howe II (1981) captured it powerfully when he called American youth
an island in our society. The messsage it receives from the adult world is, "'We have no use in our economic system for you young people between the ages of 12 and 18, and precious little use in our community affairs. So we suggest you sit quietly, …
The Changing Image Of Women In Rural Egypt, Mona Abaza
The Changing Image Of Women In Rural Egypt, Mona Abaza
Faculty Books
No abstract provided.
Ua1b5 Introducing The New Faculty & Administrative Staff 1987-88, Western Kentucky University
Ua1b5 Introducing The New Faculty & Administrative Staff 1987-88, Western Kentucky University
WKU Archives Records
List of new WKU faculty and staff.
The Search For Voice: Ideology And Perspective In The Black Community, Phillip L. Clay
The Search For Voice: Ideology And Perspective In The Black Community, Phillip L. Clay
William Monroe Trotter Institute Publications
During the last seven years there has been a significant shift to the right in the ideological perspectives of American political institutions and behavior. Despite some inconsistencies, the direction is clear. The term "moderate" has acquired a conservative meaning, and liberals have been split into neo-liberal and neoconservative camps. At this moment American society is informally declaring that it is not committed to achieving the goal of equal outcomes long espoused by a mainly liberal national political and institutional system.
The shift to the right is working changes on traditional black ideological perspectives, both among blacks and between black and …
Stability And Fluctuation In Juvenile Delinquency In Israel, Ram A. Cnaan, Itzhak Hocherman
Stability And Fluctuation In Juvenile Delinquency In Israel, Ram A. Cnaan, Itzhak Hocherman
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
A review of the literature indicates two major approaches in official crime rate analysis. The first approach postulates a positive correlation between recorded crime rates and a number of factors including police strength, organizational structure of social control agencies, opportunity, and social pathologies. The second postulate is based on Erikson's hypothesis of stability of deviance over time, namely that recorded crime rates in a given society will remain comparatively stable over time. We tested these approaches based on 15 years of juvenile delinquency statistics in Israel. Official statistics on both recorded juvenile delinquents and their recorded crimes were tested through …
Journal Of Sociology & Social Welfare Vol. 14, No. 3 (September 1987)
Journal Of Sociology & Social Welfare Vol. 14, No. 3 (September 1987)
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
Contents
- Privatization: Reforming the Welfare State - DAVID STOESZ
- Registering the Poor to Vote: Lessons from the 1984 General Election - IRA COLBY
- Refeminization of Child Care: Causation, Costs and Cures - ROBERT WEINBACH
- Stability and Fluctuation in Juvenile Delinquency in Israel - RAM A. CNAAN, ITZHAK HOCHERMAN
- The Use of Survey Methods in Researching Parents of Adjudicated Child Prostitutes - JOHN LONGRES
- Sex-Role Stereotypes about Social Work Administration - REGINALD O. YORK
- Burn-Out Among Social Work Professionals: A Behavioral Approach to Causal and Interventive Knowledge - KAREN M. SOWERS-HOAG, BRUCE A. THYER
- Advocacy and the Adversary System - …
Registering The Poor To Vote: Lessons From The 1984 General Election, Ira Colby
Registering The Poor To Vote: Lessons From The 1984 General Election, Ira Colby
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
Voter registration and educational programs for the poor and moderate income groups were a dominant political strategy embraced by a number of social welfare organizations during the 1984 general election. This article reviews one such project that registered 4,124 individuals and implemented a follow-up survey of 500 new registrants. Based on the survey, the author identifies a number of voting and nonvoting behaviors that should be considered in future voter registration and education projects. The author also identifies critical policy issues that impede voter participation among the poor.
The Use Of Survey Methods In Researching Parents Of Adjudicated Teenage Prostitutes, John Longres
The Use Of Survey Methods In Researching Parents Of Adjudicated Teenage Prostitutes, John Longres
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
This paper is methodological in its orientation. It describes experiences in applying survey methods to a difficult and hard to reach population - parents of adjudicated teenage prostitutes.
Sex-Role Stereotypes About Social Work Administration, Reginald O. York
Sex-Role Stereotypes About Social Work Administration, Reginald O. York
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
In this article, the issue of sex-role stereotype about administration was examined through a survey of social workers in one state. The analysis of data revealed that, in their descriptions of the good social work administrator, females held a greater preference for the male stereotype than did males. This female preference substantially explained the overall preference for the male stereotype over the female stereotype for the entire sample. The need for further examination of this female preference for the male stereotype about administration is discussed.