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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Will They Still Be Dancing?: Integration And Ethnic Transformation Among Yugoslav Immigrants In Scandinavia [Book Review], Joel Halpern
Will They Still Be Dancing?: Integration And Ethnic Transformation Among Yugoslav Immigrants In Scandinavia [Book Review], Joel Halpern
Joel M. Halpern
No abstract provided.
Laos: Politics, Economics, And Society; Laos: A Bibliography, Joel Halpern
Laos: Politics, Economics, And Society; Laos: A Bibliography, Joel Halpern
Joel M. Halpern
No abstract provided.
Feature Geometry And Dependency: A Review, John J. Mccarthy
Feature Geometry And Dependency: A Review, John J. Mccarthy
John J. McCarthy
A fundamental problem in phonological theory is the fact that processes often operate on consistent subsets of the distinctive features within a segment, like the features that characterize place of articulation. Recent research has responded to this problem by proposing a hierarchical organization of the features into functionally related classes, grouped under nodes of a tree structure. This ‘geometry’ resembles earlier theories that accomplish the same thing with multivalued features. This article reviews and expands the evidence for feature geometry. Within the segment, it is argued, the major dichotomy is between a Laryngeal node and a Place node. The manners …
Quantitative Transfer In Reduplicative And Templatic Morphology, John J. Mccarthy, Alan Prince
Quantitative Transfer In Reduplicative And Templatic Morphology, John J. Mccarthy, Alan Prince
John J. McCarthy
No abstract provided.
Book Review Of Communities On The Way: "Rebuilding Local Economies In The United States And Canada, John Mullin
Book Review Of Communities On The Way: "Rebuilding Local Economies In The United States And Canada, John Mullin
John R. Mullin
Many planners caught up in the everyday struggle of preparing zoning bylaws, subdivision regulations, and goverment grants-in-aid often wonder what is happening with that dedicated group of what seem to be counter-culturists across town who are attempting to bring increased prosperity to the community through community-based economic development (CED) initiatives. Rarely communicating with them, perceiving them as outside the political mainstream, infrequently helping them, and often treating them with disdain, too many planners see them as little more than the last vestiges of the grassroots movements of the 1960's. That is a mistake for, as Stewart Perry, president of the …