Results for 'Christine Havice'

961 found
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  1.  66
    MAKEUP AT WORK: Negotiating Appearance Rules in the Workplace.Christine L. Williams & Kirsten Dellinger - 1997 - Gender and Society 11 (2):151-177.
    This study seeks to understand women's use of makeup in the workplace. The authors analyze 20 in-depth interviews with a diverse group of women who work in a variety of settings to examine the appearance rules that women confront at work and how these rules reproduce assumptions about sexuality and gender. The authors found that appropriate makeup use is strongly associated with assumptions about health, heterosexuality, and credibility in the workplace. They describe how these norms shape women's personal choices to (...)
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  2.  78
    The Glass Escalator, Revisited: Gender Inequality in Neoliberal Times, SWS Feminist Lecturer.Christine L. Williams - 2013 - Gender and Society 27 (5):609-629.
    When women work in male-dominated professions, they encounter a “glass ceiling” that prevents their ascension into the top jobs. Twenty years ago, I introduced the concept of the “glass escalator,” my term for the advantages that men receive in the so-called women’s professions, including the assumption that they are better suited than women for leadership positions. In this article, I revisit my original analysis and identify two major limitations of the concept: it fails to adequately address intersectionality; in particular, it (...)
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  3.  9
    Feminist Recoveries in My Father's House.Christine Clegg - 1999 - Feminist Review 61 (1):67-82.
    One of the achievements of feminist politics, in a range of disciplines and practices, has been to secure a hearing for traumatic narratives of incest. Recently, however, the debate in the public domain seems overwhelmed by what has come to be known as ‘the memory wars’. Fathers accused by adult daughters have dismissed the possibility that traumatic childhood memories can be recovered, largely on the grounds of science and reason. This response of accused fathers would seem to drive out other (...)
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  4. Relaxing about Moral Truths.Christine Tiefensee - 2019 - Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 6:869-890.
    As with all other moral realists, so-called relaxed moral realists believe that there are moral truths. Unlike metaphysical moral realists, they do not take themselves to be defending a substantively metaphysical position when espousing this view, but to be putting forward a moral thesis from within moral discourse. In this paper, I employ minimalism about truth to examine whether or not there is a semantic analysis of the claim ‘There are moral truths’ which can support this moral interpretation of one (...)
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  5.  39
    What Have I Done to Deserve This? Effects of Employee Personality and Emotion on Abusive Supervision.Christine A. Henle & Michael A. Gross - 2014 - Journal of Business Ethics 122 (3):461-474.
    Drawing on victim precipitation theory, we propose that certain employees are more likely to perceive abusive supervision because of their personality traits. Specifically, we hypothesize that subordinates’ emotional stability, conscientiousness, and agreeableness will be negatively related to perceived abuse from their supervisor and that negative emotions at work will mediate these relationships. We surveyed 222 employees and found that emotional stability and conscientiousness negatively predicted employees’ self-reports of abusive supervision and that this relationship was mediated by negative emotions. Thus, employees (...)
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  6.  82
    The Receptive Theory: A New Theory of Emotions.Christine Tappolet - 2023 - Philosophies 8 (6):117.
    Cognitive Theories of emotions have enjoyed great popularity in recent times. Allegedly, the so-called Perceptual Theory constitutes the most attractive version of this approach. However, the Perceptual Theory has come under increasing pressure. There are at least two ways to deal with the barrage of objections, which have been mounted against the Perceptual Theory. One is to argue that the objections work only if one assumes an overly narrow conception of what perception consists in. On a better and more liberal (...)
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  7.  18
    A Feminist I: Reflections From Academia.Christine Overall - 1998 - Peterborough, CA: Broadview Press.
    Our universities are the locus of ongoing debates over the politics of gender, of class, of disadvantage and disability—and over the issue of “political correctness.” In _A Feminist I_ Christine Overall offers wide-ranging reflections from a first-person point of view on these issues, and on the politics of the modern university itself. In doing so she continually returns to underlying epistemological concerns. What are our assumptions about the ways in which knowledge is constructed? To what degree are our perceptions (...)
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  8. Indigenous voices and relationships : insights from care ethics and accounts of hermeneutical injustice.Christine Koggel - 2024 - In Sophie Bourgault, Maggie FitzGerald & Fiona Robinson (eds.), Decentering epistemologies and challenging privilege: critical care ethics perspectives. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press.
     
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  9. The dependence of value on humanity.Christine M. Korsgaard - 2003 - In Jay Wallace (ed.), The Practice of Value. Oxford University Press. pp. 63--85.
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  10.  35
    Introduction.Christine Tappolet, Fabrice Teroni & Anita Konzelmann Ziv - 2011 - In Christine Tappolet, Fabrice Teroni & Anita Konzelmann Ziv (eds.), Shadows of the Soul: Philosophical Perspectives on Negative Emotions. New York: Routledge. pp. 1-9.
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  11. Nietzsche: Virtue Ethics … Virtue Politics?Christine Daigle - 2006 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 32 (1):1-21.
  12. A Philosophical Analysis of Weakness of Will.Diane Christine Raymond - 1976 - Dissertation, New York University
     
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  13.  5
    Les enseignements de Théodore Paléologue.Paleologi Teodoro & Christine Knowles - 1983 - London: MHRA. Edited by Christine Knowles.
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  14.  31
    (1 other version)The Rhetoric of Maps: International Law as a Discursive Tool in Visual Arguments.Christine Leuenberger - 2013 - Law and Ethics of Human Rights 7 (1):73-107.
    Notions of human rights as enshrined in international law have become the “idea of our time”; a “dominant moral narrative by which world politics” is organized; and a powerful “discourse of public persuasion.”1 With the rise of human rights discourse, we need to ask, how do protagonists make human rights claims? What sort of resources, techniques, and strategies do they use in order to publicize information about human rights abuses and stipulations set out in international law? With the democratization of (...)
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  15. Metasemantics, Moral Realism and Moral Doctrines.Christine Tiefensee - 2022 - In Mark McBride & Visa A. J. Kurki (eds.), Without Trimmings: The Legal, Moral, and Political Philosophy of Matthew Kramer. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 189-204.
    In this paper, I consider the relationship between Matthew Kramer’s moral realism as a moral doctrine and expressivism, understood as a distinctly non-representationalist metasemantic theory of moral vocabulary. More precisely, I will argue that Kramer is right in stating that moral realism as a moral doctrine does not stand in conflict with expressivism. But I will also go further, by submitting that advocates of moral realism as a moral doctrine must adopt theories such as expressivism in some shape or form. (...)
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  16.  29
    Revealing Structures of Argumentations in Classroom Proving Processes.Christine Knipping & David Reid - 2013 - In Andrew Aberdein & Ian J. Dove (eds.), The Argument of Mathematics. Dordrecht, Netherland: Springer. pp. 119--146.
  17. Neural Regeneration.Christine E. Bandtlow & Thomas Oertle - 2002 - In Lynn Nadel (ed.), Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science. Macmillan.
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  18. 32 From Gender and Genius.Christine Battersby - 1998 - In Carolyn Korsmeyer (ed.), Aesthetics: The Big Questions. Malden, Mass.: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 2--305.
     
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  19.  23
    What Women Watched: Daytime Television in the 1950s (review).Christine Becker - 2005 - Symploke 13 (1):349-350.
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  20.  26
    Kollektive Autonomie. Volkssouveränität und individuelle Rechte in der liberalen Demokratie.Christine Chwaszcza - 2011 - Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 59 (6):917-935.
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  21.  30
    Jugements moraux et motivation à la lumière des données empiriques.Christine Clavien - 2009 - Studia Philosophica: Jahrbuch Der Schweizerischen Philosoph Ischen Gesellschaft, Annuaire de la Société Suisse de Philosphie 68:179-206.
    This paper contains an ‘affective picture’: a story, extensively supported by empirical data, about the way I take people to judge and behave morally; a picture in which the respective roles of reflective and affective processes are explained. According to this picture, different sorts of judgements have to be distinguished, some being cognitively more complex than others. ‘Sophisticated judgements’ are displayed at the level of rational considerations and allow for moral thinking, whereas ‘basic value judgements’ are a primitive and nonreflective (...)
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  22.  40
    A machine for the suppression of space: Illusionism as ritual in a fifteenth Century painting.Christine Hasenmueller - 1980 - Semiotica 29 (1-2).
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  23.  31
    The contribution of norms to social welfare.Christine Horne - 2001 - Legal Theory 7 (2):159-177.
    While legal scholars increasingly recognize that norms as well as law influence social behavior, the nature of these effects is not well understood. A key question concerns the content of norms. Specifically, do they reflect individual interest or do they enhance group welfare? In this paper I describe two general kinds of arguments that support these different views. I then develop predictions about the content of a particular type of norm—controller selection rules. These hypotheses are tested in an experimental setting (...)
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  24.  14
    The Child and the Hero: Coming of Age in Catullus and Vergil (review).Christine G. Perkell - 1999 - American Journal of Philology 120 (3):464-468.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Child and the Hero: Coming of Age in Catullus and VergilChristine PerkellMark Petrini. The Child and the Hero: Coming of Age in Catullus and Vergil. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1997. 152 pp. Cloth, $37.50.This brief study of youthful figures in the Aeneid proposes that Vergil represents the “coming of age” or initiation into adulthood as the devastating collision of the innocent child with the treacherous, (...)
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  25.  11
    Groups and Group Rights.Christine T. Sistare, Larry May & Leslie Francis (eds.) - 2001 - University Press of Kansas.
    In matters such as affirmative action or home schooling, rights of ethnic and other minority groups often come into conflict with those of society in a culturally diverse population such as ours. But before considering the dilemmas posed by these issues, we must first ask such basic but important questions as what group rights are and how they intersect with the principles of democracy. This new collection brings together some of today's leading thinkers from the cutting edge of these debates, (...)
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  26.  40
    Ecological subjectivism?Christine A. Skarda - 1992 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 15 (1):51-52.
  27.  21
    Asian Mail-Order Brides, the Threat of Global Capitalism, and the Rescue of the U.S. Nation-State.Christine So - 2006 - Feminist Studies 32 (2):395.
  28.  15
    Andrea Dworkin and Me.Christine Stark - 2008 - Feminist Studies 34 (3):584-590.
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  29.  43
    The Ethics of Migration: Introduction.Christine Straehle & Patti Tamara Lenard - 2012 - Journal of International Political Theory 8 (1-2):118-120.
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  30. Women in science: For development, for human rights, for themselves.Christine Min Wotipka & Francisco O. Ramirez - 2003 - In Gili S. Drori (ed.), Science in the modern world polity: institutionalization and globalization. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
  31.  33
    On the Threshold of Kingship: A Study of Agur (Proverbs 30).Christine Roy Yoder - 2009 - Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology 63 (3):254-263.
    The placement of the sayings of Agur (Prov 30) between instructions for an implied reader who is poised to assume leadership (Prov 28–29) and instructions to the implied reader as king (Prov 31:1–9) prompts this exploration of what role the unknown, arguably foreign and feeble sage Agur plays in the book of Proverbs.
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  32.  41
    Migration, Climate Change, and Voluntariness.Christine Straehle - 2023 - Ethics and International Affairs 37 (4):452-469.
    Climate change challenges the means of subsistence for many, particularly in the Global South. To respond to the challenges of climate change, countries increasingly resort to resettling those most affected by land erosion, heat, drought, floods, and the like. In this article, I investigate to what extent resettlement can compensate for the harm that climate-induced migration brings. The first harm I identify is that to individual autonomy. I argue that climate change changes the options of those affected by it to (...)
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  33. Cognitive Modeling and Representation of Knowledge in Ontological Engineering.Christine W. Chan - 2003 - Brain and Mind 4 (2):269-282.
    This paper describes the processes of cognitive modeling and representation of human expertise for developing an ontology and knowledge base of an expert system. An ontology is an organization and classification of knowledge. Ontological engineering in artificial intelligence has the practical goal of constructing frameworks for knowledge that allow computational systems to tackle knowledge-intensive problems and supports knowledge sharing and reuse. Ontological engineering is also a process that facilitates construction of the knowledge base of an intelligent system, which can be (...)
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  34.  32
    "Thinking further about value: commentary on" A taxonomy of value in clinical research".Christine Grady - 2001 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 24 (6):7-8.
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  35.  24
    Open Space: Feminism in Transnational Times, a Conversation with Christine Delphy: An Edited Transcription of Christine Delphy and Sylvie Tissot's Public Talk at the LSE.Sylvie Tissot, Clare Hemmings, Liana Eloit & Christine Delphy - 2017 - Feminist Review 117 (1):148-162.
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  36. Why Teach Environmental Ethics? Because We Already Do.Raymond Benton Jr & Christine S. Benton - 2001 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 17:18.
     
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  37.  37
    Philosophy, Art or Pedagogy? How should children experience education?Christine Doddington - 2014 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 46 (11):1258-1269.
    There are various programmes currently advocated for ways in which children might encounter philosophy as an explicit part of their education. An analysis of these reveals the ways in which they are predicated on views of what constitutes philosophy. In the sense in which they are inquiry based, purport to encourage the pursuit of puzzlement and contribute towards creating democratic citizens, these programmes either implicitly rest on the work of John Dewey or explicitly use his work as the main warrant (...)
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  38.  41
    Introduction.Nicole Pellegrin & Christine Bard - 1999 - Clio 10.
    À chacune/chacun, son image de la fille en garçon, et la panoplie vestimentaire qui va avec : complet trois pièces, salopette, cuirasse, strass, smoking, perfecto, bloomer, pourpoint, monocle, lévite de bure, chevelures rases, musculatures gonflées... Qui n'a pas rêvé de Katherine Hepburn dans Sylvia Scarlett et de Greta Garbo en Christine de Suède, de Jeanne Moreau entre Jules et Jim, de Barbara Streisand jouant Yentl, de Sarah Bernhardt faisant l'Aiglon, sans parler d'héroïnes plus...
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  39.  10
    Wasteful. Border. Wall. Building.Christine Abbt - unknown
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  40.  16
    Practical Ethics: A Medical Student’s Ethical Case in Surgery Clerkship.Christine B. Kwak - 2023 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 34 (3):282-284.
    One factor that impedes medical students from speaking up about ethical situations is the lack of sufficient knowledge and skills in conflict resolution. This may also affect students’ decision and timing to intervene. This article will provide practical ways to effectively and efficiently address the medical student’s ethical case presented in August A. Culbert et al.’s “Navigating Informed Consent and Patient Safety in Surgery: Lessons for Medical Students and Junior Trainees.”.
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  41.  65
    Self-Respect and the Disrespect of Others.Christine Bratu - 2019 - Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 6.
    This paper addresses the question whether there is a rational connection between self-respect and the disrespect of others by engaging with the so-called Stoic View (SV) presented by Colin Bird. According to SV, there is no such connection because the disrespect other people show us can never provide us with a reason to lose our self-respect. This essay argues that SV is correct only from a third-personal perspective and false from a first-personal one. Since we are social cognizers, we use (...)
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  42.  21
    Wie gemeinsames Handeln unseren guten Ruf rettet.Christine Bratu - 2012 - Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 60 (1):154-158.
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  43.  7
    Le poids de la différence.Christine Chivallon - 2004 - Hermes 40:216.
    Cet article aborde la question du modèle républicain français et de sa difficulté à composer avec la diversité culturelle. L'analyse développe l'idée selon laquelle ce n'est pas la diversité en tant que telle qui pose problème à la mise en oeuvre d'un espace public commun, mais le fait que cette diversité répercute des trajectoires historiques douloureuses et conflictuelles que la République elle-même a pu contribuer à produire. Les exemples puisés dans les sociétés antillaises fondées sur l'esclavage illustrent cette tendance du (...)
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  44.  34
    The Impact of the New Translation of The Second Sex: Rediscovering Beauvoir.Christine Daigle - 2013 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 27 (3):336-347.
  45.  17
    Antecedents to an evangelising consumer.Christine D', N. A. Lima & Mala Srivastava - 2019 - International Journal of Management Concepts and Philosophy 12 (4):448.
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  46.  14
    Preface.Christine Gudorf & Paul Lauritzen - 2003 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 23 (2):5-5.
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  47.  19
    Gott von Ewigkeit zu Ewigkeit. Luthers Trinitätsverständnis.Christine Helmer - 2002 - Neue Zeitschrift für Systematicsche Theologie Und Religionsphilosophie 44 (1):1-19.
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  48.  22
    Irene’s Story.Christine Mitchell & Robert Truog - 2002 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 13 (3):230-231.
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  49.  24
    Technicist education: paving the way for the rise of the social work robots?Christine Morley, Phillip Ablett & Kate Stenhouse - 2019 - Critical and Radical Social Work 7 (2):139-154.
    This article seeks to explicate one form of technical rationality (ie the technological development of robotics) in social work education and practice. As advances in robotics evolve, questions are raised about the role of technicist education in reducing social work practice to a set of tasks that are repeatable, formulaic and linear (ie tasks that robots are capable of performing). We conduct a critical synthesis of the literature to explore how these parallel processes potentially create a seamless transition for social (...)
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  50.  6
    Georg Simmels Religionstheorie in ihren werk- und theologiegeschichtlichen Bezügen.Christine Pflüger - 2007 - Frankfurt am Main: Lang.
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