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briggsas

Online causes may attract more clicks than commitments | Science News - 0 views

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    Online awareness campaigns can make people feel they've contributed to a good cause, but social scientists say the tangible benefits of such efforts may be small.
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    Online awareness campaigns can make people feel they've contributed to a good cause, but social scientists say the tangible benefits of such efforts may be small.
briggsas

Ice bucket challenge ‘narcissism masked as altruism?’ Oh for Pete (Frates&#... - 0 views

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    Articles and insights to empower you to natural health, mind and body wellness, positive living.
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    Articles and insights to empower you to natural health, mind and body wellness, positive living.
briggsas

Activism Vs. Slacktivism | December 2011 | Communications of the ACM - 1 views

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    Today's activists are highly plugged into social media, mobile apps, and other digital tools. But does this make a difference where it matters most?
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    Today's activists are highly plugged into social media, mobile apps, and other digital tools. But does this make a difference where it matters most?
kariannyo

Ordering the city: land use, policing, and the res... - 1 views

    • kariannyo
       
      Page 161: "Policing, meanwhile, began..." Crime rate was going down with policing. With this, the illegal dumping at the cemetery may stop. 
kariannyo

Project MUSE - Landscape Journal: design, planning, and management of the land - Challe... - 4 views

  • recovery of an ecosystem with respect to its health, integrity and sustainability” (SER 2004, 1) and “the process of assisting the recovery of an ecosystem that has been degraded, damaged, or destroyed”
  • Maintenance of indigenous species often requires extensive “weeding” (usually conducted with herbicides) and pruning. Replanting is often necessary to meet safety requirements and avoid woody growth in urban areas.
  • RE frequently claims to achieve such outcomes but often results in a cosmetic application and pastiche of historic “nature” (Pierce 1994). Even if native/indigenous plants are capable of mitigating these issues there is a high likelihood that non-native plants will be more effective without necessarily excluding native fauna (Low 1999, 2003). Broadening restoration from the attempted reconstruction of historical states to focus on delivering ecosystem services, resources, productivity, and resilience is paramount to improving its urban compatibility and effectiveness. This objective would be better achieved without dogmatic bias to nativism and indigenous plants, especially in areas where these no longer occur.
kariannyo

Social Dynamics and Sustainable Urban Design - Springer - 5 views

  • improve human well-being, understanding that such well-being depends on a healthy ecosystem
    • kariannyo
       
      Improving the state of East End cemetery may postively affect the community.
  • Quality of life is enhanced
  • increases opportunities for experiencing happiness and beauty
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  • understanding current social dynamics of cities so that designs are sensitive to the broad demographic and economic trends of urbanization. Urban design has the power to help societies move toward a more just and sustainable future.
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    The designed, built environment is the most obvious expression of urbanization, but cities are made of people, too. Any efforts to design resilient or sustainable cities must therefore take into accou
kariannyo

Philosophy Gone Urban: Reflections on Urban Restoration - De–Shalit - 2003 - Jour... - 2 views

    • kariannyo
       
      Page 22: "But if instead..." There is an approach to restoration, other than the one of nostalgia 
howardkm3

Curbing Police Brutality: What Works? A Reanalysis of Citizen Complaints at the Organiz... - 2 views

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    This project reanalyzes the data collected by Pate and Fridell (1993) on citizen complaints against police use of excessive force. The current report includes two empirical studies on the citizen complaints about police brutality in two mutually excluding areas: the police use of excessive physical force and the police use of all other non-physical forces, such as abuse of authority and verbal abuse. It attempts to establish the baseline correlation of citizen complaint rates with various police organizational factors, and to identify the causal effect of police brutality. Using Tobit regression technique, the research tested a series of hypotheses deduced from theories advanced by Wilson (1968) and Lundman (1980) with a number of control variables. It is found that organizational behavior and organizational characteristics are important covariates of the citizen complaints against police use of excessive physical force and police abuse of power. The police administration can influence its officer's behavior by strengthening the in-service training, paying attention to the education achievements of its officers, and actively provide best training for qualified new police in the force.
howardkm3

Violent police behavior: Past, present, and future research directions - 1 views

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    This manuscript contains a review of the literature concerning violent police behavior. Areas of interest include the history of violent police misconduct, characteristics of the officers and citizens, situational circumstances, theoretical explanations, and an exploration of the various methods for controlling violent police behavior. Suggestions are made for improving our knowledge in the area of violent police behavior.
howardkm3

Incidents of police misconduct and public opinion - 1 views

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    Highly publicized incidents of police misconduct have adverse effects not only on the victims of abuse but also on public perceptions of the police departments implicated in the incident. Yet the magnitude and longevity of such effects have rarely been investigated. This article examines the impact of several celebrated incidents of perceived police misconduct in Los Angeles and New York City over a fairly lengthy time span, including the most recent scandal involving the Rampart Division of the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) and the killings of Amadou Diallo and Patrick Dorismond in New York City. The analysis tracks public attitudes toward the police before and after each incident, and examines similarities and differences in the opinions of Whites, African Americans, and Hispanics. The often dramatic increase in unfavorable attitudes toward the police in the wake of highly publicized events suggests that such incidents have a pronounced effect on public opinion. Policy implications are discussed, drawing on citizens' attitudes toward measures that might prevent or reduce the frequency of future incidents of misconduct
howardkm3

THE IMPACT OF RACE ON PERCEPTIONS OF CRIMINAL INJUSTICE - 1 views

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    Based on a stratified sample of 239 residents of Cincinnati, Ohio, the present study explored whether African Americans and Whites differ in their perceptions of racial injustice in the criminal justice system. The data revealed a cleavage in the extent to which the races believed that Black citizens would be differentially stopped by the police, given a speeding ticket, jailed, and sentenced to death. The effect of race remained strong even when controls were introduced for socio-demographic characteristics, experience with the criminal justice system, experience with crime, neighborhood disorder, and political and crime related ideology. Perceptions of injustice, moreover, were strongest among the least affluent African Americans. The possibility that the racial divide in perceived criminal injustice both reflects and contributes to a larger racial chasm in how Black and White citizens understand and experience their lives in American society is explored.
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