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The Rights and Responsibilities of the Modern University: Who Assumes the Risks of College Life?
The past decades have seen an alarming increase in campus crime, alcohol abuse by college students, hazing and other risky student activities. There is a growing awareness of the need to make safer college campuses. While danger to students has been on the rise, the relationships between students and their universities has grown increasingly distant. The rise in danger and the loss of community on college campuses has been inadvertently facilitated by legal rules. Courts crafted legal protections for colleges which backfired: legal rules designed to protect colleges from lawsuits instead encouraged colleges to become insular and to avoid positive steps to protect student safety. Bickel and Lake re-imagine the role of law in university/student relations. Picking up on recent court decisions and legislative initiatives, the authors describe a new legal paradigm for college safety - the facilitator university. The modern college is not a baby-sitter or custodian of students: but it is also not a mere bystander to student safety. The facilitator university balances the rights and responsibilities of students and institutions and envisions campuses which feature shared responsibility for student safety. Law can be a positive tool for improving safety and community on modern campuses..
Price: $19.50
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Live Through This: New York 2005
Description: Live Through This brings together more than 30 of the most exciting art, music, and fashion personalities who are changing art making in New York. New art practice is now intimately tied to the lived experience of the artists themselves, and this book, through more than three hundred color photographs of artists, artworks, studios, off-duty behaviors, zines, concerts, openings, and parties, illustrates and examines the nature of this relationship. Thoughtful criticism is provided by five essays: Larry Rinder writes about the groundbreaking nature of Fort Thunder and Providence scene, Jeffrey Deitch offers an historical and personal look at New York's underground, musician Philip Guichard describes the past five years of music in the city, digital artist Cory Arcangel talks about collectives and new media, while Kathy Grayson provides a behind-the-scenes thesis. Major attention is paid to artists working in New York City, but also in Providence and San Francisco. The list includes several major names in art, fashion, and music, but some decidedly underground ones, thus emphasizing community affiliations and working collaborations. This is a most authentic look at what New York's art scene truly is, organized and produced by the members themsleves through extensive collaboration..
Price: $9.95
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Never Assume: Getting To Know Children Before Labeling Them
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When mental illness blocks the spirit: too often we assume that a deep spirituality will free us from mental or emotional illness. But I've found that ... struggles.: An article from: The Other Side
This digital document is an article from The Other Side, published by The Other Side on May 1, 2002. The length of the article is 2760 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser. Citation DetailsTitle: When mental illness blocks the spirit: too often we assume that a deep spirituality will free us from mental or emotional illness. But I've found that faith offers no easy cure for such struggles. Author: David Hilfiker Publication:The Other Side (Magazine/Journal) Date: May 1, 2002 Publisher: The Other Side Volume: 38 Issue: 3 Page: 10(7) Distributed by Thomson Gale.
Price: $5.95
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Assume Vivid Astro Focus: Open Call
Assume vivid astro focus (avaf for short) is an artists' collective whose members prefer not to let the public know their names. Their multiple authorship both comments on and evades the cult of personality--it is ostensibly designed to set their art squarely in the public eye, without gossipy biographical distractions, but it has received a lot of attention itself. The avaf works collected here are largely site-specific and in multiple media, including spatial interventions, projections, music programs, drawings and installations, stickers, masks and T-shirts. Motifs of diverse provenance are sampled and mixed, and sources range from Tibetan prayer rugs to softcore porn. Among bits of pop culture and everyday aesthetics, historical and spiritual art, an aesthetic of appropriation and collage emerges. Alice in Wonderland-esque environments, naked people, drag queens, flowers, butterflies and birds of paradise lead to a sensory overload that seems to explode the limits of perception. avaf has recently shown at Tate Liverpool, and was a standout at the 2004 Whitney Biennial..
Price: $15.81
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Developer Transition: How Community Associations Assume Independence--A Guide for Association Practitioners
You'll want this report at your side as you go through this most critical phase in your community's evolution! Make this transition the right way and you'll avoid dissent in the community more importantly, those expensive legal problems! Also contains tips on how to develop leaders within the association, draft legal documents and create effective and productive committees..
Price: $25.00
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