624 research outputs found
Editorial: The engaged university
Gateways has been a place where university researchers and community members join together to better understand the broad range of issues confronting communities across the globe, including academic communities. It is well positioned to promote a healthy debate among community members, researchers and policy-makers around scores of problems. We will continue to be a resource that is free to the thousands of our readers
Anthony M. Kennedy: A Study of His Judicial Opinions
The paper is divided into two parts. The first part is devoted to statutory interpretation. In this section, I will analyze cases questioning the validity or application of statutes or regulations. The second section centers on constitutional interpretation. Within this section, I will explain how Kennedy sees the role of the judge. In addition, I will analyze some cases involving issues of constitutional interpretation. Finally, I will analyze some of the preconfirmation articles that speculated about his behavior on the Court
Housing Discrimination and Economic Opportunity in the Chicago Region
In 1990, the Human Relations Foundation of Chicago was created in response to a publication called Report on Race, Ethnic and Religious Tensions in Chicago, released by the Chicago Community Trust Human Relations Task Force in 1989. The human relations task force released recommendations for the creation of a foundation to energize efforts to combat racism. The Human Relations Foundation of Chicago implements the recommendations of the task force\u27s report, targeting Chicago leadership by concentrating on issues related to, but not limited to, housing, education, religion, media, government and business.
Continued racial and ethnic segregation has continuing implications for the social, political, cultural, and economic vitality of Chicago region. Not only does this segregation affect how and where residents of our communities interact with each other, but by limiting free access to housing, education, and jobs a significant portion of the region\u27s population is being held back from sharing in opportunities and from realizing their full potential social, economic, cultural, and political contributions to Chicago and its surrounding communities.
This report demonstrates the reality of such concentrations, and analyzes why they persist. We are particularly interested in assessing the impact of housing discrimination on job and wealth opportunities for people of color. Findings and recommendations are drawn from reports on this subject written since the last series of reports commissioned by the Human Relations Foundation of Chicago in 1990
No harm, no foul?: Expert views on the future direction of marine antibiofouling technologies
The colonisation of submerged surfaces by marine fouling organisms is a global problem with impacts ranging from clogged pipelines and aquaculture nets through to hull fouling that increases fuel costs and green-house gas emissions and provide potential habitats for invasive species. Marine antibiofouling techniques, such as copper plates on ships and functional coatings that release toxic biocides, were historically developed in order to reduce the frequency and expense of the physical removal of fouling organisms. For a time the solution was thought to be tributyltin self-polishing coatings, but these were later proven to be detrimental to the marine environment and subsequently banned. Today, the 'state-of-the-art' general-use coatings are based on the release of biocidal copper and booster biocides, but environmental concerns exist regarding their impacts on marine life and future legislation may put restrictions on their use. While non-biocide based alternatives include non-stick or foul-release coatings, these generally work best on fast moving vessels with little stationary time, even if recent developments seem to reduce this demand on speed. We utilised a targeted questionnaire to a range of experts that work with, or are affected by, marine anti-biofouling to assess their views about potential antifouling technologies of the future. The paper provide insights into the expectations and demands that need to be addressed in development and implementation of future marine anti-biofouling technologies and indicate how those views differ between professional roles
Glutaraldehyde-crosslinking for improved copper absorption selectivity and chemical stability of polyethyleneimine coatings
Nano-thin coatings of glutaraldehyde (GA)-crosslinked polyethyleneimine (PEI) are extremely selective and effective in binding copper from seawater. Here it was demonstrated that GA-PEI performs significantly different from PEI. The copper-selectivity of self-assembled PEI coatings on silicon substrates was greatly improved by GA-crosslinking. After submersion in artificial seawater containing 200 ppb copper and equimolar amounts of 11 competing ions only copper and trace amounts of Zn were detected in the GA-crosslinked coatings, while for non-crosslinked PEI there was about 30% Zn present relative to copper. The coatings were demonstrated to be highly stable under acidic conditions and retained their copper-binding selectivity after repeated cycles of binding and acid-mediated elution. After self-assembly of the GA-crosslinked coating on mesoporous diatomaceous earth particles, significant amounts of copper could be extracted from 200 ppb in artificial seawater and eluted under acidic pH
Saving Our Homes: The Lessons of Community Struggles to Preserve Affordable Housing in Chicago\u27s Uptown
Over the past 25 years we have witnessed declining federal investment in affordable housing at the same time as there has been growth in low-income households. During this same quarter of a century we have seen a shift from a national War on Poverty to federal policies that treat poor adults and children as hopeless, undeserving citizens. In this new era of fiscal constraints there is no talk about meeting basic nutritional, housing, health care, and educational needs. A chorus of new conservative leaders claims to be speaking for the suffering middle class. The media increasingly talk of the haves and the have-nots. It is not easy to hear talk of helping the working poor over the din of politicians seeking to protect the family and traditional American values. This report is an effort to give voice to some of those working poor who have been struggling to preserve the affordable housing that is their road to self-sufficiency. It is the story about Uptown, a Chicago community which is about as American as it gets. Like the traditional urban communities in American cities in the late 1800s and early 1900s, our community is filled with immigrants who came to the United States, sometimes escaping persecution in their homelands and other times hoping to improve their quality of life through hard work in the land of opportunity. The names by the doorbells are not McGuire, Ianello, or Schmidt; they are Thu, Asoegwu, and Lopez
High frequency (HF) radar detection of the weak 2012 Indonesian tsunamis
We report here on the observation and offline detection of the weak tsunamis generated by earthquakes near Indonesia on 11 April 2012 using radar systems and tide gauges on the coasts of Sumatra and the Andaman Islands. This work extends the previous observations of the much stronger 2011 Japan tsunami. The distance offshore at which the tsunami can be detected, and hence the warning time provided, depends primarily on the bathymetry: the wider the shallow continental shelf, the greater this time. The weak Indonesia tsunamis were detected successfully in spite of the narrow shallow-water shelf offshore from the radar systems. Larger tsunamis could obviously be detected further from the coast. This paper provides further confirmation that radar is an important tool to aid in tsunami observation and warning
The Uptown Housing and Land Use Study
In the Fall of 2000, State Representative Larry McKeon, at the urging of local community groups and residents, commissioned Loyola University Chicago’s Center for Urban Research and Learning (CURL) to provide an analysis of relevant data regarding housing and land use in the Uptown community. A Local Advisory Council (LAC) was created to review, evaluate, and advise the project staff as they collected and analyzed data sets. For the past two years, researchers at CURL have worked with Organization of the NorthEast (ONE), Representative McKeon, and the LAC to collect and analyze data from a variety of sources. The goal of this report is to provide to all stakeholders and parties engaged in the Uptown community a comprehensive and accurate profile of Uptown and the changes that have been occurring within the community over the past decade, based on data collected from a wide range of reliable sources. The community, thus informed, will be better able to address the issues and concerns of all its residents
Gateways: Expanding knowledge through broader participation
This new journal, Gateways: International Journal of Community
Research and Engagement, responds to a growing global movement
of university-collaborative research initiatives. It also strives to fill a
gap created by the sparse number of journals which publish
outcomes of community-engaged research and work concerning
community engagement. We seek articles based on research that is
the result of actively engaged research-practitioner collaborative
projects, has the potential of informing community-based activities or
develops understanding of community engagement. Combining
different knowledge bases that have traditionally been separated into
academic and non-academic worlds can dramatically increase
information flowing to scholars, community leaders and activists
seeking to improve the quality of life in local communities around the
world. We also wish to encourage work that contributes to the
scholarship of engagement
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