Academic literature on the topic 'Murray Committee'

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Journal articles on the topic "Murray Committee"

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Popovici, Alexander Mihai. "Research Committee Update." Leading Edge 39, no. 9 (September 2020): 681–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1190/tle39090681.1.

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Recently I gave each of my five kids a copy of a book that I had been delighted to read, The Curmudgeon's Guide to Getting Ahead by Charles Murray. I identified with the curmudgeon, hence the title of this column. Murray's book had its origins in postings the author made on the internal website of the American Enterprise Institute where he works, with tips for entry-level staff and interns such as: Excise the word “like” from your spoken English. Don't suck up, meaning don't excessively flatter supervisors. Make strong language count.
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Popovici, Alexander Mihai. "Research Committee Update." Leading Edge 39, no. 11 (November 2020): 834–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1190/tle39110834.1.

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In the last Research Committee Update (TLE, September 2020, 681–682), I explained that the title of this column comes from a book by Charles Murray, The Curmudgeon’s Guide to Getting Ahead. With the curmudgeon still in mind, I have a few more comments to make about our lives as researchers, pushing the leading edge of technology in our industries. In small companies, it helps to be a contrarian, to develop novel algorithms in areas overlooked by large research groups or the academic groups funded by them. One such technology that our group started working on a few years ago, nudged by the research group at Saudi Aramco, is diffraction imaging (DI). Aramco was looking for a company with a good quality commercial Kirchhoff migration, since this particular DI implementation involved modifying a Kirchhoff kernel.
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Paletta, Christian. "733 From the Trenches of War to the Bedside of Civilians: Joseph E. Murray MD FACS and the Contributions of Military Surgeons to Advances in Burn Care." Journal of Burn Care & Research 41, Supplement_1 (March 2020): S198—S199. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/iraa024.316.

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Abstract Introduction Significant advances in medical and surgical care have often originated from our experience caring for those wounded on the battlefield. The year of the ABA’s 52nd annual meeting marks the 30th anniversary of the selection of Joseph E. Murray MD FACS as recipient of the 1990 Nobel Prize in Medicine. Methods In his autobiography Surgery of the Soul: Reflections on a Curious Career, Dr. Murray credits a 22 year old US Army aviator named Charles Woods with guiding him into an emerging field of transplantation surgery. On December 23, 1944, Woods sustained burns over 70% of his body in an accident during takeoff while teaching another pilot at his Army Air Corps base in India. Woods survived and eventually was transferred back to the US where came under of the care of a young 25 year old surgeon named Joseph Murray. Results Like many young surgeons of his era, Dr. Murray joined the military service during WWII. Dr. Murray had just completed his internship at Peter Bent Brigham in Boston in September 1944 when he was assigned to Valley Forge General Hospital in Phoenixville, PA. Valley Forge was one of eight regional US Army hospitals created during WWII dedicated to plastic surgery and burn care. It was during his care for soldiers wounded in battle at this time in his early formative years that Dr. Murray developed his curiosity regarding tissue transplantation. Following military service, he completed his surgical training in Boston and New York City, and returned to the Brigham in July 1951. His military service caring for burn victims instilled a passion and curiosity regarding transplantation of human tissue. This culminated in his leading a team to perform the first human kidney transplantation on December 23, 1954...exactly 10 years to the day after the airplane crash that injured Charlie Woods. Conclusions Recognizing his dedication and accomplishments in the field of transplantation surgery, the Nobel selection committee awarded Dr. Murray thirty-six years later it’s Prize in Medicine. Applicability of Research to Practice Dr. Murray’s legacy which began during his care of soldiers during WWII offers an inspiration to all those caring for patients who have sustained burn injuries.
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Watson, Janet S. K. "Wars in the Wards: The Social Construction of Medical Work in First World War Britain." Journal of British Studies 41, no. 4 (October 2002): 484–510. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/341439.

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When the Imperial War Museum was founded in early 1917, the subcommittee in charge of collections related to “Women's Work” solicited contributions from Dr. Flora Murray of the Military Hospital at Endell Street in London. Murray and Dr. Louisa Garrett Anderson had formed the Women's Hospital Corps and, with the French Red Cross, opened hospitals in Paris and Wimereux in the early stages of the war. After successful cooperation with British military and medical authorities overseas, they were asked to open the Endell Street facility, the only hospital operating under the auspices of the War Office to be staffed entirely by women. Murray refused to cooperate with the museum committee “because she wished her hospital to be considered purely professionally as a military hospital and not as women's war work.”This was not just rhetoric of women's equality from someone who described herself as “one of Mrs. Pankhurst's lot,” but reflected the new emphasis on professionalism that had developed in the preceding fifty years. The First World War provided new opportunities for work in a variety of fields more or less closely related to the perpetuation and advancement of the armed conflict; scholars have recently focused in particular on working-class women in industry and paramilitary organizations. Though opportunities for educated women increased throughout civil society, my focus here is on work that was perceived as explicitly on behalf of the war effort, with a special concentration on three populations of women working in hospitals: doctors, trained nurses, and volunteers.
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Malhi, Gin S., Erica Bell, Darryl Bassett, Philip Boyce, Richard Bryant, Philip Hazell, Malcolm Hopwood, et al. "The 2020 Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists clinical practice guidelines for mood disorders." Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry 55, no. 1 (December 22, 2020): 7–117. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0004867420979353.

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Objectives: To provide advice and guidance regarding the management of mood disorders, derived from scientific evidence and supplemented by expert clinical consensus to formulate s that maximise clinical utility. Methods: Articles and information sourced from search engines including PubMed, EMBASE, MEDLINE, PsycINFO and Google Scholar were supplemented by literature known to the mood disorders committee (e.g. books, book chapters and government reports) and from published depression and bipolar disorder guidelines. Relevant information was appraised and discussed in detail by members of the mood disorders committee, with a view to formulating and developing consensus-based recommendations and clinical guidance. The guidelines were subjected to rigorous consultation and external review involving: expert and clinical advisors, key stakeholders, professional bodies and specialist groups with interest in mood disorders. Results: The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists mood disorders clinical practice guidelines 2020 (MDcpg2020) provide up-to-date guidance regarding the management of mood disorders that is informed by evidence and clinical experience. The guideline is intended for clinical use by psychiatrists, psychologists, primary care physicians and others with an interest in mental health care. Conclusion: The MDcpg2020 builds on the previous 2015 guidelines and maintains its joint focus on both depressive and bipolar disorders. It provides up-to-date recommendations and guidance within an evidence-based framework, supplemented by expert clinical consensus. Mood disorders committee: Gin S Malhi (Chair), Erica Bell, Darryl Bassett, Philip Boyce, Richard Bryant, Philip Hazell, Malcolm Hopwood, Bill Lyndon, Roger Mulder, Richard Porter, Ajeet B Singh and Greg Murray.
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O'Brien, John. "Universities, Technology and Academic Work: A Reconsideration of the Murray Committee on Australian Universities (1957) in the light of Dawkins (1987‐1988)." Journal of Tertiary Education Administration 12, no. 1 (May 1990): 255–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0157603900120104.

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Siveter, David J. "The Brady Medal." Journal of Micropalaeontology 27, no. 1 (May 1, 2008): 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1144/jm.27.1.1.

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Abstract. In 2007 The Micropalaeontological Society commissioned and awarded the Brady Medal, the first medal in the history of the Society. This report records the various stages in that process. The inaugural recipient of the medal, Professor John Murray of the University of Southampton, was presented with the award at the Annual General Meeting of the Society, held at University College London on 7 November 2007.THE NAMEThere was no shortage of ‘possibles’ when TMS committee had the nice but tricky task of deciding the name of the medal. The final choice of the name met with strong approval by all at the Committee meeting on 14 March 2007, at which the criteria and mechanism for awarding the medal were also agreed. The medal is named in honour of George Stewardson Brady (1832–1921) and his younger brother Henry Bowman Brady (1835–1891), in recognition of their pioneering studies in micropalaeontology and natural history. Their father was a medical Doctor and they received their early education at Quaker schools in the northeast of England. George Brady went on to become Professor of Natural History at Newcastle College of Physical Science and a Fellow of the Royal Society, and is best known for his work on ostracods. Henry Brady made his way as a successful pharmacist before turning full time to the study of micro-organisms, especially foraminifera; he also received the accolade of FRS. Over their entire adult lives they published what are now deemed fundamental contributions to the then emerging . . .
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Lugg, Sebastian T., Amy Kerr, Salma Kadiri, Alina-Maria Budacan, Amanda Farley, Olga Perski, Robert West, Jamie Brown, David R. Thickett, and Babu Naidu. "Protocol for a feasibility study of smoking cessation in the surgical pathway before major lung surgery: Project MURRAY." BMJ Open 10, no. 11 (November 2020): e036568. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2019-036568.

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IntroductionSmoking prior to major thoracic surgery is the biggest risk factor for development of postoperative pulmonary complications, with one in five patients continuing to smoke before surgery. Current guidance is that all patients should stop smoking before elective surgery yet very few are offered specialist smoking cessation support. Patients would prefer support within the thoracic surgical pathway. No study has addressed the effectiveness of such an intervention in this setting on cessation. The overall aim is to determine in patients who undergo major elective thoracic surgery whether an intervention integrated (INT) into the surgical pathway improves smoking cessation rates compared with usual care (UC) of standard community/hospital based NHS smoking support. This pilot study will evaluate feasibility of a substantive trial.Methods and analysisProject MURRAY is a trial comparing the effectiveness of INT and UC on smoking cessation. INT is pharmacotherapy and a hybrid of behavioural support delivered by the trained healthcare practitioners (HCPs) in the thoracic surgical pathway and a complimentary web-based application. This pilot study will evaluate the feasibility of a substantive trial and study processes in five adult thoracic centres including the University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust. The primary objective is to establish the proportion of those eligible who agree to participate. Secondary objectives include evaluation of study processes. Analyses of feasibility and patient-reported outcomes will take the form of simple descriptive statistics and where appropriate, point estimates of effects sizes and associated 95% CIs.Ethics and disseminationThe study has obtained ethical approval from NHS Research Ethics Committee (REC number 19/WM/0097). Dissemination plan includes informing patients and HCPs; engaging multidisciplinary professionals to support a proposal of a definitive trial and submission for a full application dependent on the success of the study.Trial registration numberNCT04190966.
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Hendricks, Rickey L. "Liberal Default, Labor Support, and Conservative Neutrality: The Kaiser Permanente Medical Care Program After World War II." Journal of Policy History 1, no. 2 (April 1989): 156–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0898030600003456.

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In the politically turbulent post–World War II period, proposed federal legislation to expand the welfare state pitted conservative Republicans against liberal Democrats in Congress. The conflict over national health insurance introduced between 1943 and 1947 in the Wagner-Murray- Dingell bill ended in a conservative victory with the bill stalled in committee. The primary constituents of the two sides were American Medical Association (AMA) spokesmen and corporate interests on the political right and labor leaders and public health advocates on the left. By 1946 the conservatives controlled Congress; thereafter liberal congressional reformers defaulted on the national health issue, as they had throughout the twentieth century, to corporate progressives and the tenets of “welfare capitalism.” Government continued as a regulator of “minimum standards” for business and industry. Provision of voluntary health insurance and direct medical services was left to the private sector. The Kaiser Permanente Medical Care Program emerged out of the political stalemate over health care in the middle 1940s as a highly efficient and popular prepaid group health plan, innovative in its large scale and total integration of service and facilities. Its survival and growth was due to its acceptability to both liberals and conservatives as a model private-sector alternative to national health insurance or any other form of state medicine.
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Spicker, Stuart F. "The Search for Bioethical Criteria to Select Renal Transplant Recipients: A Response to the Honourable Judge Jean-Louis Baudouin." Dialogue 30, no. 3 (1991): 425–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0012217300011768.

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In selecting for discussion the general theme of the donation and sharing of cells, tissues and organs (typically accomplished by transfusion and other forms of surgical transplantation) the program committee of the Second Congress of the Canadian Bioethics Society appears to have been astonishingly prescient in anticipating that two North American physicians —clinical researchers rather than “basic” scientists, by the way —would receive, as they did just over a month ago, Nobel Prizes in Physiology or Medicine for their medical achievements.1 Dr. Joseph Murray was cited in part for successfully performing, in 1954, the first human kidney transplant (the recipient lived eight years), as well as for discovering how to minimize the body's rejection of this organ; Dr. Donnall Thomas was cited for work he accomplished in 1956 —the first bone-marrow cell transfusion to a 16-year-old patient (who is still alive) such that the human immune reaction of a graft to this recipient's body could be medically managed to avoid rejection of the transplanted material (Economist 1990). Having mentioned these awards, I should note that Dr. George Hitchings had already received the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1988, being credited with the discovery of a powerful immunosuppressant, azathioprine, which greatly improved the survival of the recipients of unmatched graft transplants.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Murray Committee"

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McShane, Ian, and n/a. ""Balanced development" a study of the Murray Committee on Australian Universities." University of Canberra. Education, 1995. http://erl.canberra.edu.au./public/adt-AUC20050509.161344.

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This thesis is a study of the work of the Committee on Australian Universities of 1957, usually called the Murray Committee after its chairman. Interpretations of the Murray Committee's work usually focus on its achievement in securing funding increases for Australian universities at a time of great financial need, and establishing an arms-length grants body that assisted what was referred to as the "balanced development" of the sector. In this thesis I look at the context of the inquiry and the text of the committee's report to place this outcome within what I consider to be the broader scope and intent of the committee's work. I argue that the committee was anxious to secure the position of the universities at the top of an educational hierarchy in a period of change and challenge. The committee responded to the Commonwealth Government's request that the future pattern of university development be in the best interests of the nation by defending what they saw as the traditional role and purpose of the university. I argue that this response is one that has at various times been put foward by universities to demands for change, a response that, to paraphrase a view popular in university circles at the time, seeks to give government what it needs rather than what it wants. In this instance the committee looked to an English model of a residential university as the "traditional" template on which Australian institutions should be fashioned. The committee argued for the value of a broad, liberal education as emblematic of university pedagogy in an era of increasing knowledge specialisation and increasing confusion of purpose in the tertiary education system. It considered that a residential university conducted on liberal principles was the best institutional representation of its ideal of a community of scholars. The committee set down in its report a range of strategies by which the ideal might be realised, or at least approached, in the Australian context. It paid particular attention to the incorporation of first year students - the newest and most vulnerable members of the community. I also argue that in setting down its ideas on the institutional form and pedagogy of the university, the committee made assumptions about the personal characteristics of "the scholar", and I analyse these assumptions. In redefining the university in the Australian context the committee also engaged in a process of defining the roles and purposes of other tertiary education institutions. The committee took a hierarchical view of social organisation to their work, and viewed the education system in this light. The committee charged the universities with oversight of the Australian education system and intellectual guardianship of the Australian community. University graduates, in the committee's view, were the natural leaders of Australian society, and their education should prepare them to undertake properly this role. In redefining the university the committee members engaged in a process of boundarysetting, consolidating an institutional hierarchy in what they saw as a confused and uncoordinated system. However, they sought to incorporate a commitment to meritocracy and expansion of education opportunity within this perspective and urged the creation of pathways between the institutions. To characterise the committee's work I extend the concept of "balanced development" to the various areas in which the committee made recommendations. The concept of balanced development can be seen to refer to the proper development of the individual in the university system (the production of a balanced personality, or the education of the whole person); to the balanced development and co-ordination of the university sector; to the development of the tertiary education system as a whole and its proper articulation with the labour market; and to the process of reconciling the needs of the universities with the demands of government
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Trzaskowski, Niklas. "From the Committee of 100 to the Committee to Re-Elect the President: The Political Campaigns of Richard M. Nixon." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2013. https://dc.etsu.edu/etd/1139.

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From the Committee of 100 to the Committee to Re-elect the President: The Political Campaigns of Richard M. Nixon offers the reader a comprehensive biography of Richard M. Nixon through the lens of his political campaigns. This thesis illustrates how Richard Nixon became one of the fiercest campaigners in 20th century American political history. This thesis, furthermore, examines the key staff and strategy of each campaign Nixon waged. This thesis, additionally, presents to the reader insight on how Nixon often fought his campaigns independently from the Republican Party and how he relied on the help of a few dedicated men.
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Braman, Julia Marie Badger Murray Richard M. Murray Richard M. "Safety verification and failure analysis of goal-based hybrid control systems /cJulia M.B. Braman ; Richard Murray, committee chair and advisor." Diss., Pasadena, Calif. : California Institute of Technology, 2009. http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-05292009-111937.

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Isherwood, Paul E. "A Failed Elite: The Committee on the Present Danger and the Great Debate of 1951." Ohio : Ohio University, 2009. http://www.ohiolink.edu/etd/view.cgi?ohiou1236363143.

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Thesis (M.A.)--Ohio University, March, 2009.
Title from PDF t.p. Release of full electronic text on OhioLINK has been delayed until April 1, 2014. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 149-154)
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Murphy, Shane M. Seinfeld John H. Flagan Richard C. "Analysis of the chemical composition of atmospheric and chamber generated aerosol using mass spectrometry /cShane Murphy ; John H. Seinfeld, committee chair and advisor ; Richard C. Flagan, co-advisor." Diss., Pasadena, Calif. : California Institute of Technology, 2009. http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-05292009-113717.

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Books on the topic "Murray Committee"

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), Nursing Homes Residents' Complaints Committee (Ont. Report by Nursing Homes Residents' Complaints Committee to the Minister of Health, Murray Elston. [Toronto, Ont.]: The Committee, 1986.

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Committee, Ontario Nursing Homes Residents' Complaints. Report by Nursing Homes Residents' Complaints Committee to the Minister of Health the Honourable Murray Elston. S.l: s.n, 1986.

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California. Legislature. Senate. Select Committee on the Entertainment Industry. Informational hearing of the Senate Select Committee on the Entertainment Industry, Senator Kevin Murray, chair: "college athletes". Sacramento, Calif: Senate Publications, 2003.

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Office, Canada Federal-Provincial Relations. Notes for a presentation by the Honourable Lowell Murray, at the conclusion of the hearings of the Special Joint Committee of the Senate and the House of Commons on the 1987 Constitutional Accord. Ottawa, Ont: Office of the Leader of the Government in the Senate and Minister of State for Federal-Provincial Relations, 1987.

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Office, Canada Federal-Provincial Relations. Notes for presentation by the Honourable Lowell Murray, Minister of State for Federal-Provincial Relations, to the Special Joint Committee of the Senate and the House of Commons, on the 1987 Constitutional Accord. Ottawa: Office of the Leader of the Government in the Senate and Minister of State for Federal-Provincial Relations, 1987.

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Tennessee Valley Authority's Land Between the Lakes area: Hearing before the Subcommittee on Water Resources and Environment of the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, House of Representatives, One Hundred Fifth Congress, first session, June 21, 1997, Murray, Kentucky. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1997.

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United States. Congress. Joint Committee on the Organization of Congress. Operations of the Congress: Testimony from Hon. Wendell H. Ford, Hon. Karen Shepherd, Hon. Eric D. Fingerhut, Hon. Tillie Fowler, Hon. Peter G. Torkildsen, Hon. Patty Murray, Hon. Robert F. Bennett, Hon. Paul Coverdell : hearing before the Joint Committee on the Organization of Congress, One Hundred Third Congress, first session ... April 1, 1993. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1993.

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Nominations of Jim Esquea, Ellen Gloninger Murray, and Bryan Samuels: Hearing before the Committee on Finance, United States Senate, One Hundred Eleventh Congress, first session, on the nominations of Jim Esquea, to be Assistant Secretary for Legislation, Department of Health and Human Services; Ellen Gloninger Murray, to be Assistant Secretary for Resources and Technology, Department of Health and Human Services; and Bryan Samuels, to be Commissioner of Children, Youth, and Families, Department of Health and Human Services, October 15, 2009. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 2009.

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Vasetti, Stefania. Bernardino Poccetti e gli Strozzi: Committenze a Firenze nel primo decennio del Seicento. Firenze: Opus libri, 1994.

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Milano e le origini della pittura romanica lombarda: Committenze episcopali, modelli iconografici, maestranze. Milano: Scalpendi, 2011.

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Book chapters on the topic "Murray Committee"

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Murray, Thomas. "The Irish Constitution ‘from below’: squatting families versus property rights in Dublin, 1967–71." In Judges, politics and the Irish Constitution. Manchester University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9781526114556.003.0012.

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Thomas Murray’s chapter draws on a critical social theory of law and a range of qualitatively rich primary sources to incorporate heretofore neglected social movement voices into a more complex account of constitutional development in Ireland. The chapter concentrates on the political practices and discourses at stake in a single moment of conflict when property rights were contested from below, specifically the squatting campaigns of the Dublin Housing Action Committee (D.H.A.C.) in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Murray aims to open up a broader terrain of debate about constitutional development and judicial power in Ireland than conventional studies of case-law, legislation or parliamentary politics would suggest.
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Crawford, Robert. "Charles Murray and A Sough o’ War." In Scottish Literature and World War I, 238–52. Edinburgh University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474454599.003.0012.

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Robert Crawford discusses Charles Murray, an Aberdeenshire-born poet who published most of his verse while living in South Africa. Writing in Doric – with a density and nostalgia intensified by his exilic longing for home – Murray produced A Sough o’ War (1917). Although Murray is, certainly from a modern perspective, unpalatably committed to imperial militarism, he nevertheless produced enduring works with a fervent sense of connection to the Aberdeenshire countryside.
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Sunderland, David, and Godfrey N. Uzoigwe. "Memorandum for the Private Enterprise Committee by the Hon. Gideon Murray, Master of Elibank [n.d.]; held at the National Archives CO 766/1." In Communications in Africa, 1880–1939, 201–7. Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351112277-30.

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Wood, Betsy. "Seeds of a New Sectionalism." In Upon the Altar of Work, 51–84. University of Illinois Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252043444.003.0004.

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In the age of industrialization and American imperialism, the child labor issue was remade into a symbol of the collapse of the prevailing racial order in the South when the region’s textile industry increasingly employed poor white children. Led by Southern Progressive reformer Edgar Gardner Murphy, reformers redefined the child labor issue as a crisis of white racial deterioration and founded the National Child Labor Committee in 1904. On the basis of saving the South’s poor white children, Northern reformers justified expanded federal authority in the market, but Southern reformers rejected this approach, calling instead for local control of the issue. A split in the movement left in its wake a growing opposition to national child labor reform in the South.
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Brice, Dickson. "12 The Supreme Court and the European Convention on Human Rights." In The Irish Supreme Court. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/law/9780198793731.003.0012.

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This chapter examines the engagement of the Irish Supreme Court with the European Convention on Human Rights. It reviews all of the occasions on which decisions of the Supreme Court have been reviewed by the European Commission or Court of Human Rights, cases such as Lawless, Norris, Open Door, Keegan, Heaney, Murphy, Independent News, Bosphorus Airways, McFarlane and O’Keeffe. The argument is made that, like the UK Supreme Court, Ireland’s top court has not been as committed to adopting the ECHR’s standards as it might have been and that the Court is still not adapting its own judgment-writing to take proper account of the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights. That Court has frequently highlighted the inordinate delays which plagued the Irish Supreme Court in the 1990s. More could be done to integrate the European Court’s thinking into the way the Supreme Court goes about developing Ireland’s human rights law.
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