Littérature scientifique sur le sujet « United Hebrew Community of New York »

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Articles de revues sur le sujet "United Hebrew Community of New York"

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Aghdassi, Abbas, et Seyed Mohammad Marandi. « African American Twelver Shia Community of New York ». Sociology of Islam 6, no 1 (18 avril 2018) : 29–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22131418-00601002.

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Few studies analyze minorities among the African American Muslims in the United States. The absence of ethnographic research shows that the current scholarship neglects the minority status of African American Twelver Shias. Based on fieldwork observations from March to December 2015 and several informal interviews, I try to understand how the African American Shia community of New York was formed and how it negotiated its identity when encountered with African American non-Shia Muslims and with Twelver Muslims of other ethnic backgrounds. I try to revisit the diasporic/immigrant religious culture that some Twelver Shias like to practice. This culture seems to have no resonance for the African American Twelver Muslims. Because some African American Twelvers joined Shia Islam after the end of the classic period of the Nation of Islam, it is argued that highlighting cultural practices by the immigrant community might force some African American Twelvers back to their practices of origin.
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Thielman, Miriam. « “You Shall Not Oppress a Resident Alien” : The Conception of Immigrants in the Hebrew Bible ». Oregon Undergraduate Research Journal 18, no 1 (2021) : 35–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.5399/uo/ourj/18.1.5.

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An increase in global immigration has resulted in humanitarian crises across the world as countries struggle to respond to the growing number of refugees and asylum seekers arriving at their borders. Understanding the specific messages within the Hebrew Bible regarding immigrants is important for developing faith-informed responses to immigrants and refugees. Religion often influences people’s beliefs, actions, and even the policy decisions for which they advocate, and the various forms of Christianity practiced in the United States frequently use the Hebrew Bible and New Testament as their sacred instructive texts. A detailed study of relevant portions of the Hebrew Bible, coupled with analysis of biblical commentaries and scholarly criticism, suggests that the Bible underscores the imperative to care for the most vulnerable members of society, as well as to include immigrants in the community. Arguably, people of faith should take this overarching message into account when considering how to respond to immigrants’ arrival in the United States. Note to the Reader: The books of the Bible were originally written in biblical Hebrew, Aramaic, or Greek, depending on the time period in which each book was redacted. Because I do not read biblical Hebrew, all biblical passages quoted in this thesis are from the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV) of the Hebrew Bible. The NRSV is regarded as one of the most accurate and reputable recent English translations of the Bible because it was completed by a committee of biblical scholars. My thesis advisor, Professor Deborah Green, checked the verses cited herein for accuracy against the original biblical Hebrew text and provided corrections to the translation where necessary. Verses that have been corrected from the original NRSV translation are footnoted. Unless otherwise noted, all other verses are from the NRSV translation.
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Kahn, Lily, et Sonya Yampolskaya. « Contemporary Ashkenazic Hebrew : The Grammatical Profile of an Overlooked Twenty-First-Century Variety ». Journal of Semitic Studies 67, no 1 (1 février 2022) : 199–267. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jss/fgab029.

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Abstract Ashkenazic Hebrew is a unique language variety with a centuries-long history of written use among Central and Eastern European Jews. It has distinct phonological and grammatical features attested in texts composed by Ashkenazic Jews (e.g. adherents of the Hasidic and Maskilic movements) in Europe prior to the twentieth century. While Ashkenazic Hebrew is commonly believed to have been replaced by Israeli Hebrew in the twentieth century, this traditional written variety of the language actually continues to thrive in contemporary Diaspora Haredi (strictly Orthodox) communities, chiefly the Hasidic centres of New York, London, Montreal and Antwerp. This fascinating and understudied form of Hebrew is used widely and productively in the composition of a rich variety of original documents for a Hasidic audience (about e.g. Covid transmission, United States educational stipulations, Zoom schooling, lockdown rules, etc.). In this article we demonstrate that contemporary Ashkenazic Hebrew has many shared orthographic, phonological, grammatical and lexical features with its Eastern European antecedent. These include: orthography of loanwords based on Yiddish conventions (e.g. חולי הקאראנא xóylay ha-koróna ‘those ill with coronavirus’); morphology of plural loan nouns (בקאלידזשעס be-kóleǧes‘in colleges’, הפראגראמע״ן haprográmen ‘the programmes’); retention of the definite article with inseparable prepositions (בהשכונה be-ha-šxíne‘in the neighbourhood’);
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Kiper, Daniel. « New York Ogniwo in the Years 1879-1881 ». Studia Polonijne 42 (24 novembre 2021) : 325–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.18290/sp2142.15.

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The article discusses the history of the Polish Ogniwo weekly published in New York in the years 1879-1881. The magazine was established during a major organisational transformation of the Polish diaspora in the United States. One of the most important initiatives of the then immigrant community in New York and beyond (including New Jersey) was to integrate the public of Polish origin in order to work toward the improvement of the financial and political position of Polish immigrants. This work was carried out by the Ogniwo weekly. Its editors tried to mobilise scattered economic immigrants to work towards building an ideologically aligned Polish-American community.
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Taraki, Muhammad Dhiya, Muhammad Abdul Azis Pamuji et Surwandono Surwandono. « ANALYZING DE-ISLAMOPHOBIA FACTORS IN NEW YORK, USA ». ULUL ALBAB Jurnal Studi Islam 25, no 1 (22 juin 2024) : 106–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.18860/ua.v25i1.25788.

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Recently, there has been a phenomenon of reducing the level of Islamophobia of the world community towards Muslims around the world, including Muslims in the United States. Allowing Muslims to carry out worship in public or open space, and the election of Muslim politicians in a government and congressmen are clear evidences to this phenomenon. This research aims to deeply analyze the de-islamophobia factors in New York City, The United States from 2017 to 2023. The phenomenon of Islamophobia, rising sharply since the 9/11 tragedy, has now begun to experience a significant decline, especially in the 2017-2023 period. A qualitative method was applied with literature studies. The data were taken from online books, online journals, and other relevant references such as online news. The study found various causes of the decline: socio-culture, demographic, and political events that contribute to the acceptance of Islam in the United States. Especially since Joe Biden was inaugurated as the U.S. President, the decline in Islamophobia is increasingly visible, particularly in the political fields.
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Confredo, Deborah. « Book Review : Carol L. Shansky, The Hebrew Orphan Asylum Band of New York City, 1874–1941 : Community, Culture, and Opportunity ». Journal of Historical Research in Music Education 38, no 2 (13 janvier 2017) : 211–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1536600616688763.

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McDonnell, Simon, Pooya Ghorbani, Courtney Wolf, Maria Jessa Cruz, David M. Burgy, Swati Desai, Daniel Berkovits et Renata Silberblatt. « A Managed-Participatory Approach to Community Resilience : The Case of the New York Rising Community Reconstruction Program ». American Review of Public Administration 49, no 3 (10 octobre 2018) : 309–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0275074018804663.

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Research shows that resilient communities are best achieved through active public participation, informed by local input. However, post-disaster strategies in the United States are typically federally led and top-down in nature. We present an exploratory case study of resilience planning in New York State in the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy, which is a combination of public participation and government supervision. We name this approach “managed-participation” because it emphasizes engaging the public in post-disaster planning, guided by a high degree of state-level leadership. We adapt a theoretical proposition of horizontal and vertical integration framework for an exploratory analysis of the case. We find that New York’s approach contributes to both horizontal and vertical integration of impacted communities by enhancing active participation in resilience efforts, and taking advantage of the state government’s position to connect local needs with federal funding. Furthermore, by utilizing expertise and funding support to guide and translate local knowledge, it produces potentially more viable resilience plans.
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Darcy, Jean, Joan Dupre et Michele Cuomo. « An ePortfolio Virtual Learning Community within a Traditional Classroom Space : The Student in a Global Social Networking Community ». HETS Online Journal 1, no 1 (6 novembre 2022) : 43–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.55420/2693.9193.v1.n1.83.

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Queensborough Community College is one of six community colleges of the City University of New York. Located in Bayside, Queens, the college serves more than 15,000 degree students. Queens County in New York City is the most diverse county in the United States. The College reflects this diversity. Its White, Black, Hispanic, and Asian students or their families come from 143 countries including Paraguay, Venezuela, Korea, China, India, Guyana, Pakistan, Haiti and many more. Among the numerous languages they speak are Spanish, French, Urdu, Hindi, Punjabi, Chinese, Pushto, and Farsi. Almost half of them speak a language other than English at home. This diversity generates both challenges and opportunities in a college community. Historically, non-ESL students have scored 20 percent higher in pass rates for reading and 10 percent for writing. Queensborough Community College is an Hispanic Serving Institution with a 26% Hispanic population.
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Shabbir, Syed H., et Maria Teresa M. Santos. « The role of prehealth student volunteers at a student-run free clinic in New York, United States ». Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions 12 (30 octobre 2015) : 49. http://dx.doi.org/10.3352/jeehp.2015.12.49.

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Purpose: The medical student-run Einstein Community Health Outreach Clinic provides free healthcare to the uninsured adult population of New York, the United States. During the summer, prehealth student volunteers are recruited to assist with clinic operations. Methods: We designed a survey study to identify the baseline characteristics of the volunteers between June and August of 2013 and 2014 in order to evaluate the influence of working in a medical student-run free clinic on their education, impressions, and career goals. Results: A total of 38 volunteers (response rate, 83%) participated in the study. The volunteers were demographically diverse and interested in primary care specialties and community service. Conclusion: After the Einstein Community Health Outreach program, the volunteers showed an improved understanding of the healthcare process and issues relevant to uninsured patients. They also developed favorable attitudes towards primary care medicine and an increased level of interest in pursuing careers in primary care.
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CAMPBELL, JAMES. « AFRICAN AMERICANS AND PAROLE IN DEPRESSION-ERA NEW YORK ». Historical Journal 54, no 4 (7 novembre 2011) : 1065–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x11000392.

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ABSTRACTIn the first half of the twentieth century, parole in the Deep South of the United States was part of a nexus of penal mechanisms providing white employers with a pliant black labour force. By contrast, in New York, which was at the forefront of innovations in parole policy, there was a surprising interracial consensus among white parole administrators and politicians, civil rights activists, and black prisoners themselves that the African American community was integral to parole administration and success. This article explores why different constituencies supported this consensus through debates on parole in the black press and via the desperate, and invariably futile, letters that prisoners wrote to the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). These sources also indicate that, for black prisoners in New York, African American influence over the parole system was routinely constrained by widespread black poverty, racial segregation, and discrimination in employment.
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Thèses sur le sujet "United Hebrew Community of New York"

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Schrader, Timo. « Loisaida as urban laboratory : pioneering community activism in New York, 1964-2001 ». Thesis, University of Nottingham, 2018. http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/49960/.

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This thesis offers the first in-depth analysis of the network of Puerto Rican community activism in the Lower East Side from 1964 to 2001. The community of Loisaida organized itself to fight against postwar urban deindustrialization, housing disinvestment, and gentrification, which threatened to displace an entire generation of Puerto Ricans who migrated to this New York neighborhood and tried to make it their home. Using an amalgam of unprocessed organizational archives, oral histories, ephemera, and neighborhood publications, this project recreates the history of community action in Loisaida. Focusing on key institutions and community groups that mobilized residents and built a lasting activist network, this thesis demonstrates how community groups pioneered a methodology for more sustainable community activism. These activists turned Loisaida into their laboratory, constantly experimenting with and adapting new strategies to put up a solid defense against absentee landlords, greedy developers, opportunist politicians, and an era of increased policing of urban space. The interplay of community activism, urban politics, and Puerto Rican history in Loisaida provides three crucial insights: (1) the need for grassroots organizations to adapt their activism to the changing needs of the community, (2) the creativity of urban communities to transform and design their immediate environment, and (3) the key strategies that enable activists to develop campaigns to their full potential. By uncovering these insights, this thesis raises new and challenging questions about the nature of sustained neighborhood activism at a major transitional phase in United States urban history: the shift from 1960s antipoverty programs to 1980s neoliberal policies. It shows the ingenuity and strength of activists who confronted this shift in the socio-political urban landscape by devising strategies to continue serving the residents of Loisaida. In 2017, the same community leaders who mobilized residents in the early 1960s are still marching on City Hall to demand the return of their former headquarters.
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Alvarez, Luis Alberto. « The power of the zoot : race, community, and resistance in American youth culture, 1940-1945 / ». Thesis, Full text (PDF) from UMI/Dissertation Abstracts International, 2001. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/utexas/fullcit?p3008265.

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Westcot, Julia Ellen. « The September 11th tragedy : Effects and interventions in the school community ». CSUSB ScholarWorks, 2002. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/etd-project/2271.

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Kershner, Seth. « “A Constant Surveillance” : The New York State Police and the Student Peace Movement, 1965-1973 ». 2021. https://scholarworks.umass.edu/masters_theses_2/1057.

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Historians recognize that there was an increase in political repression in the United States during the Vietnam War era. While a number of accounts portray the Federal Bureau of Investigation as the primary driver of repression for many groups and individuals during the 1960s and 1970s, particularly those on the left, historians typically overlook the role played by local and state law enforcement in political intelligence-gathering. This thesis seeks to advance the study of one aspect of this much larger topic by looking at New York State Police surveillance of the Vietnam-era student peace movement. Drawing extensively on State Police spy files housed at the New York State Archives, the thesis makes several significant contributions to the existing historiography on this period. First, it demonstrates how state and local police contributed to the climate of political repression and surveillance during the Vietnam era. Second, while this thesis encompasses state police surveillance at all types of institutions, including elite private universities and second-tier state colleges, in doing so it provides the first-ever detailed look at how community college students organized against the war. Since a majority of community college students were from relatively low-income backgrounds, chronicling the history of protest on two-year campuses gives historians another angle from which to counter the persistent myth that antiwar activism failed to penetrate the most working-class sectors of U.S. society.
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Maxey, Hannah L. « Understanding the Influence of State Policy Environment on Dental Service Availability, Access, and Oral Health in America's Underserved Communities ». Thesis, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/1805/5993.

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Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)
Oral health is crucial to overall health and a focus of the U.S. Health Center program, which provides preventive dental services in medically underserved communities. Dental hygiene is an oral health profession whose practice is focused on dental disease prevention and oral health promotion. Variations in the practice and regulation of dental hygiene has been demonstrated to influence access to dental care at a state level; restrictive policies are associated lower rates of access to care. Understanding whether and to what extent policy variations affect availability and access to dental care and the oral health of medically underserved communities served by grantees of the U.S. Health Center program is the focus of this study. This longitudinal study examines dental service utilization at 1,135 health center grantees that received community health center funding from 2004 to 2011. The Dental Hygiene Professional Practice Index (DHPPI) was used as an indicator of the state policy environment. The influence of grantee and state level characteristics are also considered. Mixed effects models were used to account for correlations introduced by the multiple hierarchical structure of the data. Key findings of this study demonstrate that state policy environment is a predictor of the availability and access to dental care and the oral health status of medically underserved communities that received care at a grantee of the U.S. Health Center program. Grantees located in states with highly restrictive policy environments were 73% less likely to deliver dental services and, those that do, provided care to 7% fewer patients than those grantees located in states with the most supportive policy environments. Population’s served by grantees from the most restrictive states received less preventive care and had greater restorative and emergency dental care needs. State policy environment is a predictor of availability and access to dental care and the oral health status of medically underserved communities. This study has important implications for policy at the federal, state, and local levels. Findings demonstrate the need for policy and advocacy efforts at all levels, especially within states with restrictive policy environments.
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Livres sur le sujet "United Hebrew Community of New York"

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Wyszkowski, Charles. A community in conflict : American Jewry during the great European immigration. Lanham, Md : University Press of America, 1991.

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Markowitz, Fran. A community in spite of itself : Soviet Jewish émigrés in New York. Washington : Smithsonian Institution Press, 1993.

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Shansky, Carol L. The Hebrew Orphan Asylum Band of New York City, 1874 -1941 : Community, culture and opportunity. Newcastle upon Tyne, UK : Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2016.

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Korrol, Virginia Sánchez. From colonia to community : The history of Puerto Ricans in New York City. Berkeley : University of California Press, 1994.

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Rosner, David. A once charitable enterprise : Hospitals and health care in Brooklyn and New York, 1885-1915. Princeton, N.J : Princeton University Press, 1986.

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Seixas, Peter C. Shifting sands beneath the state : Unemployment, the labor market, and the local community, 1893-1922. New York : Garland Pub., 1993.

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Convegno Italia-USA (2nd 1987 City University of New York). Il difficile cammino dell'Europa unita = The difficult path of united Europe : 2o Convegno Italia-USA, City University of New York, May 14-15, 1987. [Pavia] : Facoltà di scienze politiche dell'Università di Pavia, 1989.

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Michele, Sviridoff, National Institute of Justice (U.S.) et State Justice Institute (U.S.), dir. Dispensing justice locally : The implementation and effects of the midtown community court. Amsterdam, The Netherlands : Harwood Academic Publishers, 2000.

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Bereuter, Douglas K. United States and European Community development assistance to Africa : The 25th meeting of the United States Congress and the European Parliament : June 22, 1985, West Point, New York. [Washington, D.C. ? : D. Bereuter, 1985.

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Marwell, Nicole P. Bargaining for Brooklyn : Community organizations in the entrepreneurial city. Chicago, IL : University of Chicago Press, 2008.

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Chapitres de livres sur le sujet "United Hebrew Community of New York"

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Diner, Hasia R. « First Journeys : 1654–1820 ». Dans A New Promised Land, 1–21. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195158267.003.0001.

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Abstract In late August or early September of 1654, a total of twenty-three Jews stepped from a ship onto the soil of what would one day be New York City, the largest Jewish community in the world. But in 1654 it was the Dutch city of New Amsterdam, and the twenty-three new arrivals were the first Jews there. Many of them scattered to other places soon thereafter, and all but one of them have disappeared from history. We know, however, that they had been traveling for a long time. The Jews who arrived in New Amsterdam came from the Dutch colony of Recife in northeastern Brazil. A few generations earlier, however, their families had lived in Spain and Portugal on Europe’s Iberian peninsula. These Iberian Jews were known as Sephardim (Sepharad is Hebrew for “Spain”). Under Muslim rule, the large and prosperous community of Spanish Jews created a rich culture in which tight-knit, all-Jewish communities enjoyed good relations with their Spanish neighbors.
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Fisher, James T. « Building an American Catholic Community ». Dans Communion of Immigrants, 24–42. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195154962.003.0002.

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Abstract On April 30, 1789, on the balcony of New York City’s Federal Hall, General George Washington was inaugurated the first President of the United States. Several weeks later, at Whitemarsh Plantation in Maryland, John Carroll was elected the first American bishop of the Roman Catholic Church. Carroll was elected by his peers in the American priesthood, who numbered fewer than 30 in active service at the time. Many, like Carroll himself, were Jesuits who had been serving in a freelance capacity since the suppression of their order in 1773 by Pope Clement XIV, who had feared the Jesuits’ growing international influence.
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Fisher, James T. « Building an American Catholic Community ». Dans Communion of Immigrants, 24–42. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195333305.003.0002.

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Abstract 0n April 30, 1789, on the balcony of New York City’s Federal Hall, General George Washington was inaugurated the first President of the United States. Several weeks later, at Whitemarsh Plantation in Maryland, John Carroll was elected the first American bishop of the Roman Catholic Church. Carroll was elected by his peers in the American priest hood, who numbered fewer than 30 in active service at the time. Many, like Carroll himself, were Jesuits who had been serving in a freelance capacity since the suppression of their order in 1773 by Pope Clement XIV; who had feared the Jesuits’ growing international influence. In 1784 Pope Pius VI, with the urging of U.S. Minister to France Benjamin Franklin, named Carroll the Prefect Apostolic, or chief administrator of the church in the United States. In 1788 the pope granted a request of the U.S. clergy that they be empowered to choose their first bishop. John Carroll’s election as bishop in 1789 confirmed his stature as the most revered and influential leader of Catholics living in the new American nation.
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El Hitti, Samar, et Deborah Hecht. « Global Pull of Community Engagement ». Dans Preparing Students for Community-Engaged Scholarship in Higher Education, 264–83. IGI Global, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-2208-0.ch013.

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This chapter discusses the CUNY Youth Ambassador Program, an undergraduate mentorship and leadership development program with an emphasis on global sustainability that focuses on the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, specifically Goal Number 4: Quality Education. The creation and development of this program is one way two educators at the City University of New York responded to the global call for action on quality education, by initiating a collaboration with UNESCO to seed a movement of informed youth undergraduate advocates active in education spaces. This chapter showcases the framework and components of the CUNY Youth Ambassador Program and the aforementioned collaboration, as well as the experience and impact on the undergraduate students involved in this initiative.
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El Hitti, Samar, et Deborah Hecht. « Global Pull of Community Engagement ». Dans Research Anthology on Service Learning and Community Engagement Teaching Practices, 1426–45. IGI Global, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-6684-3877-0.ch075.

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This chapter discusses the CUNY Youth Ambassador Program, an undergraduate mentorship and leadership development program with an emphasis on global sustainability that focuses on the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, specifically Goal Number 4: Quality Education. The creation and development of this program is one way two educators at the City University of New York responded to the global call for action on quality education, by initiating a collaboration with UNESCO to seed a movement of informed youth undergraduate advocates active in education spaces. This chapter showcases the framework and components of the CUNY Youth Ambassador Program and the aforementioned collaboration, as well as the experience and impact on the undergraduate students involved in this initiative.
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Temkin, Sefton D. « A New American Jewish World ». Dans Creating American Reform Judaism, 294–97. Liverpool University Press, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781874774457.003.0046.

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This chapter shows how the battles over the Pittsburgh Platform were being fought over a terrain which other factors were already transforming. Large-scale migration from Eastern Europe had begun. The number of Jews in the United States, estimated at 250,000 in 1880, reached the million mark in 1900, the year of Wise’s death. The acculturated community, speaking English albeit with a German accent, largely middle class, reformed in religion, was outnumbered by one that spoke Yiddish, belonged to the proletariat, and was untouched by Reform Judaism. The processes which Wise saw at work when he arrived in 1846 had to begin over again; but although many of the factors were similar, the answers were not necessarily the same. Incidentally, the presence of a second and larger Jewish community enhanced the importance of New York in American Jewish life and diminished the significance of Cincinnati and other Midwest communities where Wise had held sway.
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Kenny, Kevin. « The Boundaries of Political Community ». Dans The Problem of Immigration in a Slaveholding Republic, 110–38. Oxford University PressNew York, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197580080.003.0005.

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Abstract During the political crisis of the 1850s, as this chapter demonstrates, the Supreme Court drew a stark line between Americans of European and African descent. In Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), Roger Taney ruled not only that the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional but also that black Americans, whether free or enslaved, could never be citizens of the United States. Irish immigrants, by contrast, faced a nativist backlash from the Know-Nothing Party, yet—like all European immigrants—they enjoyed basic civic political and privileges denied to African Americans born on the soil, including the right to travel and to naturalize as citizens. After Dred Scott, Abraham Lincoln warned that the Supreme Court might prevent free states, as well as territories, from excluding slavery. The case of Lemmon v. New York was pending when eleven slave states seceded from the Union in 1860–61, which Alexander Stephens celebrated as heralding a new civilization founded on slavery.
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« Indenture of Susan Remer to the Shakers of Watervliet ». Dans New York's Burned-over District, sous la direction de Spencer W. McBride et Jennifer Hull Dorsey, 266–69. Cornell University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501770531.003.0039.

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This chapter provides a background on the men and women that were formally united with a Shaker Village by signing a covenant, which was both a spiritual and a legal document. It explains that the newly united by the covenant affirmed their faith in the gospel of Christ's second appearing and agreed to live according to the rules of the Shaker faith, including adherence to the principles of celibacy and communalism. It also talks about the children of adult converts to the Shaker faith, which were considered the legal property of their parents by law and subject to the terms of the covenant signed by their parents. The chapter recounts the punishing economic recession in the aftermath of the War of 1812 that prompted struggling families to indenture their children to the Shakers. It features the transcript of Susan Remer's indenture to the Shaker community at Watervliet, New York.
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Martinez, Maximo G. « Livelihood on the Caribbean Coast ». Dans Sojourners in the Capital of the World, 41–50. Fordham University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.5422/fordham/9781531504755.003.0003.

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Garifuna’s experiences in Central America later influenced them as immigrants organizing in New York. Foreign agro-export company presence, Garifuna interactions with English-speaking Black laborers, and Marcus Garvey’s United Negro Improvement Association (UNIA): all had an early impact on Garifuna men, some of whom eventually migrated to New York City. The Garifuna in British Honduras (now Belize) established organizations to promote their culture, and these groups played a role in the formation of the Garifuna seamen’s association in New York. In Belize, Garifuna joining the UNIA assisted managing discrimination and inequalities experienced in the country. Later they established their own group helping to preserve their culture and address their community social needs in Central America. Eventually, economic decline and World War II caused many Garifuna men to leave their Central American communities. Many became seamen and ended up in New York.
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« Becoming Blue ». Dans Police and the Empire City, 24–43. Duke University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/9781478027546-002.

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From its origin in 1845, the police department in New York City had to explicitly consider the racial landscape in the city, as Irish and German immigrants came to the United States and as New York's Black community of free and self-emancipated people were forced to defend their freedom because of the Fugitive Slave Law. Despite prejudice against Irish immigrants, who were seen as predisposed to crime and violence and incompatible with the Anglo-American way of life, Irish police earned racial and social mobility by opposing Irish rioters in the 1857 police civil war, the 1863 Draft Riots, and the 1871 Orange Riots. During this period the African American community in New York fought back against the willingness of police officers to collaborate with Southern enslavers.
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Actes de conférences sur le sujet "United Hebrew Community of New York"

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Oppenheimer, Nat. « Mass Timber : Looking Back to Effectively Look Forward ». Dans IABSE Congress, New York, New York 2019 : The Evolving Metropolis. Zurich, Switzerland : International Association for Bridge and Structural Engineering (IABSE), 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2749/newyork.2019.0650.

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<p>The use of mass timber as a structural element is not a new phenomenon. For example, within almost every major city in the world, there are upscale enclaves centered around the adaptive reuse of factories and warehouses from the late 19th and early 20th centuries. These former industrial structures are almost always constructed from masonry and mass timber.</p><p>Within the past decade, the building industry has seen a renewed interest in mass timber structures. This resurgence has been fueled by several trends, including the mass production of Cross Laminated Timber (CLT) and a growing awareness of mass timber’s sustainable advantages. A number of high-profile heavy timber structures have found commercial success in the United States and abroad. Leading architectural practices such as Skidmore Owings &amp; Merrill (SOM) have used research initiatives like the Timber Tower Research Project to jump-start a fertile debate within the design industry. On the demand side, building owners have pushed the design community to find innovative ways to incorporate mass timber into their projects.</p><p>This interest has often driven designers and builders to aggressively distinguish their projects from predecessors, pushing for pure mass timber structures while giving less consideration to hybrid structures (mass timber and masonry/concrete structures). This bias towards material purity risks ignoring important lessons from the past and may in some cases lead to inefficient structural choices and structures with less durability and sustainability than their hypothetical hybrid counterparts.</p><p>This paper posits that some of the energy generated by a resurgence in mass timber construction would be well spent on understanding, celebrating, and rediscovering the elegance and importance of hybrid structures.</p>
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Yen, Eric Y., Magda Shaheen, Jennifer MP Woo, Neil Mercer, Lewei Duan, Ning Li, Deborah K. McCurdy et Ram R. Singh. « CE-08 Temporal trends in SLE mortality according to sex, race, ethnicity, and geographic region in the united states over the past five decades ». Dans Abstracts of the Third Biannual Scientific Meeting of the North and South American Lupus Community, Armonk, New York, USA, September 29 – October 1, 2016. Lupus Foundation of America, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/lupus-2016-000179.87.

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Castro, Ana Claudia Veiga de. « Um historiador entre duas cidades : Richard Morse, de Nova York a São Paulo ». Dans Seminario Internacional de Investigación en Urbanismo. Barcelona : Instituto de Arte Americano. Universidad de Buenos Aires, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.5821/siiu.5938.

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O historiador Richard Morse (1922-2001) publica o livro De comunidade à metrópole, a biografia de São Paulo, em 1954, nas comemorações do IV Centenário da cidade. O livro, hoje um clássico, foi gestado entre a sua formação nos Estados Unidos e a pesquisa de campo em São Paulo. Esse artigo tem a intenção traçar paralelos entre as condições urbanas e culturais de São Paulo e Nova York em 1940 e 1950 e a estrutura narrativa do livro, apontando o que Morse traz da América para a formulação do problema encarado na tese – a evolução urbana de comunidade à metrópole – e o que ele formula na experiência de pesquisa numa cidade em processo de metropolização. Richard Morse (1922-2001) published the book From community to metropolis, the biography of São Paulo, in 1954, in celebration of the fourth centenary of the city. The book, now a classic, was conceived between his training in the United States and his field research in São Paulo. This article intends to draw parallels between the urban and cultural conditions of Sao Paulo and New York in the 40’s and 50’s and the narrative structure of the book, pointing out that Morse brings form America to the formulation of the problem faced in the thesis - the urban evolution from community to metropolis - and that he makes in the search experience in a city undergoing metropolis.
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Lockhart, Calum, et Edmund Metters. « Ghosts of the Erie Canal Past Present and Future ». Dans Footbridge 2022 (Madrid) : Creating Experience. Madrid, Spain : Asociación Española de Ingeniería Estructural, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.24904/footbridge2022.249.

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<p>In 1825, amidst the industrial revolution taking place in the United States of America, the Erie Canal was constructed bringing industry and wealth to the communities along with it. Almost 200 years later, the governor of New York announced a 300-million-dollar plan to Reimagine the Canals and bring new economic and social development to those communities along the canal.</p><p>Of the 57 locks and 19 guard gates along the Erie Canal, lock E11, and guard gate 12 are examples that offer the ability to use their heritage value to bring economic value to the areas around them by pairing them with a footbridge, due to their location. These pieces of infrastructure, still performing critical functions to prevent flooding, often fall forgotten and sit in the backdrop. As part of the Reimagine the Canals initiative these historic structures will become a centrepiece, showcasing their heritage value.</p><p>Along the canal network also sit many derelict old road bridges. One in the community of Waterloo on Locust Street has been closed for several years, having been through cycles of rebirth before- we looked at how this bridge could again become the centre of the local community.</p>
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Osakuade, Opeyemi. « Keynote Talk : How DSN is Contributing to Social Impact in Africa ». Dans International Workshop on Social Impact of AI for Africa 2022. AIJR Publisher, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.21467/proceedings.157.k2.

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DSN-Data Scientists Network (formerly Data Science Nigeria) is committed to raising 1 million AI talents and building AI solutions that improve the quality of life and wellbeing of 2 billion people in an emerging market. DSN is the No 1 Artificial Intelligence learning community and solution delivery network in Africa. We won the Matthai Impact Award at Deep Learning Indaba 2019. One of DSN’s papers on the use of AI to address financial inclusion was the best poster at the 21st edition of the ACM Conference on Economics and Computation (EC’ 20), the world’s premier conference on the interface of economics and computer science, organized by the Association for Computing Machinery, New York, United States. 2 Products initiated, conceptualized and developed by DSN were selected in the 2021 Global Top 100 AI Products by UNESCO IRCAI. DSN-Data Scientists Network (formerly Data Science Nigeria) is building cross-country AI learning and research communities, developing AI solutions that enhance the quality of life and wellbeing of 2 billion people in emerging markets such as CareerTech, FinTech, RetailTech, EdTech, PlatformTech and HealthTech. DSN’s work has won academic and social impact awards across the world which has been showcased as a best practice in delivering scalable learning, research and social good solutions development. We released the 1st Artificial Intelligence and Python Book for elementary students and beginners in Africa and we recently opened a dedicated AI Research Lab Hub in Yaba, Lagos for Social Impact. Our renewed focus will see us delivering on our vision through a renewed focus on 3 core areas; A community for learning and research Product development for social impact Partnerships for solution delivery
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Farayola, Olarinde, Dastyni Loksa et Jinjuan Feng. « Unraveling Interaction Challenges for Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing Users : An Exploration of Digital Content and Interfaces Accessibility ». Dans 15th International Conference on Applied Human Factors and Ergonomics (AHFE 2024). AHFE International, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.54941/ahfe1004623.

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Efficient engagement with ubiquitous digital content and interfaces presupposes a profound level of reading comprehension, a potential impediment for users within the deaf and hard-of-hearing community. Existing literature demonstrates a correlation between diminished reading comprehension and deafness [1, 3], accentuating the formidable barriers faced by this demographic in accessing and understanding digital content and navigating an increasingly digital world. Despite decades of efforts to enhance digital accessibility for all users, limited research has focused on the specific challenges confronting deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals, particularly those not adept with technology [2].This study aims to address this gap by investigating the daily interaction challenges faced by deaf and hard-of-hearing users with digital content and interfaces. Conducting a focus group with four deaf participants, we chose this method to facilitate rich, in-depth discussions in American Sign Language (ASL), a mode of communication familiar to the participants. We selected participants with educational levels from high school to those who had attained an Associate's degree seeking to get a range of possible challenges and investigating if their level of education might impact the challenges they face.Qualitative analysis of the focus group's dialogue unveiled insights into the technological struggles experienced by participants, coupled with their expressed needs for technological support. Three salient themes emerged: 1. Difficulties comprehending textual information across various tasks (email, online search, reading news, text messages, etc.), as unanimously reported by all participants; 2. Challenges associated with writing text and text entry, universally confirmed by all participants; and 3. Challenges in content and interface comprehension, influencing the installation, navigation, and utilization of various technologies, universally acknowledged by all participants.In this paper, we discuss the implications of these findings for researchers, technology developers, and digital content providers alike. We further explore avenues for future research along with potential technological enhancements aimed at mitigating the challenges confronting the deaf and hard-of-hearing population. The insights derived from this study are positioned to guide digital content developers, policymakers, and educators in effecting essential changes to amplify the accessibility of digital content and interfaces for deaf and hard-of-hearing users, both within the United States and on a global scale. References[1]M. Marschark and P. C. Hauser, Deaf cognition: foundations and outcomes. Oxford ; New York: Oxford University Press, 2008.[2]M. Maiorana-Basas and C. M. Pagliaro, “Technology Use Among Adults Who Are Deaf and Hard of Hearing: A National Survey,” Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, vol. 19, no. 3, pp. 400–410, Mar. 2014, doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/deafed/enu005.[3]E. Toofaninejad, E. Zaraii Zavaraki, S. Dawson, O. Poquet, and P. Sharifi Daramadi, “Social media use for deaf and hard of hearing students in educational settings: a systematic review of literature,” Deafness & Education International, vol. 19, no. 3–4, pp. 144–161, Oct. 2017, doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/14643154.2017.1411874.
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Rapports d'organisations sur le sujet "United Hebrew Community of New York"

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Schad, Aaron, Gary Dick, Kris Erickson, Paul Fuhrmann et Lynde Dodd. Vegetation community changes in response to phragmites management at Times Beach, Buffalo, New York. Engineer Research and Development Center (U.S.), septembre 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21079/11681/42149.

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Management of invasive phragmites (Phragmites australis [Cav.] Trin. Ex Steud.) in the United States has proven challenging over the last several decades. Various methods for control exist, but integrated approaches appear to have the most success. However, documentation of vegetation community–wide responses to these approaches remains limited. This study monitored plant community changes at Times Beach, New York, over a five-year period. In concert with mowing and thatch removal in all areas, the study evaluated two herbicides separately and together, representing three experimental treatment areas (TAs), for control efficacy by measuring plant community structure. Phragmites was targeted for treatments, avoiding native and nonproblematic non-native species when possible, to preserve beneficial habitat during phragmites control efforts. Monitoring results showed significant drops in phragmites relative cover, relative frequency, and importance values due to integrated management, regardless of herbicide treatment, with corresponding increases in these same values for native and other plant species. This suggests that prudent removal of phragmites is compatible with beneficial plant restorative efforts to maintain and improve habitat in infested areas.
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DeMetri, Olga, Samuel Moreno et Gerardo Funes. Seizing the Market Opportunity of the Growing Latino and Caribbean Community in the United States. Inter-American Development Bank, novembre 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0005199.

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This study examines the transformative influence of the rapidly growing Latino and Caribbean community in the United States, both as a demographic and an economic powerhouse. Accounting for nearly one in five U.S. residents, this community is reshaping the nation's social, economic, and cultural landscapes. In 2019 alone, the economic output of Latinos in the U.S. was $2.7 trillion, marking them as a global economic force. The report highlights the community's role in enhancing trade and economic relations with Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC), including its influence on foreign direct investment (FDI) and diaspora direct investment (DDI). Remittances to LAC countries remain strong, further solidifying economic ties. Culturally and politically, the Latino and Caribbean community is becoming mainstream in the U.S., as evidenced by its growing impact on music, food, and voter participation. The study includes case studies from Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, and New York to underline the community's diverse contributions across various sectors. In summary, the Latino and Caribbean community is not just growing in numbers but is a formidable force that is shaping the U.S. and strengthening its international ties with LAC. This growth presents numerous opportunities for both domestic and international economic and cultural collaborations.
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Engel, Chandler, Rachel Hastings, Jeremy Giovando, Eric Gabel, Caroline Duncan et Travis Dahl. Summary of ground-based snow measurements for the Northeastern United States. Engineer Research and Development Center (U.S.), avril 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.21079/11681/44122.

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Snow is an important resource for both communities and ecosystems of the Northeastern United States. Both flood risk management and water supply forecasts for major municipalities, including New York City, depend on the collection of snowpack information. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to summarize all of the snowpack data from ground-based networks currently available in the Northeast. The collection of snow-depth and snow water equivalent information extends back several decades, and there are over 2,200 active sites across the region. Sites are distributed across the entire range of elevations in the region. The number of locations collecting snow information has increased substantially in the last 20 years, primarily from the expansion of the CoCoRaHS (Community Collaborative Rain, Hail, and Snow) network. Our summary of regional snow measurement locations provides a foundation for future studies and analysis, including a template for other regions of the United States.
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Lovoi, Annette, Julia Brown, Barbara Magnoni et Rebecca Thornton. Risk across Borders : A Study of the Potential of Microinsurance Products to Help Migrants Cope with Cross Border Risks. Inter-American Development Bank, septembre 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0011118.

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This paper presents new evidence on migration and risk among Mexican migrants to the United States living in the New York City area. The paper examines the potential demand for formal risk mitigating mechanisms by studying some of the risks facing this community on both sides of the border, and provide greater understanding of their current informal risk management tools.
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