Sentences with phrase «recent scholarly work»

The conclusion of the two meta - analyses and the systematic reviews, and the over-all conclusion of the most recent scholarly work on SFBT, is that Solution - Focused Brief Therapy is an effective approach to the treatment of psychological problems, with effect sizes similar to other evidenced - based approaches, such as CBT and IPT, but that these effects are found in fewer average sessions, and using an approach style that is more benign (Gingerich et al, 2012; Trepper & Franklin, 2012).
Then look up recent scholarly work on the PETM.
The Dark Ages are reasserted as dark, as if all the recent scholarly work to shed light upon late antiquity were in vain.

Not exact matches

The latter approach has gained considerable traction over recent years, in part because of the impressive scholarly work of Brad Gregory in his book The Unintended Reformation.
I have retraced and reviewed these conversations, and attempted to assess their contribution to our contemporary understanding of process metaphysics, in a number of other works (e.g., The Rehabilitation of Whitehead, «The Compositional History of Whitehead's Writings,» «Outside the Camp: Recent Work in Whitehead's Philosophy»), which help contextualize historically the many contributions Ford has made in over 100 scholarly articles published during the past three decades.
The scholarly work on dog domestication is quite voluminous; below are listed a few of the most recent studies.
Stories featured on CASW Showcase are selected by a panel of volunteer judges from work recognized by recent awards given by scholarly and professional organizations.
The recent convergence of scholarly research, program development efforts, and policy advocacy work have all pushed in the direction of a fresh «ecological» framework for learning that nests more responsibility in the nonschool hours.
These works have been informed by the development of the contemporary art world over recent decades, as a previously more insular, scholarly culture has transformed into a more market - driven scene appealing to a new class of international plutocrats.
Recent scholarly writing on her work has been published in the Brooklyn Rail (2017); Artforum (2016); Art in America (2016); The New York Times (2016); and South Atlantic Quarterly (2015).
Fiber, as the ICA's website attests, may be «the first exhibition in 40 years to examine the development of abstraction and dimensionality in fiber art from the mid-twentieth century through to the present,» but it also speaks to a broader interest in this type of work evidenced by recent curatorial and scholarly projects, including Elissa Auther's String, Felt, Thread: The Hierarchy of Art and Craft in America (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2009)(click here for review); Thread Lines, a group exhibition curated by Joanna Kleinberg Romanow at the Drawing Center in New York (2014); and Richard Tuttles's installation I Don't Know.
In this volume, amply illustrated with many never - before - seen images from early in his career as well as new photography of his most recent works, scholarly essays provide a broad context for viewing: Cornelia Butler looks at Graham's relationship to landscape and Canadian identity, Lynne Cooke examines the construction of the artist's persona in works such as City Self / Country Self (2001), and Shep Steiner discusses the joke as a conceptual strategy for Graham.
The most recent issue of D - Lib Magazine includes the article Scaling Up Perma.cc: Ensuring the Integrity of the Digital Scholarly Record that describes work to continue developing the Harvard Library Innovation Lab's Perma.cc web archiving service.
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