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We study factors influencing individuals’ decisions to purchase Citibank stock during the 1920s. Familiarity was an important positive influence (measured outside New York by branch presence, and within New York, by network connections to existing owners). Within New York, wealth, knowledge, and one's influence within the New York City Business network also increased the probability of becoming a Citibank shareholder. The role of some network influences, like other identifiable influences, became less important during the price boom of the late 1920s, perhaps reflecting the rising importance of other means of increasing familiarity during the price boom (i.e. media coverage).
This Roundtable marks the beginning of a new era for the Journal of British Studies (JBS). Volume 63, issue 4, October 2024, was the last traditional issue printed on paper. No longer will members of the North American Conference on British Studies receive a bound volume quarterly in the mail. We fully understand that for many of our readers the end of print is emotionally wrought, and it constitutes a loss that is tangible and personal. We know that many people enjoy reading the journal from cover to cover, or dipping in and out, and then archiving it on their bookshelves for future use. In using the journal in this way, our readers have cherished JBS as a material object. As scholars born into an age of mass communication, cheap print, long distance shipping, and widespread literacy, we have taken the format of the academic journal for granted. But as historians we know better than anyone that the only thing constant is change. This Roundtable demonstrates that print—what it is, what it enables, what it means—has always been both capacious and contentious. As editors, we hope these essays spark a critical consideration of the age of print and encourage us to move forward into the new era together, innovating in the ways we produce, disseminate, and consume knowledge.
In 2017, the World Health Organization introduced an international standardized medical data collection tool for disasters, known as the Emergency Medical Team (EMT) Minimum Data Set (MDS). The EMT MDS was activated for the first time in 2019 in response to Cyclone Idai in Mozambique. The present study aimed to examine the daily and phase trends in acute mental health problems identified by international EMTs during their response to Cyclone Idai and reported using the EMT MDS.
Methods
Joinpoint regression analysis was used to examine daily trends in acute mental health consultations. Trends were also examined by phases, which were identified using joinpoints.
Results
During the 90-day EMT response period following Cyclone Idai, 94 acute mental health consultations were reported. The daily trend analysis showed a significant increase in the daily number and percentage of acute mental health consultations from response onset until day 13, followed by a gradual decline (P<0.05). The phase trend analysis showed a consistent decrease across the identified phases (P for trend<0.001).
Conclusions
The findings of this study provide insight into the need for mental health support in the immediate aftermath of natural disasters and how that need may change over time.
In 2022, the Centre for Global South Asia (CGSA) at Royal Holloway University of London developed a small research project entitled ‘Exhibit Asia’. The aim was to explore the use of exhibitions in nation-making in postcolonial South and East Asia in contrast to the scholarly preoccupation with investigating the region’s history of museums and exhibitions primarily in a colonial context. Its academic outcomes were to be a conference and related publication; but we also wanted our research to be relevant to our students. The resulting intervention in the teaching and learning of history took the form of a curatorial fellowship for an international cohort of ten students from Taiwan, Japan, India, Pakistan and the UK, leading to a co-curated online exhibition. The first section of this article sets out the development, design and delivery of the fellowship and discusses the viability and relevance of such projects. The subsequent three sections are co-authored by several of the participating students. They outline their methods, reflections and learnings; share their insights on the role of exhibitions in perceptions of Asia in the UK today; and analyse responses to ‘Tea and Tigers’, the online exhibition that was the outcome of the fellowship.
The articles compiled here offer examples of how the impacts of anthropogenic climate change in coastal settings are monitored and measured, how the broader public can be involved in these efforts, and how planning for mitigation can come about. The case studies are drawn from the southeastern United States and the British Isles, and they indicate the great potential that cooperating communities of practice can offer for addressing climate-change impacts on cultural heritage.
The decorative potential of an early modern playhouse depended considerably on whether it was an outdoor or indoor venue. Once the King’s Men started alternating between the outdoor Globe and indoor Blackfriars from 1609, they were able regularly to introduce a new technology to their roster of performance effects: candlelight.
Fall-planted cover crops are becoming popular among growers in the Midwest for various reasons, including their ability to suppress weeds. Cereal rye is the cover crop most often planted in Nebraska. Glyphosate availability was limited in 2022, so growers sought information about glyphosate alternatives for terminating cover crops such as cereal rye. The objectives of this study were to evaluate glyphosate alternative acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACCase)-inhibiting herbicides for terminating cereal rye 15 d before soybean planting (DBSP), at soybean planting day (SPD), and 15 d after soybean planting (DASP) and their effect on weed control, density, biomass, soybean plant stand, and soybean grain yield. Field experiments were conducted from 2018 to 2020 at South Central Ag Lab near Clay Center, Nebraska. Cereal rye biomass collected 15 d after termination was 394, 1,697, and 3,700 kg ha−1 in 2019 and 330, 1,304, and 4,550 kg ha−1 in 2020, respectively, at the 15 DBSP at SPD and 15 DASP termination timings. Clethodim provided 77% control of cereal rye 15 DBSP compared with greater than 94% control with applications of fluazifop-P-butyl, fluazifop-P-butyl/fenoxaprop-P-ethyl, quizalofop-P-ethyl, and glyphosate. Similarly, at the SPD and 15 DASP termination timings, 66% and 31% control of cereal rye, respectively, were recorded after clethodim was used compared with greater than 92% control after other ACCase-inhibitors and glyphosate were used. Palmer amaranth control at the R5 soybean growth stage was 70%, 88%, and 96%, respectively, at 15 DBSP, SPD, and 15 DASP. Soybean yield was reduced to 2,184 kg ha−1 when cereal rye was terminated at 15 DASP compared with 4,566 kg ha−1 when it was terminated at SPD, and 4,460 kg ha−1 at 15 DBSP.
While a trip to a bar or pub might not conjure up the image of a whole night’s theatrical entertainment for us, for the average Londoner in Shakespeare’s time it often did exactly that. Several large inns located within the City itself, whose yards probably looked a little something like the illustration depicted in Figure 6.1, are known to have hosted all manner of entertainments, including plays performed by Shakespeare’s company and others.
Despite persistent reference to the ‘all-male stage’, women comprised a significant portion of the audience at both types of playhouse. We have records of playhouse attendance by a queen, along with two countesses, four other women aristocrats, two ambassadors’ wives, and ten ladies (Gurr 1996, 61). This likely incomplete roll-call sheds interesting interpretive light on the potential reception of the sexual politics in several of Shakespeare’s plays, not least The Taming of the Shrew, Much Ado about Nothing, and Measure for Measure.
The devastating impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the missing voices of families and residents in long-term care (LTC) decision-making and policy processes. Family and resident councils constitute one method of raising these voices, but there is currently a gap in evidence of how to promote the effectiveness of these councils. We conducted five focus groups and two interviews with LTC home leaders, residents, family members, and advocates in British Columbia using a participatory approach integrating knowledge-users throughout the research process. Using a framework analysis, we found modifiable (communication, structure, recruitment/engagement, council leadership, culture/attitudes, and resources/supports) and non-modifiable factors (medical complexity of residents and short lengths of stay) affecting council effectiveness. We discuss strategies implemented by knowledge-users to address modifiable effectiveness factors and construct a preliminary tool (a 35-question survey) that operationalizes and identifies areas that can increase council effectiveness in practice to ensure that their voices are heard in LTC decision making.
As Tim Fitzpatrick, a leading proponent of the two-door theory, has shown in a book-length study of early modern players’ use of stage space, even the three stage directions cited by Gurr and Ichikawa which seem to call unproblematically for three doors can be read in the opposite direction: as demands for a third opening to be created onstage for one-off use – by hanging up a set of curtains across the back of the stage, for instance (Fitzpatrick 2011, 64).
The problem of evil is an ideal topic for experimental philosophy. Suffering – which is at the heart of most prominent formulations of the problem of evil – is a universal human experience and has been the topic of careful reflection for millennia. However, interpretations of suffering and how it bears on the existence of God are tremendously diverse and nuanced. Why does suffering push some people toward atheism while pushing others toward deeper faith? What cultural, psychological, or sociological differences account for this diversity of responses? And, importantly, what light might this diversity of responses shed on the problem of evil and how it has been formulated by philosophers in recent years? The aim of this article is to highlight how the tools and resources of experimental philosophy might be fruitfully applied to the problem of evil. In the first section, we review some recent work in this area and describe the current state of this emergent body of literature. In the second section, we review the broader and more recent theoretical developments on the problem of evil. In the final section, we outline some potential areas of future empirical research that we see as especially promising given those developments.
At coastal archaeological sites, measuring erosion rates and assessing artifact loss are vital to understanding the timescale(s) and spatial magnitude of past and future site loss. We describe a straightforward low-tech methodology for documenting shoreline erosion developed by professionals and volunteers over seven years at Calusa Island Midden (8LL45), one of the few remaining sites with an Archaic component in the Pine Island Sound region of coastal Southwest Florida. We outline the evolution of the methodology since its launch in 2016 and describe issues encountered and solutions implemented. We also describe the use of the data to guide archaeological research and document the impacts of major storms at the site. The response to Hurricane Ian in 2022 is one example of how simply collected data can inform site management. This methodology can be implemented easily at other coastal sites at low cost and in collaboration with communities, volunteers, and heritage site managers.
At the Blackfriars, the general layout of the auditorium was broadly similar to that of the Globe, though it isn’t as clear whether there were two levels of galleries or three (current scholarship favours a three-gallery structure like the Globe’s – see O. Jones 2014, 68; Cohen 2011, 213).