YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :African Americans in the Legal Profession
Essays 841 - 870
of postwar survival -- that a person who learns a trade and can take care of himself is not only an asset to his own family but to...
interest that particular vocation. If it holds a significant amount of appeal, then it would be wise to dissect it right down to ...
base on Pearl Harbor in Hawaii, officially bringing the United States into World War II. At the time of the surprise attack, howev...
to be human life. There are, of course various other elements which enter into accountability concerns but human life is the most...
She stated that sex was "only warranted as an expression of true and passionate love" (DEmilio and Freedman, 1988, p.56). DEmilio ...
out the parameters of the problem and review previous the results of research in this area. She discusses how patients older than ...
(Hodges, Satkowski, and Ganchorre, 1998). Despite the hospital closings and the restructuring of our national health care system ...
present-day nurse, he notes, this can be construed to mean a caring about the well-being of those the nurse serves which, in this ...
term. The rationale is that the experienced nurse will guide the new graduate into the active and applied portion of the pr...
effective leader was his ability to build bridges between communities, between upper and lower caste Hindus and among Hindus, Musl...
and other health care workers cope with musculoskeletal problems even in the primary care setting. A Wausau Insurance Company rep...
home as well. All of this adds up to the fact that officers rarely have a place they can go to relieve their stress; it follows t...
noted that cases of a rare lung infection, pneumocystis carinni pneumonia, had occurred in Los Angeles and also that three young m...
a more useful graduate" (Patterson, 1990, p. 69). The extent to which educators deal with both internal and external issues is ov...
deals with knowledge about how knowledge itself develops. From this starting point, Rossides goes on to discuss a brief history of...
In five pages this paper examines how social justice is the goal of the social work profession. Twelve sources are cited in the...
who choose to use qualitative methods tend to seek a deeper reality, inasmuch as their aim is to "study things in their natural se...
most often have a great deal of training and, in most mainstream settings, are also nurses or nurse-midwife practitioners. Many ar...
repressed anger" (Shannon, 2001; p. 60). This rudimentary profile can describe hundreds of thousands of Americans, of cours...
stress and exhaustion sets in (1992). Nurse managers are subject to continual stress as many of their tasks involve life an...
unsafe by those who practice the procedure unskilled and unprepared for complications should they arise. So why do women still con...
there are other reasons for diversity hiring. In police departments around the nation, there have been accusations of prejudice. O...
on a global scale. Therefore, for nurses to succeed in the complex world of the twenty-first century, many authorities feel th...
This essay describes the unionization debate in regards to the nursing profession and focuses on the con side. Four pages in lengt...
This essay offers an analysis of the nursing profession. Specifically, strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats are ident...
that if a society views social workers and their clients as somehow less desirable members of that society, and if they dont like ...
organisational changes fail at a rate of 29% (Maurer, 1997). Reengineering is higher at 30% and of most concern is the figure for ...
change, understand the reasons for this change and hare a vision of the future" (Gokenbach, 2003, p. 8). The catch is that these g...
before God to my chosen profession... Law Enforcement" (Morris and Vila, 1999, p. 164). When labor unions had succeeded in substa...
have otherwise been a lingering existence in private homes or disreputable hospitals. Inasmuch as the nurse is "temporarily the c...