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Showing 1 to 15 of 34 results Save | Export
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Markowitz, Gerald; Rosner, David – Academe, 2010
During the past two decades, historians have been brought into legal cases in unprecedented numbers. As the courts have tried to adjudicate responsibility for environmental and occupational diseases, history and historians have played an increasingly central role in shaping decisions in the cases themselves as well as in related social policy. In…
Descriptors: Historians, Court Litigation, Occupational Diseases, Poisoning
Hartlep, Nicholas Daniel – Online Submission, 2010
Written through the prism of Critical Race Theory (CRT), this paper addresses the question, "How can schoolhouses best serve the students within them?" The author begins by introducing "environmental racism" through a review of the literature. The author argues that CRT proponents, by allying with whites and using geographic…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Racial Discrimination, Whites, Geographic Information Systems
Leal, Amy – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
Two months before he died, John Keats claimed he had been poisoned. Although most scholars and biographers have attributed Keats's fears of persecution, betrayal, and murder to consumptive dementia, Keats's suspicions had begun long before 1820 and were not without some justification. In this article, the author talks about the death of John…
Descriptors: Poetry, Poets, Poisoning, Death
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Marika, Rarriwuy; Yunupingu, Yalmay; Marika-Mununggiritj, Raymattja; Muller, Samantha – Journal of Rural Studies, 2009
The popular construction of rural places as "white" spaces has significant repercussions for ethnic, Indigenous and "other" groups who do not always fit within prescribed dominant processes. This paper provides new insights for rural scholarship through an engagement with Indigenous specific experiences of governance and…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Poisoning, Rural Areas, Foreign Countries
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Schneider, Stanley – Adolescence, 1980
Drug/poison inhalation is described as a neglected dimension in the clinical intake process. Various technical concepts are explained with classification and diagnoses. (SS)
Descriptors: Drug Abuse, Mental Disorders, Poisoning
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Tsuji, Leonard J. S.; Nieboer, Evert – Journal of Environmental Education, 2001
Describes a study designed to examine the effectiveness of the family-based environmental education lead poisoning program called "The Adventure of Lead Commander". Design and methodological weaknesses call into question the conclusions reached in the study. The effectiveness of the educational program cannot be ascertained from the data…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Environmental Education, Lead Poisoning
Riley, Becky – 2000
This report examines the extensive presence of pesticide contamination in the environment and its impact on children. Chapters 1 and 2 review evidence that when pesticides are used indoors or out in other comparable settings, unavoidable contamination occurs, even when products are used according to label directions. Chapter 3 explains that people…
Descriptors: Child Health, Elementary Secondary Education, Pesticides, Poisoning
Institute for Environmental Assessment, Brooklyn Park, MN. – 1994
This paper examines the lead issue in school buildings, noting that even minimal exposures to lead can create diagnosable health problems in children. It includes comments about current regulations and laws pertaining to the areas of soil, water, air, debris disposal, surfaces, and level of lead in the blood. It also lists responses to lead that…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Lead Poisoning, Prevention, Public Schools
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Chaiklin, Harris – American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 1979
The article discusses the dangers to children posed by lead in the environment, and briefly reviews selected research on the subject. (Author/DLS)
Descriptors: Environmental Influences, Hyperactivity, Lead Poisoning, Opinions
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Ernhart, Claire B.; Needleman, Herbert L. – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1987
Opposing views regarding the connection between lead exposure and cognitive impairment are presented. C. B. Ernhart states that no study has yet proved that low-level lead exposure is detrimental to child development, while H. L. Needleman asserts that previous research studies have proven conclusively that such a connection exists. (CB)
Descriptors: Child Development, Etiology, Intelligence Quotient, Lead Poisoning
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Bryce-Smith, D.; Pickard, P.M. – International Journal of Early Childhood, 1980
Descriptors: Children, Dyslexia, Hyperactivity, Lead Poisoning
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Needleman, Herbert L. – American Journal of Public Health, 1991
Discusses the mounting evidence for the neurological damage of childhood lead poisoning. Argues that ignoring lead poisoning is more expensive than preventing it. Reviews a recent plan to eradicate lead poisoning and the sociological factors that may impede its implementation. (CJS)
Descriptors: Child Advocacy, Child Welfare, Children, Lead Poisoning
Virginia State Div. for Children, Richmond. – 1981
The three major causes of injury and mortality among children in the state of Virginia are, in order of frequency, automobile-related accidents, poison ingestion, and suicide. With respect to injuries sustained in automobile accidents, adults traveling with children by car must accept responsibility for the safety of child passengers. Acute…
Descriptors: Accident Prevention, Adolescents, Child Safety, Children
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Piomelli, Sergio – Pediatrics, 1994
Notes that, despite gains in eliminating lead sources, there are still detectable effects from low-level exposure. Discusses at what level of exposure the adverse effects of lead become trivial and what measures, if any, should be taken to reduce low-level exposure. (HTH)
Descriptors: Air Pollution, Child Health, Child Safety, Children
O'Hara, Jim – Momentum, 2000
Reports that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has been tracking the levels of lead, which is linked to increased behavioral disorders, retardation, and anemia in children, in the United States since the 1970s. Provides statistics on the current state of chronic diseases in the U.S. and asserts that there is a need for a nationwide heath…
Descriptors: Anemia, Child Health, Conservation (Environment), Disease Control
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