The Scout Report for Social Sciences - September 19, 2000

September 19, 2000

A Publication of the Internet Scout Project
Computer Sciences Department, University of Wisconsin-Madison

The target audience of the new Scout Report for Social Sciences is faculty, students, staff, and librarians in the social sciences. Each biweekly issue offers a selective collection of Internet resources covering topics in the field that have been chosen by librarians and content specialists in the given area of study.

The Scout Report for Social Sciences is also provided via email once every two weeks. Subscription information is included at the bottom of each issue.

In This Issue

Research

Learning Resources

New Data

Current Awareness

In The News


Research

"Marketing Violent Entertainment to Children" -- FTC [.pdf]
http://www.ftc.gov/opa/2000/09/youthviol.htm
With a bit of fanfare, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) released on September 11 a new 104-page report which accused the entertainment industry of marketing violent material to children, even when that material is labeled for mature audiences only. The report was conducted after requests by President Clinton and some members of Congress in the wake of the school shootings in Columbine, CO. The report finds that, though entertainment companies have taken self-regulating steps to identify mature content, they regularly target children under seventeen in marketing those same products. While recommending additional self-regulation by the industry, the FTC report does not call for any legislative remedies at this point. In a well-timed interview with the New York Times, Vice-President Gore chided the entertainment industry and stated that he would seek new regulations if the report's recommendations were not adopted within six months. The full text of the report is available in its entirety or by section at the FTC site, along with the official press release. [MD]
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Two from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) [.pdf]:
Teachers' Tools for the 21st Century: A Report on Teachers' Use of Technology [.pdf, 178 pages]:
http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2000/2000102.pdf
Executive Summary and Chapters One and Two [.pdf, 28 pages]:
http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2000/2000102A.pdf
The NPEC Sourcebook on Assessment [.pdf]
Volume 1: Definitions and Assessment Methods for Critical Thinking, Problem Solving, and Writing [.pdf, 118 pages]
http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2000/2000195.pdf
Volume 2: Selected Institutions Utilizing Assessment Results [.pdf, 52 pages]
http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2000/2000196.pdf
Interactive version:
http://nces.ed.gov/npec/evaltests/
In the past week, the NCES has issued two significant publications. The first, Teachers' Tools for the 21st Century: A Report on Teachers' Use of Technology, "uses multiple data sources to describe teachers' use of education technology in their classrooms and schools." It examines the availability of computer and Internet technology in the classroom, teacher training and preparation for using such technology, and the barriers that teachers encounter to its use. Key findings of the report include the fact that approximately half of the public school teachers who had access to computers or the Internet used them for classroom instruction and that the most frequently reported barriers to instructional use of computers were "not enough computers (78 percent), lack of release time for teachers to learn how to use computers or the Internet (82 percent), and lack of time in schedule for students to use computers in class (80 percent). The second publication, The NPEC Sourcebook on Assessment Volumes 1 and 2, offers "a tool for researchers who are seeking comparative data about the policy-relevance of student outcomes measured in the primary skills areas of critical thinking, problem solving, and writing." The first volume provides a "a compendium of information about tests" used to assess these skills at the postsecondary education level, while the second volume "presents a series of case studies at postsecondary institutions highlighting the successful use of assessment data for policy-related decisionmaking purposes." An interactive version of the Sourcebook is also available, though we found this to be more difficult to use. [DC]
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Civil Rights in Mississippi Digital Archive
http://www.lib.usm.edu/~spcol/crda/index.html
Maintained by the McCain Library and Archives at the University of Southern Mississippi (USM), this Website features "an Internet-accessible, fully searchable database of digitized versions of rare and unique library and archival resources on race relations in Mississippi." Currently, the site contains 63 transcripts of oral history, each one supplemented by a brief biography of the interviewee, a list of topics discussed, information about the circumstances of the interview, and best of all for researchers, a find function for searching each transcript for particular terms. Eventually, the Website plans to offer no less than 125 oral history transcripts that emphasize "local sources with truly national significance." In addition, plans are in the works to include photographs and distributed civil rights literature from the time. Given Mississippi's pivotal role in the Civil Rights movement, this site will surely be of great use to researchers of the Civil Rights era. The project is presented in cooperation with the USM Center for Oral History. [DC]
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Harry S. Truman Library and Museum
http://www.trumanlibrary.org/
One of the ten Presidential Libraries administered by the National Archives and Records Administration, the Harry S. Truman Library and Museum features documents and materials from the Truman era. Highlights of the site include original documents relating to the Korean War, the Berlin Airlift, the formation of NATO, the decision to drop the bomb, the Marshall Plan, and the Truman Doctrine. A detailed chronology of Truman's life and times from 1940 until his death is also posted along with photographs, educational programs and resources (including Project Whistlestop, an extensive Website offering online activities for K-12, last featured in the March 24, 2000 Scout Report), and online museum exhibits. Even a quick visit to this Website powerfully reminds us of the pivotal role Truman's presidency played in the history of the 20th century. [DC]
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Prosperity for America's Families: The Gore-Lieberman Economic Plan [.pdf]
http://www.algore.com/pdf/gore_prosperity.pdf
This 196-page document from the democratic presidential and vice-presidential candidates Al Gore and Joe Lieberman details their proposed economic plan for the United States. Their plan centers on issues of the American families, and their goals include "extending the life of Social Security and Medicare," increasing the family income by one third, and cutting the wage gap between men and women in half. The first chapter of the report describes the candidates's goals to tailor the American economic plan to help Americans and their families. The subsequent eleven chapters investigate the plan in greater detail, including proposed economic policies and budget outlines. The plan also links to the official Al Gore Website, which offers additional information about the economic plan. The proposal provides an in-depth view of the Gore-Lieberman economic plan in easy-to-read language. [EM]
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Philosophy - Neuroscience - Psychology (PNP) Archive of Papers and Technical Reports -- Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri [PostScript]
http://www.artsci.wustl.edu/~pnp/archive/archive.html
The Department of Philosophy at Washington University offers an extensive archive of papers and technical reports on interdisciplinary issues involving philosophy, neuroscience, and psychology at their PNP Website. The documents can be browsed by author's last name and by a number assigned by the maintainers of PNP, but no search option is available. Titles are listed with abstracts in HTML format and links to the full text, typically offered in PostScript format, though some are in HTML or ASC II. We found one bad link on our visit, but the archive is kept current, and many leading scholars in the field have posted work here. [DC]
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A Good Beginning: Sending America's Children to School with the Social and Emotional Competence They Need to Succeed -- US Department of Health and Human Services [.pdf]
http://www.nimh.nih.gov/childhp/monograph.pdf
Released on September 6 by the Department of Health and Human Services, this 23-page report compiled by The Child Mental Health Foundations and Agencies Network examines the issues surrounding the social transition of children from pre-school and home environments to K-12 education. The purpose of the monograph "is to summarize the research on the social and emotional risk and protective factors that predict early school outcomes and to analyze the federal policies that seek to improve these outcomes." The publication also explores the existing gaps between research and practice, and makes recommendations for reform. [DC]
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Learning Resources

Electronic Literature Directory
http://directory.eliterature.org/
Electronic Literature Organization
http://www.eliterature.org/index2.html
The heart of the Electronic Literature Organization's Website, this Website presents a "comprehensive directory of work" in the field of electronic literature. Electronic literature is here defined as any literature with an electronic element available on the Internet and thus includes both experimental Internet novels and animated poems as well as audio versions of traditional works that have been made available on the Web, such as the postings of authors reading their own works available at sites like the Atlantic Monthly's Poetry Pages. The directory's virtues include size -- there are over 400 links for poetry alone; thoroughness of annotations; and ease of access -- the directory allows users to search and browse by author, traditional genre, type of electronic media (hypertext, recording, animated text, online generated text, and other multimedia), and keyword. In addition, the creators have struck a balance between the democratic impulse of the Internet and the desire for aesthetic quality, allowing individuals to register to have their works appear in the directory but requiring submission of their work to an editorial review by the Directory's board before posting. With individuals like the postmodern novelist Robert Coover and Larry Wangberg, CEO of ZDTV, behind it, this Website promises to give electronic literature a new level of visibility and credibility. A good thing, even if Coover's prediction that "the vast majority of the human race will simply do without literature" if they cannot find it on the Web does strike us as a premature epitaph on that four-centuries-old technology: the printed word. [DC]
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CNNfyi.com [QuickTime, RealPlayer, or Windows Media Player; SimPlayer]
http://fyi.cnn.com/fyi/
Playing from its strength, CNN offers this new education site built around issues in the news as covered by various CNN programs. The site comes in two versions -- one for students and another for teachers. The student version features news stories; student reports and commentary from CNN's Student Bureau; online polls on adolescent issues; feature stories in health, entertainment, and popular culture; and Reel History, a section highlighting significant moments in recent history through video chronicles. The teacher's version offers a wealth of lesson plan guides, timelines, reference links, and an extensive collection of materials for units in the subject areas of social studies and history, science and technology, geography, economics, language and fine arts, health and fitness, the environment, mathematics, and world languages. To view video segments, users will need QuickTime, RealPlayer, or Windows Media Player. Some interactive elements require the application SimPlayer. Note: pages are loaded with graphics and links and may task lower bandwidths. [DC]
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The NPR 100: The 100 most important American musical works of the 20th century -- National Public Radio [RealPlayer]
http://www.npr.org/programs/specials/vote/list100.html
Last October, working off of a list created by NPR staff, critics, and scholars, NPR listeners and a panel of musicians voted for the 100 most important American musical works of the 20th century. Throughout this year, NPR has been broadcasting stories featuring these works on All Things Considered NPR's Performance Today, and other NPR shows. The Website currently features 53 of these broadcasts, which typically run about ten minutes and feature performances of the musical piece along with a background report on its genesis and significance to American music. The list is both fascinating and profoundly eclectic, ranging from Stravinsky's Symphony of Psalms to Nirvana's "Smells like Teen Spirit" with representatives from folk, rock, jazz, R 'n' B, gospel, punk, American musicals, the hit parade, and country. The broadcasts are listed in order of appearance (most recent first) with annotations, or alphabetically without annotations. A description of the voting process is also posted. Visitors will need RealPlayer to listen to the broadcasts. Note: we do wish that the creators of the site had chosen the QuickTime audio application so as to avoid that wobbly streaming effect that so undermines a piece like Barber's Adagio for Strings.[DC]
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American Indian Resources
http://jupiter.lang.osaka-u.ac.jp/~krkvls/naindex.html
Multicultural Resources
http://jupiter.lang.osaka-u.ac.jp/~krkvls/
This Website offers a directory of briefly annotated links to resources and Websites in Native American Studies, Texts, Culture, Literature and Background, History, Representations, Languages, and Nations. Students and researchers can find information here on everything from the representation of Laguna women in Leslie Marmon Silko's fiction to the Bureau of Indian Affairs's official definition of a "tribe," to dozens of links for Native American law and advocacy issues. All of the pages we visited had been updated in the past few months, and the site links to a page by Elaine Cubbins, graduate student at University of Arizona, "Techniques for Evaluating American Indian Web Sites," that not only serves to give a sense of the inclusion criteria of the site's authors, but provides a kind of tutorial for doing Web research related to Native Americans or Native American issues. The Website is authored by Will Karkavelas of Osaka University and is part of his larger site, Multicultural Resources, offering similar directories for African-American and Hawaiian studies.
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School Psychology Resources Online
http://www.schoolpsychology.net/
With over 1,000 annotated links, this Website offers a valuable directory of online resources in the broad and burgeoning field of school psychology. Resources are divided into two broad categories: Specific Conditions, Disorders, and Disabilities, and Other Information. The first includes listings for such topics as Attention Deficit Disorders, Deafness, Eating Disorders, Learning Disabilities, Mental Retardation, Substance Abuse, and Tourette's Syndrome. The second catch-all category includes such topics as Adolescence, Assessment/Evaluation, ERIC Clearinghouses, Law and Education, Mental Health, Professional Organizations, and about a dozen others. The links are authoritative, and the Website is updated daily. A features section also includes an online bookstore, daily cartoon, and jobs information. The site is created and maintained by Sandra Steingart, who holds a doctorate in education and works in the Office of Psychological Services in the Baltimore County Public Schools. [DC]
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PopPolitics
http://poppolitics.com/
Founded and maintained by by Christine Cupaiuolo, a former newspaper reporter and writer/researcher for C-SPAN, this new e-zine seeks to exploit the increasingly growing intersection between politics and popular culture. As its mission statement says, "popular culture guides politics, often possessing a greater influence over our imagination and our decisions than any rule of law. Politics, moreover, invades popular culture, often suppressing or exacerbating concerns that first emerged in other supposedly apolitical venues." If that sounds a bit stuffy, we can only say that the articles are not. The second issue published last Friday devotes its main section to issues of work and includes the article "What is Hard Work? -- written by a university professor who, remembering that his father sold hot dogs and dodged bowling pins -- disputes the notion that academics have it tough. Other features in this issue examine the nexus between professional sport and the marketing of sex and gender, the popularity of The Sopranos as motivated by a nostalgia for "an old-fashioned, vigorous, and indiscriminate man," and the obsession with Survivor as an indication of a rise in American individualism and a falling off in party loyalty among presidential candidates. Readers who get exercised over the ideas in the articles can join the online discussion at PopForum, and a Mixed Media section provides links to media-related pieces. More like Salon than George, only time will tell if PopPolitics can carve a genuine niche for itself in the exploding world of ephemeral cultural commentary. [DC]
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The Complete History of the Discovery of Cinematography
http://www.precinemahistory.net/
Subtitled An Illustrated Chronological History Of The Development Of Motion Pictures Covering 2,500 Years Leading To Cinematography In The 1800's, this Website presents a prehistory of Cinematography beginning with the cave drawings at Lascaux and the shadow plays of Ancient China through the "earliest-ever extant illustration of the camera obscura in 1420 and finishing with the first true "films," albeit very short ones, in the late nineteenth century. The site is structured as an annotated timeline with graphic illustrations but, strangely, no video. Researched, compiled, and written by Paul T. Burns, a Canadian film historian, the Website offers an interesting summary of humankind's fascination with light and its capacity to project visions of the imagination. [DC]
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Social Change
http://gsociology.icaap.org/
Created and maintained by Gene Shackman, who holds a PhD in sociology from SUNY Albany, this Website serves as a directory of annotated links for scholarship and resources in the area of social change. Included here are links to theory, research, data sources, social history sites, national profiles, bibliographies and syllabi, gateways, and pertinent organizations. The author has also posted an essay offering a summary of theories of social change. The links are credible and frequently updated; the annotations, clear and concise. [DC]
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New Data

Psychology Experiments on the Internet [Excel, Authorware]
http://www.olemiss.edu/PsychExps/
UK Mirror site
http://www.psy.ed.ac.uk/psychexps/
PsychExperiments is an extraordinary online cognitive and social psychology laboratory site developed with funding from the US Department of Education's Fund for the Improvement of Post-Secondary Education (FIPSE). Visitors, including faculty and students, can participate in interactive online experiments, download and analyze cumulative data from over 35 ongoing and completed experiments conducted over the last five years, and consult support materials in preparation for using or developing on-site experiments. Recently added experiments include Learning and Memory, Semantic Differential, Perception of Gender in Facial Features, the Be A Juror study, and a Wheel of Fortune study. The data are designed to be downloaded in Microsoft Excel spreadsheets, and participation in online experiments requires a Shockwave Authorware player. A link is also provided to a substantial chapter-by-chapter summary of the recently published Psychological Experiments on the Internet, edited by Michael H. Birnbaum, complete with links to data and experiment Websites relevant to each article. Psychology Experiments on the Internet is hosted by the University of Mississippi. [DC]
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World Data on Education -- International Bureau of Education (IBE)
http://www.ibe.unesco.org/Inf_Doc/Nat_reps/wdepfome.htm
Maintained by the International Bureau of Education, a department of UNESCO, this Website features documentation and data on education across the globe. The materials are kept in two databases: the first provides profiles of national education systems for 144 countries, prepared by the IBE, and the second gives the 1993-1994 national reports on educational development from UNESCO-member countries. Both databases may be searched by region, country, fields of inquiry, broad keywords, and free text. Documents appear within frames in HTML. The site also contains a descriptive essay linked to relevant data sites as well as a subject-indexed directory of annotated sites. The What's New section keeps visitors updated on recent additions. [DC]
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State Of Working America 2000-01: Introduction and Executive Summary -- Economic Policy Institute
http://www.epinet.org/books/swa2000/swa2000intro.html#
Released on Labor Day, the State of Working America 2000-01 report from the Economic Policy Institute offers comprehensive data concerning such issues as family income, wages, employment, wealth, and poverty. The report also features regional analyses and international comparisons of these data. While the entire text is not currently available online, a lengthy introduction and executive summary have been posted presenting substantive data and analysis on the aforementioned topics. Visitors may also order a copy online from a link available at the address above. The Economic Policy Institute is a "nonprofit, nonpartisan think tank that seeks to broaden the public debate about strategies to achieve a prosperous and fair economy." [DC]
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Current Awareness
(For links to additional current awareness on tables of contents, abstracts, preprints, new books, data, conferences, etc., visit the The Scout Report for Social Sciences Current Awareness Metapage: http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/report/socsci/metapage/).

UN End of Millennium Summit Final Declaration
http://www.un.org/millennium/declaration/ares552e.htm
.pdf version
http://www.un.org/millennium/declaration/ares552e.pdf
The UN has posted the End of Millennium Summit Final Declaration signed by over 150 heads of state who attended the Millennium Summit earlier this month in New York (see the September 5, 2000 Scout Report for the Social Sciences). The document articulates 32 points, expressing the goals of the UN for peace and prosperity in the coming century. Among the more substantive statements are a commitment to "minimize the adverse effects of United Nations economic sanctions on innocent populations, subjecting such sanctions regimes to regular reviews" and a promise to give full support to the political and institutional structures of emerging democracies in Africa. Among the most ambitious goals -- and one quite possibly beyond the powers of the current UN to realize -- is the goal "to halve, by the year 2015, the proportion of the world's people whose income is less than one dollar a day and the proportion of people who suffer from hunger; and also, by the same date, to halve the proportion of people who are unable to reach, or to afford, safe drinking water." [DC]
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New Working Papers

Axtell, Robert L. "Effects of Interaction Topology and Activation Regime in Several Multi-Agent Systems" -- Center on Social and Economic Dynamics
Working Paper No. 12 [.pdf, 11 pages]
http://www.brookings.edu/es/dynamics/papers/interaction/interaction.pdf

Birdsall, Nancy, Carol Graham, and Stefano Pettinato. "Stuck In The Tunnel: Is Globalization Muddling The Middle Class?" -- Center on Social and Economic Dynamics, Working Paper No. 14 [.pdf, 36 pages]
http://www.brookings.edu/es/dynamics/papers/middleclass/middleclass.pdf

Graham, Carol and Stefano Pettinato. "Happiness, Markets, and Democracy: Latin America in Comparative Perspective" -- Center on Social and Economic Dynamics Working Paper No. 13 [.pdf, 29 pages]
http://www.brookings.edu/es/dynamics/papers/happylatin/happylatin.pdf

Hewett, Paul and Sajeda Amin. "Assessing the Impact of Garment Work on Quality of Life Measures" -- Population Council
http://www.bids-bd.org/sajeda.htm

Schoenborn, Charlotte, Richard Klein, and Virginia Freid. "Age Adjustment of National Center for Health Statistics Data Using the 2000 Projected U.S. Population with Emphasis on Survey Data Systems" -- Division of Health Interview Statistics, National Center for Health Statistics, Working Papers [Tables in .pdf]
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/pubs/workpap/ageadjust.htm

Sundstrom, Marianne and Ann-Zofie E. Duvander. "Family division of Child Care: Why Do - or Don't - Swedish Fathers Take Parental Leave?"
Microsoft Word:
http://www.suda.su.se/SRRD/srrd139.doc
Plain Text:
http://www.suda.su.se/SRRD/srrd139.txt
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New Think Tank Policy Papers and Briefs

Center on Budget and Policy Priorities:
Guyer, Jocelyn. "Health Care after Welfare: An Update of Findings from State-Level Leaver Studies"
http://www.cbpp.org/8-16-00wel.htm
Executive Summary [.pdf, 8 pages]:
http://www.cbpp.org/8-16-00wel.pdf
Full text [.pdf, 64 pages]:
http://www.cbpp.org/8-16-00wel2.pdf

Center for Law and Social Policy:
Savner, Steve. "Welfare Reform and Racial/Ethnic Minorities: The Questions to Ask"
http://www.clasp.org/pubs/TANF/WelfareReformandRacial-EthnicMinorities-TheQuestionstoAsk1.htm

Center for the Study of Democracy:
Ingram, Helen. "Research Agenda for Public Policy and Democracy"
http://www.democ.uci.edu/democ/papers/ingram2.htm
Cichowski, Rachel. "Sustaining Democracy: A Study of Authoritarianism and Personalism in Irish Political Culture"
http://www.democ.uci.edu/democ/papers/rachel.htm

Murphy, Walter. "The 1999-2000 Harry Eckstein Lecture: Constitutional Interpretation as Constitutional Creation"
http://www.democ.uci.edu/democ/papers/murphy.htm

Stepan-Norris, Judith and Caleb Southworth. "Where the Heart Is? A Geographic Analysis of Working-class Cultures in Detroit Neighborhoods, 1953"
http://www.democ.uci.edu/democ/papers/murphy.htm

Economic Policy Institute:
Faux, Jeff. "The Next Recession" - Viewpoints
http://www.epinet.org/webfeatures/viewpoints/next_recession.html

Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development:
"Science, Technology and Innovation in the New Economy" - Policy Brief [.pdf, 12 pages]
http://www.oecd.org/publications/pol_brief/2000/2000_04.pdf
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New Offerings from Academic Publishers

Association of American University Presses: New Releases
http://aaup.uchicago.edu/new_releases/

Michigan State University Press Online -- New Releases
http://www.msu.edu/unit/msupress/newrel/newrlst.html

Cambridge University Press
http://www.cup.org/books/hot.html

Basic Books: New Releases
http://www.basicbooks.com/newreleases.html

Thela Thesis -- Just Published
http://www.thelathesis.nl/new.html

Perseus Publishing -- Book News (click on category)
http://www.perseuspublishing.com/booknews.html
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Conferences

Center for Professional and Community Ethics: Medical Ethics, Law, and Community: Philosophical Foundations
February 9-11, 2001
Louisville, Kentucky
http://www.apa.udel.edu/apa/opportunities/conferences/cpce.html

New Information Technology 2001: Global Digital Library Development in the New Millennium
May 29-31, 2001
Beijing, China
http://web.simmons.edu/~chen/nit/

UK Political Studies Association Labour Movements Specialist Group Conference: Interpretations of Labour
July 6, 2001
Mechanics Institute, Manchester, UK
http://www.shef.ac.uk/uni/academic/N-Q/pol/2001call.htm
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New Tables of Contents/ Abstracts

Holocaust and Genocide Studies (table of contents, abstracts)
Volume 14, Issue 2 (Fall 2000)
http://www3.oup.co.uk/holgen/hdb/Volume_14/Issue_02/

American Literary History (table of contents)
Volume 12, Issue 4 (Fall 2000)
http://www3.oup.co.uk/alhist/hdb/Volume_12/Issue_04/

International Journal of Public Opinion Research (table of contents, abstracts, full text) [.pdf]
Volume 12, Issue 3 (Autumn 2000)
http://www3.oup.co.uk/intpor/hdb/Volume_12/Issue_03/

Marvels and Tales: Journal of Fairy-tale Studies (table of contents, abstracts)
Volume 14, Number 1 (2000)
http://www.langlab.wayne.edu/MarvelsHome/v14n1.html

Feminist Collections: A Quarterly of Women's Studies Resources (table of contents, some full text)
Volume 21, No. 4 (Summer 2000)
http://www.library.wisc.edu/libraries/WomensStudies/fc/fctc214.htm
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Job Guides

H-Net Job Guide
http://www.matrix.msu.edu/jobs/

The Chronicle of Higher Education Job Openings
Humanities
http://jobs.chronicle.com/free/jobs/faculty/humanities/links.htm
Social Science
http://jobs.chronicle.com/free/jobs/faculty/sscience/links.htm

Academic Employment Network (By State)
http://www.academploy.com/jobs.cfm

American College Personnel Association: ACPA Ongoing Placement Listings
http://www.acpa.nche.edu/placemnt/placemnt.htm

Academic 360.com (Update of "Jobs in Higher Education" site)
http://www.academic360.com/
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In The News

Wen Ho Lee Case Under Intense Scrutiny
1. The New York Times: "Asian-Americans Demanding Bias Inquiry in Scientist's Case" [free registration required]
http://www.nytimes.com/2000/09/18/national/18LEE.html
2. The New York Times: "Statement by Judge in Los Alamos Case With Apology for Abuse of Power" [free registration required]
http://www.nytimes.com/2000/09/14/national/14LTEX.html
3. Washingtonpost.com: "Wen Ho Lee and Los Alamos"
http://washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/nation/specials/nationalsecurity/chineseespionage/index.html
4. Indictment of Wen Ho Lee, US District Court of New Mexico -- Federation of American Scientists
http://www.fas.org/irp/ops/ci/docs/lee_indict.html
5. LA Times Editorial: "An Abuse Compounded"
http://www.latimes.com/news/comment/20000915/t000087157.html
6. Final Report of the Select Committee on U.S. National Security and Military/ Commercial Concerns with the Peoples Republic of China (The Cox Report) [.pdf]
http://www.house.gov/coxreport/
7. Facts Speak Louder Than Words and Lies Will Collapse by Themselves - Further Refutation of the Cox Report -- Federation of American Scientists
http://www.fas.org/sgp/news/1999/07/chinacox/index.html
8. Asiaweek.com: "The Spy of the Century?"
http://www.cnn.com/ASIANOW/asiaweek/magazine/2000/0421/is.main.html
9. Time: "Feds Fed Up at Bill's Wen Ho-lier-Than-Thou Act"
http://www.time.com/time/daily/0,2960,54934-101000915,00.html
On Monday, representatives of Asian-American groups met with the President and demanded a full review of the FBI and Justice department's investigation and prosecution of Wen Ho Lee, a Chinese-American scientist held for nine months without bail under suspicion of spying at the Los Alamos National Laboratory. Last week, the government abruptly dropped 58 of 59 charges against Lee and released him in accord with a plea agreement in which Lee admitted to removing classified materials from the Laboratory, one of the lesser charges in an indictment that had originally sought to establish Lee as someone stealing US nuclear weapons secrets for the Chinese government. The presiding federal judge, James A. Parker, expressed criticism last Wednesday of the government's handling of the case and of the harsh treatment of Lee, who had been denied bail and kept in solitary confinement for the preceding nine months. In particular, Parker noted with concern the coincidence of the government abruptly resolving the case just two days before Justice Department attorneys would have been forced to turn over documents to the Judge detailing the FBI's process of selecting Lee for investigation and its subsequent interrogations. Henry Tang, a Asian-American advocate for Lee, echoes the desire of many Asian-Americans to have the issue of possible racial profiling at the Nuclear Weapons Labs investigated. But in spite of a rising chorus of criticism that includes the President, much of the press, and members from both parties in Congress, both Attorney General Janet Reno and FBI director Louis Freeh have pointedly declined to follow Judge Parker's recommendations and apologize to Lee for his treatment.

The New York Times posts stories reporting on the sentiments of Asian-Americans in the wake of the plea bargaining (1) and Judge Parker's statements last week (2). A special section from the Washington Post(3) offers an archive of Post stories on the investigation and court case going back to August of 1999 as well as a transcript of Director Freeh's statement last week and the text of the February Circuit Court of Appeals decision to uphold the denial of bail for Lee. The Federation of American Scientists has posted the full text of the government's original 59-count indictment (4). A September 15 editorial from the Los Angeles Times(5) criticizes Reno, Freeh, and Department of Energy Secretary Bill Richardson for their violation of Lee's civil rights. The Cox report, a massive three-volume report published by the House of Representatives committee on national security in January of 1999, (6) details the types of US nuclear weapons secrets obtained by the People's Republic of China over the last few decades and the means by which such secrets were acquired. The Federation of American Scientists has also posted a People's Republic of China document (7) answering the charges in the Cox Report. Asiaweek.com posted a detailed and sympathetic profile of Wen Ho Lee (8) and his daughter, Alberta, who has been an outspoken voice in support of her father. In a brief, unfortunately-titled article from Time(9) FBI and Justice Department officials complain of their lack of support from President Clinton in the Lee case and express their belief that the case was unsuccessful but not unjustified. [DC]
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The Scout Report for Social Sciences
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The Scout Report for Social Sciences is published every other Tuesday by the Internet Scout Project, located in the University of Wisconsin-Madison's Department of Computer Sciences.

Susan Calcari
Travis Koplow
David Charbonneau
Pat Coulthard
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Director
Managing Editor
Editor
Technical Specialist

Below are the copyright statements to be included when reproducing annotations from The Scout Report for Social Sciences.

The single phrase below is the copyright notice to be used when reproducing any portion of this report, in any format:

From The Scout Report for Social Sciences, Copyright Internet Scout Project 1994-2000. http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/

The paragraph below is the copyright notice to be used when reproducing the entire report, in any format:

Copyright Susan Calcari and the University of Wisconsin Board of Regents, 1994-2000. The Internet Scout Project (http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/), located in the Computer Sciences Department of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, provides information about the Internet to the U.S. research and education community under a grant from the National Science Foundation, number NCR-9712163. The Government has certain rights in this material. Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of the entire Scout Report provided this paragraph, including the copyright notice, are preserved on all copies.

Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Wisconsin - Madison or the National Science Foundation.


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