Subsequent History (subsequent + history)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Contested Nations: Iraq and the Assyrians

NATIONS AND NATIONALISM, Issue 3 2000
Sami Zubaida
The formation of nation-states from the ruins of the Ottoman Empire in the Middle East after World War I, under colonial auspices, proceeded with negotiations in some instances and hostilities in others from previously autonomous communities, some of them formally designated as millets. Iraq comprised a diversity of religious and ethnic communities. The Assyrians, Christian mountain tribes, mostly refugees from Turkish Kurdistan under British protection, were one community which actively resisted integration into the new nation-state and, as a result, were subject to violent attacks by the nascent Iraqi army in 1933. This episode and the way it was perceived and interpreted by the different parties is an interesting illustration of the political psychology of communitarianism in interaction with nationalism, complicated by religious identifications, all in a colonial context. Subsequent histories and commentaries on the episode are also interesting in illuminating ideological readings. [source]


Legislation to institutionalize resources for tobacco control: the 1987 Victorian Tobacco Act

ADDICTION, Issue 10 2009
Ron Borland
ABSTRACT Aim To describe the process surrounding the creation of the first organization in the world to be funded from an earmarked tax on tobacco products, the Victorian Health Promotion Foundation (VicHealth), and to outline briefly its subsequent history. Description The genesis of VicHealth came from an interest of the Minister for Health in the Victorian State Government to address the tobacco problem, and the strategic capacity of Dr Nigel Gray from the Anti-Cancer Council of Victoria to provide a vehicle and help the government to muster support for its implementation. Success involved working with government to construct a Bill it was happy with and then working with the community to support the implementation and to counter industry attempts to derail it. The successful Bill led to the creation of VicHealth. VicHealth has played a creative and important role in promoting health not only in Victoria (Australia), but has been a stimulus for similar initiatives in other parts of the world. Conclusions Enacting novel advances in public policy is made easier when there is a creative alliance between advocates outside government working closely with governments to develop a proposal that is politically achievable and then to work together to sell it. Health promotion agencies, once established, can play an important role in advancing issues like tobacco control. [source]


IFORS: the formative years

INTERNATIONAL TRANSACTIONS IN OPERATIONAL RESEARCH, Issue 2 2000
G.K. Rand
In 1999 IFORS (The International Federation of Operational Research Societies) celebrated 40 years since its formation. The purpose of this article is to explain how it came into being following the first international conference in Operational Research, and to examine the foundations that were laid in the years leading up to its first General Meeting, held at the second international conference. A further article will examine several themes in IFORS' subsequent history. [source]


Severe contact dermatitis as a result of an antiseptic bath oil

AUSTRALASIAN JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGY, Issue 1 2004
Emma Storer
SUMMARY Siblings aged 7 and 5 years developed extensive truncal and flexural inflammation and desquamation unresponsive to standard eczema therapy. After delays in diagnosis, subsequent history revealed prior use of an antiseptic bath oil in a much stronger concentration than recommended. The case illustrates the severe irritant contact dermatitis that can arise following inadequate dilution of antiseptic bath oils, presumably as a result of skin contact with benzalkonium chloride and triclosan. Features that may direct attention to such irritant dermatitis are flexural predominance with superficial desquamation and rapid improvement after avoidance of exposure to the antiseptic solution. [source]