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Abortion in the United States : a reference handbook / by McBride, Dorothy E.; Keys, Jennifer L.,author.;
Includes bibliographical references and index."Provides a balanced scholarly analysis of the most salient issues in the pro-life/pro-choice debate." -- Publisher's descriptionBackground and history -- Problems, controversies, and solutions -- Perspectives -- Profiles -- Data and documents -- Resources -- Chronology.
Subjects: Abortion; Abortion; Pro-life movement; Pro-choice movement;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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Defenders of the unborn : the pro-life movement before Roe v. Wade / by Williams, Daniel K.;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 269-337) and index.On April 16, 1972, ten thousand people gathered in Central Park to protest New York's liberal abortion law. Emotions ran high, reflecting the nation's extreme polarization over abortion. Yet the divisions did not fall neatly along partisan or religious lines. The assembled protesters were far from a bunch of fire-breathing culture warriors. In Defenders of the Unborn, Daniel K. Williams reveals the hidden history of the pro-life movement in America, showing that a cause that many see as reactionary and anti-feminist began as a liberal crusade for human rights. For decades, the media portrayed the pro-life movement as a Catholic cause, but by the time of the Central Park rally, that stereotype was already hopelessly outdated. The kinds of people in attendance at pro-life rallies ranged from white Protestant physicians, to young mothers, to African American Democratic legislators -- even the occasional member of Planned Parenthood. One of New York City's most vocal pro-life advocates was a liberal Lutheran minister who was best known for his civil rights activism and his protests against the Vietnam War. The language with which pro-lifers championed their cause was not that of conservative Catholic theology, infused with attacks on contraception and women's sexual freedom. Rather, they saw themselves as civil rights crusaders, defending the inalienable right to life of a defenseless minority: the unborn fetus. It was because of this grounding in human rights, Williams argues, that the right-to-life movement gained such momentum in the early 1960s. Indeed, pro-lifers were winning the battle before Roe v. Wade changed the course of history. Through a deep investigation of previously untapped archives, Williams presents the untold story of New Deal-era liberals who forged alliances with a diverse array of activists, Republican and Democrat alike, to fight for what they saw as a human rights cause.A clash of values -- The political fight begins -- Initial losses -- National Right to Life -- "Abortion on demand" -- A new image -- Progressive politics -- National battle -- After Roe -- Epilogue.
Subjects: National Right to Life Committee (U.S.); Pro-life movement; Abortion; Abortion; Abortion;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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Abortion after Roe / by Schoen, Johanna.;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 307-320) and index.Living through some giant change: the establishment of abortion services -- Medicine at the edges of life: abortion and fetal research -- The formation of the National Abortion Federation and the standards debate -- The development of dilation and evacuation and the debate over fetal bodies -- To protect the lives of American babies: the escalation of antiabortion activism -- Truths, lies, and partial truths: the debate surrounding intact D&E."Abortion is--and always has been--an arena for contesting power relations between women and men. When in 1973 the Supreme Court made the procedure legal throughout the United States, it seemed that women were at last able to make decisions about their own bodies. In the four decades that followed, however, abortion became ever more politicized and stigmatized. Abortion after Roe chronicles and analyzes what the new legal status and changing political environment have meant for abortion providers and their patients"--
Subjects: Abortion; Abortion; Abortion; Abortion; Abortion services; Pro-life movement; Dilatation and extraction abortion; Abortion, Induced; Abortion, Induced; Reproductive Rights; Women's Health.; Dissent and Disputes.; History, 20th Century.;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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Madame Restell : [electronic resource] : The life, death, and resurrection of old new york's most fabulous, fearless, and infamous abortionist. by Wright, Jennifer.; Wilson, Mara.;
Narrator: Mara Wilson.This sharp, witty Gilded Age medical history spotlights the glamorous Madame Restell, a fearless birth control provider and abortionist for unmarried women in New York City, in defiance of persecution from powerful men. Madame Restell is a sharp, witty Gilded Age medical history which introduces us to an iconic, yet tragically overlooked, feminist heroine: a glamorous women's healthcare provider in Manhattan, known to the world as Madame Restell. A celebrity in her day with a flair for high fashion and public, petty beefs, Restell was a self-made woman and single mother who used her wit, her compassion, and her knowledge of family medicine to become one of the most in-demand medical workers in New York. Not only that, she used her vast resources to care for the most vulnerable women of the city: unmarried women in need of abortions, birth control, and other medical assistance. In defiance of increasing persecution from powerful men, Restell saved the lives of thousands of young women and, in fact, as author Jennifer Wright says in own words, "despite having no formal training and a near-constant steam of women knocking at her door, she never lost a patient." Restell was a revolutionary who opened the door to the future of reproductive choice for women, and Wright brings Restell and her circle to life in this dazzling, sometimes dark, and thoroughly entertaining tale. In addition to uncovering the forgotten history of Restell herself, the book also doubles as an eye-opening look into the "greatest American scam you've never heard about": the campaign to curtail women's power by restricting their access to healthcare. Before the 19th century, abortion and birth control were not only legal in the United States, but fairly common, and public healthcare needs (for women and men alike) were largely handled by midwives and female healers. However, after the Birth of the Clinic, newly-minted male MDs wanted to push women out of their space -- by forcing women back into the home and turning medicine into a standardized, male-only practice. At the same time, a group of powerful, secular men -- threatened by women's burgeoning independence in other fields -- persuaded the Christian leadership to declare abortion a sin, rewriting the meaning of "Christian morality" to protect their own interests. As Wright explains, "their campaign to do so was so insidious -- and successful -- that it remains largely unrecognized to this day, a century and a half later." By unraveling the misogynistic and misleading lies that put women's health in jeopardy, Wright simultaneously restores Restell to her rightful place in history and obliterates the faulty, fractured reasoning underlying the very foundation of what has since been dubbed the "pro-life" movement. Thought-provoking, character-driven, funny, and feminist as hell, Madame Restell is required reading for anyone and everyone who believes that when it comes to women's rights, women's bodies, and women's history, women should have the last word.Electronic reproduction.
Subjects: Electronic books.; Nonfiction.; Biography & Autobiography.; History.; Medical.;
On-line resources: http://link.overdrive.com/?websiteID=130119&titleID=9054273 -- Click to access digital title in OverDrive.;
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Ethics: Questions & Morality of Human Actions / by Lucas, George,editor.; Roth, John K.,editor.;
Includes bibliographical references.Vol. 1 -- Publisher's Note -- Editors' Introduction -- Contributing Scholars -- The Concepts of Ethics -- The Absurd -- Accountability -- Aggression -- Altruism -- Authenticity -- Autonomy -- Bad faith -- Benevolence -- Character -- Charity -- Choice -- Collective guilt -- Consent -- Consistency -- Conversion of one's system of beliefs -- Duty -- Equality -- Excellence -- Exploitation -- Fairness -- Fatalism -- The Good -- Greed -- Harm -- Human nature -- Immortality -- Impartiality -- Incommensurability -- Inequality -- Intention -- Intrinsic good -- Is/ought distinction -- Language -- Leadership -- Lifestyles -- Love -- Luck and chance -- Merit -- Moral education -- Moral equivalence -- Moral luck -- Moral realism -- Moral responsibility -- Morality -- Motivation -- Natural law -- Naturalistic fallacy -- The Other -- Ought/can implication -- Perfectionism -- Permissible acts -- Pessimism and optimism -- Power -- Practical reason -- Prisoner's dilemma -- Property -- Punishment -- Reason and rationality -- Responsibility -- Revelation -- Right and wrong -- Rights and obligations -- "Slippery-slope" arguments -- Tragedy -- Truth -- Value -- Values clarification -- Weakness of will -- Wickedness -- Will -- Work -- Theories & Traditions -- Absolutism -- Academic freedom -- African traditional religion -- Anthropomorphism of the divine -- Applied ethics -- Aristotelian ethics -- Atheism -- Cannibalism -- Caste system, Hindu -- Casuistry -- Chivalry -- Cognitivism -- Communitarianism -- Comparative ethics -- Confucian ethics -- Consequentialism -- Critical theory -- Cynicism -- Cyrenaics -- Daoist ethics -- Deconstruction -- Deism -- Deontological ethics -- Determinism and freedom -- Dilemmas, moral -- Egalitarianism -- Egoism -- Egotist -- Emotivist ethics -- Enlightenment ethics -- Ethics -- Ethics/morality distinction -- Evolutionary theory -- Existentialism -- Fact/value distinction -- Free-riding -- Golden mean -- Golden rule -- Hedonism -- Ideal observer -- Idealist ethics -- Ideology -- Intersubjectivity -- Intuitionist ethics -- Kantian ethics -- Libertarianism -- Marxism -- Maximal vs. minimal ethics -- Mean/ends distinction -- Metaethics -- Moral principles, rules, and imperatives -- Moral-sense theories -- Narrative ethics -- Native American ethics -- Nihilism -- Normative vs. descriptive ethics -- Objectivism -- Panentheism -- Pantheism -- Paradoxes in ethics -- Platonic ethics -- Pluralism -- Post-Enlightenment ethics -- Postmodernism -- Pragmatism -- Prescriptivism -- Private vs. public morality -- Professional ethics -- Progressivism -- Relativism -- Secular ethics -- Situational ethics -- Skepticism -- Social Darwinism -- Sophists -- Stoic ethics -- Subjectivism -- Supererogation -- Teleological ethics -- Theory and practice -- Transcendentalism -- Universalizability -- Utilitarianism -- Virtue ethics -- Theorists & Practitioners -- Abelard, Peter -- Aristotle -- Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics -- Ataturk -- Ayer, A. J -- Bacon, Francis -- Beauvoir, Simone de -- Bentham, Jeremy -- Berdyayev, Nikolay -- Bergson, Henri -- Boethius -- Bradley, F. H -- Buber's I and Thou -- Camus, Albert -- Cicero -- Comte, Auguste -- Confucius -- Darwin, Charles -- Derrida, Jacques -- Descartes, Rene -- Dewey, John -- Dewey's Human Nature and Conduct -- Dostoevski, Fyodor -- Du Bois, W. E. B -- Durkheim, Emile -- Emerson, Ralph Waldo -- Epictetus -- Epicurus -- Foucault, Michel -- Gandhi, Mohandas K -- Hare, R. M -- Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit -- Heidegger, Martin -- Hobbes, Thomas -- Hobbes's Leviathan -- Hume, David -- Hume's An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals -- Jefferson, Thomas -- Jung, Carl -- Kant, Immanuel -- Kant's Foundations of the Metaphysics of Morals -- Kierkegaard's Either/Or -- Kohlberg, Lawrence -- Laozi -- Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm -- Lenin, Vladimir Ilich -- Levinas, Emmanuel -- Locke, John -- Locke's Two Treatises of Government -- Machiavelli, Niccolo -- MacIntyre, Alasdair -- Maimonides, Moses -- Malcolm X -- Malthus, Thomas -- Marcus Aurelius -- Marx's The Communist Manifesto -- Mencius -- Mill, John Stuart -- Mill's On Liberty -- Montesquieu -- Moore, G. E -- More's Utopia -- Nagel, Thomas -- Nietzsche, Friedrich -- Nietzsche's Beyond Good and Evil -- Ortega y Gasset, Jose -- Orwell, George -- Pascal, Blaise -- Peirce, Charles Sanders -- Perry, R. B -- Plato -- Plato's Republic -- Rand, Ayn -- Rawls, John -- Rorty, Richard -- Rousseau, Jean-Jacques -- Royce, Josiah -- Russell, Bertrand -- Santayana, George -- Sartre, Jean-Paul -- Sartre's Being and Nothingness -- Schopenhauer, Arthur -- Schweitzer, Albert -- Shaftesbury, third earl of -- Sidgwick, Henry -- Smith, Adam -- Socrates -- Solzhenitsyn, Aleksandr -- Solzhenitsyn's The Gulag Archipelago -- Spinoza, Baruch -- Spinoza's Ethics -- Stalin, Joseph -- Tagore, Rabindranath -- Thomas Aquinas -- Thomas Aquinas's Summa Theologica -- Thoreau, Henry David -- Tillich, Paul -- Unamuno y Jugo, Miguel de -- Voltaire -- Wang Yangming -- Weber, Max -- Whitehead, Alfred North -- Wiesel, Elie -- Wittgenstein, Ludwig -- Zhu Xi -- Zhuangzi.Vol. 2 -- Politics, government, law, human rights, and war : Politics and government; Law & human rights; War -- Politics & Government -- American Association of Retired Persons -- Anarchy -- Apology -- Arendt, Hannah -- Assassination -- Boycotts -- Burke, Edmund -- Campaign finance reform -- Capitalism -- Citizenship -- Class struggle -- Clinton, Bill -- Communism -- Congress -- Conservatism -- Constitutional government -- Covert action -- Declaration of Independence -- Democracy -- Dictatorship -- Dirty hands -- Distributive justice -- Economic analysis -- Economics -- Entitlements -- Espionage -- Fascism -- Freedom of Information Act -- Free enterprise -- Future-oriented ethics -- Habermas, Jurgen -- Hitler, Adolf -- Immigration -- Immigration Reform and Control Act -- Income distribution -- Liberalism -- Lincoln, Abraham -- Lobbying -- Lotteries -- Marx, Karl -- McCarthy, Joseph R -- Merleau-Ponty, Maurice -- Nader, Ralph -- Nationalism -- Native American casinos -- Nazism -- Nonviolence -- Nozick, Robert -- Pacifism -- Political correctness -- Political liberty -- Political realism -- Politics -- Poverty -- Poverty and wealth -- Profit economy -- Realpolitik -- Revolution -- Sedition -- Social contract theory -- Socialism -- State of nature -- Taxes -- A Theory of Justice -- Treason -- Tyranny -- Voting fraud -- Watergate scandal -- Zizek, Slavoj -- Law & Human Rights -- Accused, rights of -- Adversary system -- Affirmative action -- Ageism -- American Civil Liberties Union -- American Inns of Court -- Americans with Disabilities Act -- Amnesty International -- Animal consciousness -- Animal research -- Animal rights -- Arbitration -- Arrest records -- Attorney misconduct -- Attorney ethics -- Attorney-client privilege -- Bilingual education -- Bill of Rights, U.S -- Bosnia -- Brandeis, Louis D -- Capital punishment -- Child abuse -- Child labor legislation -- Child support -- Children -- Children's Bureau -- Children's rights -- Choiceless choices -- Civil disobedience -- Civil Rights Act of 1964 -- Civil rights and liberties -- Civil Rights movement -- Code of Professional Responsibility -- Codes of civility -- Commission on Civil Rights, U.S -- Concentration camps -- Congress of Racial Equality -- Constitution, U.S -- Cruelty to animals -- Dallaire, Romeo -- Disability rights -- Discrimination -- Dronenburg v. Zech -- Due process -- Dworkin, Ronald -- Electronic surveillance -- Emancipation Proclamation -- English Bill of Rights -- Erroneous convictions -- Ethics in Government Act -- Famine -- First Amendment -- Fraud -- Freedom of expression -- Gault, In re -- Gangs -- Genocide and democide -- Gewirth, Alan -- Gideon v. Wainwright -- Good Samaritan laws -- Goss v. Lopez -- Gray Panthers -- Hammurabi's code -- Hart, H. L. A -- Hate crime and hate speech -- Head Start -- Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich -- Holocaust -- Homeless care -- Homicide -- Homophobia -- Human rights -- Human Rights Watch -- Humane Society of the United States -- Hunger -- Hussein, Saddam -- Identity theft -- Infanticide -- Intellectual property -- International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights - International Criminal Court -- International justice -- Invasion of privacy -- Jackson, Jesse -- Judicial conduct code -- Jurisprudence -- Jury system -- Keller, Helen -- Law -- Lawyer for the situation -- Legal ethics -- Lemkin, Raphael -- Loyalty oaths -- Lynching -- Magna Carta -- Mandela, Nelson -- Miranda v. Arizona -- Moral status of animals -- National Anti-Vivisection Society -- Natural rights -- Nobel Peace Prizes -- Oppression -- Parenting -- Parole of convicted prisoners -- Peace Corps -- People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals -- Perjury -- Personal injury attorneys -- Police brutality -- Poll taxes -- Poona Pact -- Privacy -- Refugees and stateless people -- Rwanda genocide -- Schindler, Oskar -- Sentience -- Singer, Peter -- Slavery -- Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals -- South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission -- Supreme Court justice selection -- Supreme Court, U.S -- Three-strikes laws -- Torture -- United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide -- United Nations Declaration of the Rights of the Child -- United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Disabled Persons -- Universal Declaration of Human Rights -- Vegetarianism -- Veterans' rights -- Victims' rights -- Vivisection -- War crimes trials -- Welfare programs -- Welfare rights -- World Society for the Protection of Animals -- Zero-base ethics -- War -- The Art of War -- Assault Weapons Ban -- Biochemical weapons -- Bushido -- Chemical warfare -- Child soldiers -- Cold War -- Colonialism and imperialism -- Conscientious objection -- Deterrence -- Developing world -- The Disappeared -- Dresden firebombing -- Geneva conventions -- Genocide, frustration-aggression theory of -- Globalization -- Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings -- Homeland defense -- International law -- International Monetary Fund -- International Red Cross -- Intervention -- Iraq -- Isolationism -- Israeli-Palestinian conflict -- Japanese American internment -- Just war theory -- Kosovo -- Land mines -- League of Nations -- Limited war -- Manifest destiny -- Marshall Plan -- Mercenary soldiers -- Military ethics -- Monroe Doctrine -- Mutually assured destruction -- National security and sovereignty -- North Atlantic Treaty Organization -- Nuclear arms race -- Nuremberg Trials -- Nussbaum, Martha -- On War -- Peace studies -- Peacekeeping missions -- Potsdam Conference -- SALT treaties -- Sanctions -- Scorched-earth policies -- Sovereignty -- Terrorism -- Treaty of Versailles -- Truman Doctrine -- Unconditional surrender -- UnitedNations -- United Nations Issues a Declaration Against Torture -- Vietnam War -- War -- Weapons research -- World Trade Organization -- The Wretched of the Earth.Vol. 3 -- Ethics & professional practices : Bioethics: health, medicine & mortality; Economics & business; Science, technology & the environment  -- Bioethics: Health, Medicine & Mortality -- Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) -- American Medical Association -- Behavior therapy -- Bioethics -- Biofeedback -- Biometrics -- Biotechnology -- Brain death -- Child psychology -- Cloning -- Death and dying -- Diagnosis -- Electroshock therapy -- Ethical Principles of Psychologists -- Ethics of DNA analysis -- Eugenics -- Euthanasia -- Family therapy -- Freud, Sigmund -- Genetic counseling -- Genetic engineering -- Genetic testing -- Genetically modified foods -- Group therapy -- Health care allocation -- Hippocrates -- Holistic medicine -- Human Genome Project -- Hypnosis -- Illness -- Institutionalization of patients -- Intelligence testing -- Kevorkian, Jack -- Life and death -- Lobotomy -- Medical bills of rights -- Medical ethics -- Medical insurance -- Medical research -- Mental illness -- National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research -- Opioid epidemic -- Organ transplants -- Pain -- Principles of Medical Ethics -- Principles of Medical Ethics with Annotations Especially Applicable to Psychiatry -- Psychopharmacology -- Quinlan, Karen Ann -- Right to die -- Soviet psychiatry -- Stem cell research -- Suicide assistance -- Therapist-patient relationship -- Triage -- UNESCO Declaration on the Human Genome and Human Rights -- World Health Organization -- Economics & Business -- Accuracy in Media -- Advertising -- Advice columnists -- Affirmative action -- Agribusiness -- American Federation of Labor -- American Society of Newspaper Editors -- Antitrust legislation -- Art -- Art and public policy -- Betting on sports -- Book banning -- Bribery -- Business ethics -- Cell-phone etiquette -- Censorship -- Cheating -- Children's television -- Coercion -- College applications -- Computer misuse -- Consumerism -- Corporate compensation -- Corporate responsibility -- Corporate scandal -- Cost-benefit analysis -- Downsizing -- Employee safety and treatment -- Ethical codes of organizations -- Ethics in Accounting -- Ethics Reform Act of 1989, Public Law 101-194 -- "Everyone does it" -- Executive Order 10988 -- Fair Labor Standards Act -- Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting -- Fear in the workplace -- Hiring practices -- Index librorum prohibitorum -- Infomercials -- Information access -- Inside information -- Insider trading -- International Labour Organisation -- International Organization of Consumers Unions -- Internet piracy -- Journalistic entrapment -- Journalistic ethics -- Knights of Labor -- Labor-Management Relations Act -- Libel -- Library Bill of Rights -- Marketing -- Marketing Ethics -- Media ownership -- Minimum-wage laws -- Money laundering -- Monopoly -- Motion picture ratings systems -- Multinational corporations -- Napster -- National Labor Relations Act -- National Labor Union -- Negligence -- New York Times Co. v. Sullivan -- News sources -- Outsourcing -- Pentagon Papers -- Photojournalism -- Plagiarism -- Price fixing -- Product safety and liability -- Professional athlete incomes -- Profit taking -- Public's right to know -- Reality television -- Redlining -- Retirement funds -- Sales ethics -- Sedition Act of 1798 -- Self-regulation -- Song lyrics -- Stewart, Martha -- Tabloid journalism -- Telemarketing -- Tipping -- Tobacco industry -- Warranties and guarantees -- Whistleblowing -- White-collar crime -- Science, Technology & the Environment -- Anthropological ethics -- Artificial intelligence -- Atom bomb -- Atomic Energy Commission -- Biodiversity -- Clean Air Act -- Clean Water Act -- Computer crime -- Computer databases -- Computer technology -- Conservation -- Deep ecology -- Deforestation -- Dominion over nature, human -- Earth and humanity -- Earth Day -- Ecology -- Endangered species -- Environmental ethics -- Environmental movement -- Environmental Protection Agency -- Experimentation -- Facebook -- Gaia hypothesis -- Gene Editing and CRISPR (Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats) -- Global warming -- Green parties -- Greenhouse effect -- Greenpeace -- Industrial research -- Leopold, Aldo -- Lifeboat ethics -- Manhattan Project -- Milgram experiment -- Muir, John -- National Park System, U.S -- Nature Conservancy Council -- Nature, rights of -- Nazi science -- "Not in my backyard" -- Nuclear energy -- Nuclear Regulatory Commission -- Pollution -- Pollution permits -- Population Connection -- Population control -- Rain forests -- Robotics -- Science -- Sierra Club -- Silent Spring -- Social media -- Sociobiology -- Sustainability of resources -- Technology -- Toxic waste -- Union of Concerned Scientists -- Virtual reality -- Walden -- Wilderness Act of 1964.Vol. 4 -- Ethics & human identities : Religion & ethics; Gender, sexuality & reproduction; Race, ethnicity & tribalism; Hope, happiness & the future -- Religion & Ethics -- Abu Bakr -- Abu Hanifah -- Ahimsa -- Akbar the Great -- Ali ibn Abi Talib -- Asceticism -- Asoka -- Augustine, Saint -- Aurobindo, Sri -- Avalokitesvara -- Averroes -- Avicenna -- Bahya ben Joseph ibn Pauda -- Bhagavadgita -- Bodhidharma -- Bodhisattva ideal -- Bonhoeffer, Dietrich -- Buber, Martin -- Buddha -- Buddhist ethics -- Bukhari, al- -- Butler, Joseph -- Calvin, John -- Christian ethics -- Church-state separation -- Dalai Lama -- Dignity -- Divine command theory -- Divorce -- Dogen -- Edwards, Jonathan -- Ethical monotheism -- Evil -- Faith healers -- al-Farabi -- Farrakhan, Louis -- Fatima -- Five precepts of Buddhism -- Four noble truths -- al-Ghazali -- God -- Godparents -- Gluttony -- Guilt and shame -- Hadith -- al-Hallaj -- Hartshorne, Charles -- Hasidism -- Hebrew Bible -- Hindu ethics -- Holy war -- Huineng -- Husayn -- Ibn al-'Arabi -- Ibn Gabirol -- Ibn Khaldun -- Islamic ethics -- Jain ethics -- James, William -- Jesus Christ -- Jewish ethics -- Jihad -- Kabbala -- Karma -- Kierkegaard, Soren -- al-Kindi -- Kukai -- Laziness -- Lust -- Luther, Martin -- Lying -- Madhyamaka -- Manichaeanism -- Marriage -- Messianism -- Moses -- Mozi -- Muhammad -- Mysticism -- Nagarjuna -- Nanak -- Narcissism -- Niebuhr, H. Richard -- Niebuhr, Reinhold -- Nirvana -- Philo of Alexandria -- "Playing god" in medical decision making -- Promiscuity -- Qur'an -- Rabi'ah al-'Adawiyah -- al-Razi -- Religion -- Religion and violence -- Roman Catholic priests scandal -- Rumi, Jalal al-Din -- Sankara -- Scientology -- Self-righteousness -- Shari'a -- Shi'a -- Shinran -- Shinto ethics -- Sikh ethics -- Sin -- Sufism -- Sunnis -- Taboos -- Talmud -- Televangelists -- Temptation -- Ten Commandments -- Torah -- Tutu, Desmond -- Tzaddik -- Upanisads -- Vardhamana -- Vedanta -- Vice -- Xunzi -- Zen -- Zoroastrian ethics -- Gender, Sexuality & Reproduction -- Abortion -- Abuse -- Adultery -- Agreement for the Suppression of White Slave Traffic -- Birth control -- Birth defects -- Butler, Judith -- Cesarean sections -- Ecofeminism -- Equal pay for equal work -- Equal Rights Amendment -- The Feminine Mystique -- Feminist ethics -- Gay rights -- Gender bias -- Griswold v. Connecticut -- Homosexuality -- In vitro fertilization -- Incest -- League of Women Voters -- MacKinnon, Catharine A -- Mapplethorpe, Robert -- Men's movement -- National LGBTQ Task Force -- National Organization for Women -- Pornography -- Premarital sex -- Pro-choice movement -- Pro-life movement -- Prostitution -- Rape -- Rape and political domination -- Right to life -- Roe v. Wade -- The Second Sex -- Sexism -- Sexual abuse and harassment -- Sexual orientation and gender identity -- Sexual revolution -- Sexual stereotypes -- Sexuality and sexual ethics -- Sexually transmitted diseases -- Sperm banks -- Stanton, Elizabeth Cady -- Sterilization of women -- Stonewall Inn riots -- Suffrage -- Surrogate motherhood -- Title IX -- Wage discrimination -- Wollstonecraft, Mary -- Women's ethics -- Women's liberation movement -- Race, Ethnicity & Tribalism -- Abolition -- Alienation -- Anger -- Anti-Semitism -- Apartheid -- Apologizing for past wrongs -- Behaviorism -- Bigotry -- Black Lives Matter -- Brown v. Board of Education -- Bystanders -- Compromise -- Confidentiality -- Conflict of interest -- Conflict resolution -- Corruption -- Cruelty -- Diversity -- Dress codes -- Drug abuse -- Drug testing -- Electronic mail -- Elitism -- Envy -- Ethnic cleansing -- Ethnocentrism -- Evers, Medgar -- Genocide, cultural -- Gossip -- Grotius, Hugo -- Hate -- Heschel, Abraham Joshua -- Hypocrisy -- Integration -- Internet chat rooms -- Jealousy -- King, Martin Luther, Jr -- Ku Klux Klan -- Mass incarceration of African Americans and other ethnic minorities -- Multiculturalism -- Nation of Islam -- National Association for the Advancement of Colored People -- Native American genocide -- Pan-Africanism -- Paternalism -- Peltier conviction -- Plessy v. Ferguson -- Pogroms -- Racial prejudice -- Racial profiling -- Racism -- Reparations for past social wrongs -- Resumes -- Revenge -- Reverse racism -- Scott v. Sandford -- Scottsboro case -- Segregation -- Self-deception -- Self-interest -- Selfishness -- Suicide -- Tolerance -- Unarmed black killings by whites in the twenty-first century -- Uncle Tom's Cabin -- Violence -- Washington, Booker T -- Zionism -- Hope, Happiness & the Future -- Common good -- Compassion -- Conscience -- Courage -- Custom -- Desire -- Dignity -- Etiquette -- Family -- Family values -- Forgiveness -- Freedom and liberty -- Friendship -- Future generations -- Generosity -- Gratitude -- Heroism -- Honesty -- Honor -- Honor systems and codes -- Humanism -- Humility -- Individualism -- Integrity -- Justice -- Life, meaning of -- Loyalty -- Mentoring -- Mercy -- Needs and wants -- Obedience -- Passions and emotions -- Patriotism -- Personal relationships -- Pride -- Promises -- Prudence -- Public interest -- Reconciliation -- Role models -- Self-control -- Self-love -- Self-preservation -- Self-respect -- Service to others -- Social justice and responsibility -- Temperance -- Trustworthiness -- Virtue -- Wisdom -- Appendixes -- Bibliography -- Biographical Directory -- Glossary -- Nobel Peace Prize Winners -- Organizations -- Time Line of Primary Works in Moral and Ethical Philosophy -- Indexes -- List of Entries by Category -- Personages Index -- Subject Index.Provides a four-volume set that covers topics of recent interest to readers in the twenty-first century, such as Heroic medicine, Gender identity, Wealth inequality, LGBTQ issues, Female genital mutilation, Informed consent, and Transgender care.10-A.Mode of access: Internet.
Subjects: Ethics;
On-line resources: https://libproxy.kirtland.edu/login?url=https://online.salempress.com/doi/book/10.3331/Ethics -- Available online. Click here to access.;
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The evangelicals you don't know : introducing the next generation of Christians / by Krattenmaker, Tom,1960-;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 199-216) and index.Replacing styrofoam Jesus -- Jesus' favorite city -- All bait, no switch -- Unchristian nation -- Confession booth -- Breaking formation -- Through the logs in their eyes -- Pro-life ... seriously -- From behind church walls -- September 12.Tom Krattenmaker challenges stereotypes about evangelical Christians and introduces readers to a movement of "new evangelicals" who are bringing forth a non-partisan expression of evangelicalism and creating opportunities for alliances and partnerships to advance the common good. Krattenmaker argues that cultural fault lines no longer divide the religious from the secular, or the evangelicals from "everyone else." Rather, the lines that matter now run between the fundamentalist culture warriors of both the left and right on one side, and, on the other, the good-doers of any faith, or none, who want to work together to solve our society's problems and introduce a new civility and decency to our shared national life. Krattenmaker is one of the best-informed non-evangelicals writing about evangelicalism in American public life. He offers interesting stories, intriguing character sketches, and incisive writing in his readable and engaging book. Recounting the findings and insights gleaned from his many years of engagement with evangelical America, he draws conclusions sure to surprise, challenge, and even inspire non-evangelicals who had written off this controversial and influential faith movement. The Evangelicals You Don't Know offers a refreshing alternative to narratives that pay attention only to aspects of evangelicalism that are most distasteful and threatening to secular-progressives and liberal religionists--providing instead a hopeful introduction to promising new currents rising among theologically conservative Christians.
Subjects: Evangelicalism;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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Roe v. Dobbs : the past, present, and future of a constitutional right to abortion / by Bollinger, Lee C.,1946-editor.https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJjXjhJxXVkvYyCJQbRFrq; Stone, Geoffrey R.,editor.https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJfGWPDQF4WfKyrGFytMyd;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 341-450) and index."With this volume, Roe v. Dobbs: The Past, Present and Future of a Constitutional Right of Abortion, we confront the remarkable beginning and end--once again, after a half-century-of the landmark Supreme Court decision in Roe v. Wade, shockingly overruled by the Court in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization. The goal of this book is to bring together some of our nation's leading constitutional scholars, historians, philosophers, and medical experts to share their views on whether there should be a constitutional right to abortion and what the consequences of Dobbs might be. What makes this subject unique is how it intersects with our own lives, since both Bollinger and Stone were law clerks at the Supreme Court in the year that Roe was decided (1973)--Stone for Justice William Brennan and Bollinger for Chief Justice Warren Burger. During the Court's 1972 Term, when Roe was decided, the Court was in a state of flux. President Nixon had just appointed four Justices to the Court--Burger, Blackmun, Powell, and Rehnquist. The era of the Warren Court was clearly over. In those days, the Justices were non-partisan, often joined opinions across the political/ideological spectrum, and approached cases with an open mind. That in large part explains why the Court could reach the decision it did in Roe, with five of the six Republican-appointed Justices and two of the three Democratic-appointed Justices in the majority, and one Republican-appointed justice (Rehnquist) and one Democratic-appointed justice (White) in dissent. It was a different Court and a different era." -- Publisher's description
Subjects: Abortion; Pro-choice movement; Reproductive rights; Constitutional law;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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The Arab uprisings : what everyone needs to know / by Gelvin, James L.,1951-;
Includes bibliographical references and index.1. A revolutionary wave? : What is the Arab world? ; How homogeneous is the Arab world? ; Why do Arabs identify with one another? ; What was political life in the Arab world like on the eve of the uprisings? ; Why have authoritarian governments been so common in the Arab world? ; What was the state of the economy in the Arab world on the eve of the uprisings? ; What benefits did Arab regimes originally promise their populations? ; Why and how did Arab regimes renege on the promises they had made to their populations? ; How did the demography of the Arab states make them vulnerable to uprisings? ; How did a food crisis make Arab states vulnerable to uprisings? ; Why did populations wanting change in the Arab world have to take to the streets? ; Can we pinpoint the factors that caused the uprisings? ; What was the spark that ignited the Arab uprisings? ; Where did the demands for democracy and human rights come from? ; How appropriate is the word "wave" to describe the spread of protests throughout the Arab world? ; Where did the phrase "Arab Spring" come from, and how appropriate is it to describe events in the Arab world? -- 2. The beginning: Tunisia and Egypt : What characteristics do Tunisia and Egypt hold in common? ; How entrenched were the autocracies ruling Tunisia and Egypt? ; Were there political parties in Tunisia and Egypt? ; How did the regimes in Tunisia and Egypt attempt to control their populations? ; How widespread was corruption in Tunisia and Egypt? ; How did the Tunisian uprising play out? ; Was the uprising in Egypt like that of Tunisia? ; What did protest leaders in Egypt learn from earlier protests there? ; Why was one of the groups that organized the January 25 protests called "We are all Khaled Said"? ; What was the role of social media in the Tunisian and Egyptian uprisings? ; Who led the Egyptian uprising in Cairo ; Why did the Tahir Square protesters and others adopt the tactic of nonviolent resistance? ; What was the role of labor in the two uprisings? ; What was the role of Islamic groups in the two uprisings? ; Why did the armies in Tunisia and Egypt refuse to put down the uprisings? ; What changes did the uprising in Tunisia bring about? ; What changes did the uprising in Egypt bring about? ; What are the ten greatest myths about the Egyptian uprising? -- 3. Uprisings in weak states: Yemen and Libya : What did the political systems of Yemen and Libya have in common before the uprisings? ; What was political life in Yemen like before the uprising there? ; What was political life in Libya like before the uprising there? ; Why do political scientists consider Yemen and Libya "weak states"? ; Why is the fact that Yemen and Libya are weak states important for understanding the uprisings there? ; What role have tribes played in Yemen and Libya? ; How did the uprising in Yemen evolve? ; How did the uprising in Libya begin? ; Was Qaddafi crazy, or crazy like a fox? ; Why did the uprisings in Yemen and Libya turn violent? ; Who were the "rebels" in Libya? ; Why did outside powers intervene directly in Libya and not in Yemen? ; What is "R2P"? ; Why is al-Qaeda in Yeman? ; What are the fissures in Yemen and Libya that might divide them in the future? --4. Two surprises: Algeria and Syria : Why did events in Algeria and Syria surprise most experts? ; Why did observers believe that after Tunisia, Algeria would be next? ; What were the Algerian protests of early 2011 like? ; Why did the results of the uprising in Algeria differ from those in Tunisia and Egypt? ; Did Algeria ever experience a pro-democracy uprising? ; Why was the Syrian uprising a surprise? ; How did the uprising in Syria begin? ; How has the Syrian regime responded to the uprising? ; What made the Syrian regime vulnerable? ; What made the Syrian regime so resilient? ; Who is the opposition to Syria? ; Why have foreign powers treated Bashar al-Assad with kid gloves? ; What would happen to the Syrian alliance with Iran should Bashar al-Assad's regime fall? -- 5. The monarchies : Why are there so many monarchies in the Arab world? ; Why did Morocco retain its king? ; How did the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan come to be? ; What was the origin of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia? ; What was the British role in creating Gulf monarchies? ; Why have so many monarchies in the Arab world endured? ; How has oil affected the stability of Arab monarchies? ; How have ethnic and sectarian divisions affected the stability of Arab monarchies? ; Does monarchical rule inhibit development of political institutions? ; What were the demands of protesters in the Arab monarchies? ; Who were the protesters in the Arab monarchies? ; How did Arab monarchs react to protests? ; How did the uprising in Bahrain differ from uprisings in other monarchies? ; How have the uprisings transformed the Gulf Cooperation Council? ; What might Bahrain's experience with a "national dialogue" tell us about future national dialogues in the Arab world? -- 6. Stepping back : Was George W. Bush right? ; How did the United States come up with its policy toward the uprisings? ; Whatever happened to Iraq? ; Have the uprisings strengthened or weakened al-Qaeda? ; What was the state of the Israel-Palestine conflict at the time of the first uprisings? ; What effects have the uprisings had on the Israel-Palestine conflict so far? ; How has Iran greeted the uprisings? ; What can history tell us about "revolutionary waves"? ; When will we be able to judge the significance of the Arab uprisings? ; What conclusions might we draw from the uprisings so far?Beginning in December 2010 popular revolt swept through the Middle East, shocking the world and ushering in a period of unprecedented unrest. Protestors took to the streets to demand greater freedom, democracy, human rights, social justice, and regime change. What caused these uprisings? What is their significance? And what are their likely consequences? In a question-and-answer format, this book explores all aspects of the revolutionary protests that have rocked the Middle East. The author, a historian begins with an overview: What sparked the Arab uprisings? Where did the demands for democracy and human rights come from? How appropriate is the phrase "Arab Spring"? before turning to specific countries around the region. He looks at such topics as the role of youth, labor, and religious groups in Tunisia and Egypt and discusses why the military turned against rulers in both countries. Exploring the uprisings in Libya and Yemen, he explains why these two states are considered "weak," why that status is important for understanding the upheavals there, and why outside powers intervened in Libya but not in Yemen. Next, he compares two cases that defied expectations: Algeria, which experts assumed would experience a major upheaval after Egypt's, and Syria, which experts failed to foresee. He then looks at the monarchies of Morocco, Jordan, and the Gulf, exploring the commonalities and differences of protest movements in each. The final chapter discusses the implications of the uprisings. What do they mean for the United States? For Iran? Has al-Qaeda been strengthened or weakened? What effects have the uprisings had on the Israel-Palestine conflict? What conclusions might we draw from the uprisings so far?
Subjects: Protest movements; Protest movements; Protest movements;
© c2012., Oxford University Press,
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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Waiting for "Superman" [videorecording] / by Guggenheim, Davis.ausdrt; Kimball, Billy.aus; Chilcott, Lesley.pro; Strickland, Bill,1947-; Canada, Geoffrey.ive; Rhee, Michelle.ive; Weingarten, Randi.ive; Roland, Erich.cng; Richman, Bob.cng; Finton, Greg.flm; Cassidy, Jay.flm; Roberts, Kim.flm; Beck, Christophe,1972-cmp; Legend, John.prf; Paramount Vantage.; Participant Media.; Walden Media.; Electric Kinney Films.; Paramount Home Entertainment (Firm);
DVD ; NTSC, Region 1 ; widescreen presentation ; Dolby Digital 5.1.Bill Strickland, Geoffrey Canada, Michelle Rhee, Randi Weingarten.Cinematography by Erich Roland, Bob Richman ; edited by Greg Finton, Jay Cassidy, Kim Roberts ; music by Christophe Beck ; title track "Shine" written and performed by John Legend."Provides an engaging and inspiring look at public education in the United States. [This documentary] has helped launch a movement to achieve a real and lasting change through the compelling stories of five unforgettable students such as Emily, a Silicon Valley eighth-grader who is afraid of being labeled as unfit for college, and Francisco, a Bronx first-grader whose mom will do anything to give him a shot at a better life."--container.MPAA rating: PG; some thematic material, mild language, and incidental smoking.Winner, Best Documentary, National Board of Review ; Winner, 2010 Audience Award, U.S. Documentary, Sundance Film Festival.
Subjects: Documentary films.; Nonfiction films.; Educational films.; Feature films.; Film adaptations.; Video recordings for the hearing impaired.; Educational accountability; Education; Education; School improvement programs; Educational equalization; Public schools;
© 2011., Paramount Home Entertainment,
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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The Gale encyclopedia of alternative medicine / by Hiam, Deirdre S.,1978-editor.; Gale (Firm);
Includes bibliographical references and index.Hyperthermia -- Hyperthyroidism -- Hypnotherapy -- Hypoglycemia -- Hypothyroidism -- Hyssop -- Iceland moss -- Ignatia -- Immuno-augmentation therapy -- Impetigo -- Indigestion -- Infant massage -- Infections -- Infertility -- Inflammatory bowel disease -- Influenza -- Ingrown nail -- Inositol -- Insomnia -- Insulin resistance -- Interstitial cystitis -- Iodine -- Ipecac -- Ipriflavone -- Iridology -- Iron -- Irritable bowel syndrome -- Ischemia -- Itching -- Jamaica dogwood -- Jaundice -- Jet lag -- Jock itch -- Jojoba oil -- Journal therapy -- Juice fasts -- Juniper -- Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis -- Kali bichromium -- Kampo medicine -- Kaposi's sarcoma -- Kava kava -- Kegel exercises -- Kelley-Gonzalez diet -- Kelp -- Khella -- Kidney infections -- Kidney stones -- Kirlian photography -- Knee pain -- Kneipp wellness -- Kola nut -- Kombucha -- Kudzu -- Labyrint walking -- Lachesis -- Lactobacillus species -- Lacto-ovo vegetarianism -- Lactose intolerance diet -- Laryngitis -- Lavender -- Lazy eye -- Lead poisoning -- Learning disorders -- Lecithin -- Ledum -- Lemon balm -- Lemongrass -- Leukemia -- Lice infestation -- Licorice -- Light pollution -- Light therapy -- Linoleic acid -- Lipase -- Lobelia -- Lomatium -- Lomilomi -- Lou Gehrig's disease -- Low back pain -- Lucuna -- Lung cancer -- Lutein -- Lycium fruit -- Lycopene -- Lycopodium -- Lycopus -- Lyme disease -- Lymphatic drainage -- Lysimachia -- Lysine -- Macrobiotic diet -- Macular degeneration -- Magnesium -- Magnetic therapy -- Magnolia -- Maitake -- Malaria -- Malignant lymphoma -- Manganese -- Mangosteen -- Manuka honey -- Marijuana -- Marsh mallow -- Martial arts -- Massage therapy -- Measles -- Meditation -- Mediterranean diet -- Medium-chain triglycerides -- Melatonin -- Memory loss -- Menière's disease -- Meningitis -- Menopause -- Menstruation -- Mercurius vivus -- Mercury poisoning -- Mesoglycan -- Metabolic therapies -- Methionine -- Mexican yam -- Microbiome -- Migraine headache -- Milk thistle -- Mind/body medicine -- Mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) -- Mistletoe -- Modified citrus pectin -- Mononucleosis -- Moringa -- Morning sickness -- Motherwort -- Motion sickness -- Movement therapy -- Moxibustion -- MSM -- Mugwort -- Mullein -- Multiple chemical sensitivity -- Multiple sclerosis -- Mumps -- Muscle spasms and cramps -- Music therapy -- Myopia -- Myotherapy -- Myrrh -- Narcolepsy -- Native American medicine -- Natrum muriaticum -- Natural hormone replacement therapy -- Natural hygiene diet -- Naturopathic medicine -- Nausea -- Neck pain -- Neem -- Nettle -- Neural therapy -- Neuralgia -- Neurolinguisitic programming -- Niacin -- Night blindness -- Noni -- Nosebleeds -- Notoginseng root -- Nrf KEAP pathway -- Nutmeg -- Nutrition -- Nux vomica -- Oak -- Obesity -- Obsessive-compulsive disorder -- Oleander (Nerium oleander) -- Olive leaves -- Omega-3 fatty acids -- Omega-6 fatty acids -- Ophiopogon -- Oregano essential oil -- Organic food -- Ornish diet -- Ortho-bionomy -- Orthomolecular medicine -- Osha -- Osteoarthritis -- Osteopathy -- Osteoporosis -- Ovarian cancer -- Ovarian cysts -- Oxygen/ozone therapy -- Pain -- Paleolithic diet -- Panchakarma -- Pancreatitis -- Panic disorder -- Pantothenic acid -- Parasitic infections -- Parkinson's disease -- Parsley -- Passionflower -- Past life therapy -- Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) -- Pau d'arco -- Pelvic inflammatory disease -- Pennyroyal -- Peppermint -- Perillyl alcohol -- Peripheral neuropathy -- Periwinkle -- Pet therapy -- Phlebitis -- Phobias -- Phosphorus -- Phytolacca -- Phytosterols -- Pilates -- Pill curing -- Pinched nerve -- Pine bark extract -- Pinellia -- Piperine -- Pityriasis rosea -- Placebo effect -- Plantain -- Plant-based meats -- Pleurisy -- Pneumonia -- Polarity therapy -- Polycystic ovary syndrome -- Polysaccharide K (PSK) -- Polysaccharopeptide (PSP) -- Pomegranate -- Positive emotions -- Postpartum depression -- Post-traumatic stress disorder -- Potassium -- Pranic healing -- Prayer and spirituality -- Pregnancy -- Pregnancy massage -- Premenstrual syndrome -- Prickly heat -- Prickly pear cactus -- Prince's pine -- Pritikin diet -- Pro and Prebiotics -- Progressive muscle relaxation (PMR) -- Prolotherapy -- Prostate cancer -- Prostate enlargement -- Psilocybin -- Psoralea seeds -- Psoriasis -- Psychoneuroimmunology -- Psychophysiology -- Psychosomatic medicine -- Psychotherapy -- Psyllium -- Pulsatilla -- Pulse diagnosis -- Pyridoxine -- Qigong -- Quercetin -- Rabies -- Radiation injuries -- Radiesthesia -- Radionics -- Rashes -- Raspberry -- Raw foods diet -- Raynaud's syndrome -- Red cedar -- Red clover -- Red yeast rice extract -- Reflexology -- Reiki -- Reishi mushroom -- Relaxation -- Rescue remedy -- Restless leg syndrome -- Resveratrol -- Retinal detachment -- Retinopathy -- Rheumatic fever -- Rheumatoid arthritis -- Rhinitis -- Rhodiola rosea -- Rhubarb root -- Rhus toxicodendron -- Riboflavin -- Rolfing -- Rosacea -- Rose hip -- Rosemary -- Rosen method -- Royal jelly -- Rubella -- Rubenfeld synergy -- Russian massage -- Ruta -- Saccharomyces boulardii -- Safflower flower -- Saffron -- Sage -- Saliva sample testing -- Sargassum seaweed -- Sassafras -- Saw palmetto -- Scabies -- Scallion -- Scarlet fever -- Schisandra -- Schizophrenia -- Sciatica -- Scoliosis -- Seasonal affective disorder -- Selenium -- Senior nutrition -- Senna -- Sensory deprivation -- Sensory integration disorder -- Sepia -- Sermorelin -- Service animals -- Sesame oil -- Sexual dysfunction -- Shamanism -- Shangri-La diet -- Sheep sorrel -- Shepherd's purse -- Shiatsu -- Shiitake mushroom -- Shin splints -- Shingles -- Shintaido -- Sick building syndrome -- Sickle cell disease -- Silica -- Sinus infection -- Sjögren's syndrome -- Skin cancer -- Skullcap -- Sleep apnea -- Sleep disorders -- Slippery elm -- Smoking -- Sneezing -- Snoring -- Sodium -- Somatics -- Sore throat -- Sound therapy -- South Beach diet -- Soy protein -- Spearmint -- Spinal manipulative therapy -- Spirulina -- Sports massage -- Sprains and strains -- Squaw vine -- St. John's wort -- Staphylococcal infections -- Stem cell therapies -- Stevia -- Sties -- Stomachaches -- Stone massage -- Strep throat -- Stress -- Stroke -- Substance abuse and dependence -- Sulfur -- Suma -- Sunburn -- Swedish massage -- Sweet clover -- Swimmer's ear -- Syntonic optometry -- Syphilis -- Systemic lupus erythematosus -- Tai chi -- Tangerine peel -- Tea tree oil -- Teen nutrition -- Teething problems -- Temporomandibular joint syndrome -- Tendinitis -- Tennis elbow -- Tetanus -- Thai massage -- The Zone diet -- Theanine -- Therapeutic touch -- Thermography -- Thiamine -- Thuja -- Thunder god vine -- Thyme -- Tibetan medicine -- Tiger balm -- Tinnitus -- Tonsillitis -- Toothache -- Tourette syndrome -- Toxic shock syndrome -- Traditional African medicine -- Traditional Chinese medicine -- Trager psychophysical integration -- Trans fats -- Tremor -- Trichomoniasis -- Trigger point therapy -- Triglycerides -- Triphala -- Tuberculosis -- Turkey tail mushroom -- Turmeric -- Ukrain -- Ulcers, digestive -- Unani-tibbi -- Urinary incontinence -- Usnea -- Uterine cancer -- Uterine fibroids -- Uva ursi -- Vaginitis -- Valerian -- Vanadium -- Varicose veins -- Veganism -- Vegetarianism -- Venom immunotherapy -- Vinegar -- Vitalistic approach -- Vitamin A -- Vitamin B complex -- Vitamin B12 -- Vitamin C -- Vitamin D -- Vitamin E -- Vitamin K -- Vitamins -- Vomiting -- Warts -- Wasabi -- Water and nutrition -- Wheat germ -- Wheat grass therapy -- Wheezing -- Whey protein -- White peony root -- White willow -- Whole foods vs. processed foods -- Whole grains -- Whooping cough -- Wigmore diet -- Wild oat -- Wintergreen -- Witch hazel -- Worms -- Wormwood -- Wounds -- Yarrow -- Yeast infection -- Yellow dock -- Yerba santa -- Yoga -- Yohimbe -- Yucca -- Zheng gu shui -- Zinc.Covers all aspects of the subject including therapies, conditions/diseases, herbs/plants, and people. Identifies numerous types of alternative medicine being practiced today, including reflexology, acupressure, acupuncture, chelation therapy, kinesiology, yoga, chiropractic, Feldenkrais, polarity therapy, detoxification, naturopathy, Chinese medicine, biofeedback, Ayurveda and osteopathy.Description based on print version record.
Subjects: Alternative medicine;
On-line resources: https://libproxy.kirtland.edu/login?url=https://link.gale.com/apps/pub/95JG/GVRL?sid=gale_marc&u=lom_kirtlandcc -- Available online. Click here to access.;
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