A History of the Department of Agricultural Economics of the University of Kentucky

1969 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lawrence Allen Bradford
Author(s):  
Terry L. Birdwhistell ◽  
Deirdre A. Scaggs

Since women first entered the University of Kentucky (UK) in 1880 they have sought, demanded, and struggled for equality within the university. The period between 1880 and 1945 at UK witnessed women’s suffrage, two world wars, and an economic depression. It was during this time that women at UK worked to take their rightful place in the university’s life prior to the modern women’s movement of the 1960s and beyond. The history of women at UK is not about women triumphant, and it remains an untidy story. After pushing for admission into a male-centric campus environment, women created women’s spaces, women’s organizations, and a women’s culture often patterned on those of men. At times, it seemed that a goal was to create a woman’s college within the larger university. However, coeducation meant that women, by necessity, competed with men academically while still navigating the evolving social norms of relationships between the sexes. Both of those paths created opportunities, challenges, and problems for women students and faculty. By taking a more women-centric view of the campus, this study shows more clearly the impact that women had over time on the culture and environment. It also allows a comparison, and perhaps a contrast, of the experiences of UK women with other public universities across the United States.


1981 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-23

Sources is a regular feature of Practicing Anthropology designed to inform the readership about the activities of the Applied Anthropology Documentation Project at the University of Kentucky. The Project, sponsored by the Society for Applied Anthropology and the Society of Professional Anthropologists, is an archive collection of materials produced by applied anthropologists and other social scientists interested in solving human problems with their professional skills. The collection includes technical reports, social impact assessments, evaluation reports, research and curriculum proposals, conference papers, reprints as well as other kinds of materials. The collection is intended to serve as a source for practicing anthropologists, students and people concerned with the history of applied anthropology.


1982 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-27

Sources is a regular feature of Practicing Anthropology designed to inform the readership about the activities of the Applied Anthropology Documentation Project at the University of Kentucky. The Project, sponsored by the Society for Applied Anthropology, the Society of Professional Anthropologists and the Washington Association of Professional Anthropologists, is an archive collection of materials produced by applied anthropologists and other social scientists interested in solving human problems with their professional skills. The collection includes technical reports, social impact assessments, evaluation reports, research and curriculum proposals, conference papers, reprints as well as other kinds of materials. The collection is intended to serve as a source for practicing anthropologists, students and people concerned with the history of applied anthropology.


1983 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-19

Sources is a regular feature of Practicing Anthropology designed to inform the readership about the activities of the Applied Anthropology Documentation Project at the University of Kentucky. The Project, sponsored by the Society for Applied Anthropology, the Society of Professional Anthropologists and the Washington Association of Professional Anthropologists, is an archive collection of materials produced by applied anthropologists and other social scientists interested in solving human problems with their professional skills. The collection includes technical reports, social impact assessments, evaluation reports, curriculum descriptions and some proposals. The collection is intended to serve as a source for practicing anthropologists, students, and people concerned with the history of applied anthropology.


1985 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 20-23
Author(s):  
Ralph Biship

Sources is a regular feature of Practicing Anthropology designed to inform the readership about the activities of the Applied Anthropology Documentation Project at the University of Kentucky. The Project, sponsored by the Society for Applied Anthropology, the Society of Professional Anthropologists and the Washington Association of Professional Anthropologists, is an archive collection of materials produced by applied anthropologists and other social scientists interested in solving human problems with their professional skills. The collection includes technical reports, social impact assessments, evaluation reports, curriculum descriptions and some proposals. The collection is intended to serve as a source for practicing anthropologists, students, and people concerned with the history of applied anthropology.


1983 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 16-19

Sources is a regular feature of Practicing Anthropology designed to inform the readership about the activities of the Applied Anthropology Documentation Project at the University of Kentucky. The Project, sponsored by the Society for Applied Anthropology, the Society of Professional Anthropologists and the Washington Association of Professional Anthropologists, is an archive collection of materials produced by applied anthropologists and other social scientists interested in solving human problems with their professional skills. The collection includes technical reports, social impact assessments, evaluation reports, curriculum descriptions and some proposals. The collection is intended to serve as a source for practicing anthropologists, students, and people concerned with the history of applied anthropology.


1982 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 21-23
Author(s):  
John Van Willigen

Sources is a regular feature of Practicing Anthropology designed to inform the readership about the activities of the Applied Anthropology Documentation Project at the University of Kentucky. The Project, sponsored by the Society for Applied Anthropology, Society of Professional Anthropologists and the Washington Association of Professional Anthropologists, is an archive collection of materials produced by applied anthropologists and other social scientists interested in solving human problems with their professional skills. The collection includes technical reports, social impact assessments, evaluation reports, research and curriculum proposals, conference papers, reprints as well as other kinds of materials. The collections is intended to serve as a source for practicing anthropologists, students and people concerned with the history of applied anthropology.


1985 ◽  
Vol 7 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 29-33

Sources is a regular feature of Practicing Anthropology designed to inform the readership about the activities of the Applied Anthropology Documentation Project at the University of Kentucky. The Project, sponsored by. the Society for Applied Anthropology, the Society of Professional Anthropologists and the Washington Association of Professional Anthropologists, is an archive collection of materials produced by applied anthropologists and other social scientists interested in solving human problems with their professional skills. The collection includes technical reports, social impact assessments, evaluation reports, curriculum descriptions and some proposals. The collection is intended to serve as a source for practicing anthropologists, students, and people concerned with the history of. applied anthropology.


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