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Item Abortion and contraception: conscientious objection in the healing professions(IU Center for Bioethics, 2014-05-24) Odell, Jere D.; Abhyankar, Rahul; Comer, Amber (Malcolm); Rua, Avril N.Item Civic-Minded Rubric 2.0(2017-07-10) Weiss, H. Anne; Hahn, Thomas W.; Norris, Kristin E.The Civic-Minded Graduate Rubric 2.0 was developed in order to travel across multiple artifacts of and experiences in learning and service. The goal was to create a practical tool for faculty and staff to use when assessing either a large, broad civic learning goal related to obtaining a tertiary education- being a civic minded graduate- or assessing a certain aspect of being civic-minded as it relates to a specific learning experience, initiative, pedagogy or program (empathy, curiosity, depth of community engagement, etc.).Item Collection scope and search strategies: conscientious objection in the healing professions(IU Center for Bioethics, 2014-06-14) Odell, Jere D.; Abhyankar, Rahul; Comer, Amber (Malcolm); Rua, Avril N.Item Court cases and legal analyses: Conscientious objection in the healing professions(IU Center for Bioethics, 2014-06-07) Odell, Jere D.; Abhyankar, Rahul; Comer, Amber (Malcolm); Rua, Avril N.Item Critical Juncture of Unification – Window of (missed) opportunity for the German Welfare State?(University of Duisburg-Essen, 2013) Walk, Marlene[Excerpt] This analysis focuses on the role of free welfare associations (FWAs) in the unification process, which was mainly characterized as an institution transfer from the west to the east. FWAs are a major force in the German nonprofit sector and the main provider of social services and health care in the country (Zimmer, 1999). Moreover, they play a special role in the German welfare state under the principle of subsidiarity. This principle allows them to act on behalf of the government in the provision of social services and health care (Zimmer, et al., 2004). Incorporating FWAs in the process of institution transfer after unification was essential for the German government, due to the valuable political knowledge of East Germany that the FWAs held (Angerhausen, Backhaus-Maul, Offe, Olk, & Schiebel, 1998). This paper draws on the concepts of path dependency, critical juncture, and window of opportunity (Hacker, 2002; Ebbinghaus, 2005; Marcussen et al., 1999) and analyzes to what extent the process of German unification was a successful or a missed opportunity for the unified welfare state, with particular consideration to the role of FWAs.Item End-of-life care: Conscientious objection in the healing professions(IU Center for Bioethics, 2014-05-31) Odell, Jere D.; Abhyankar, Rahul; Comer, Amber (Malcolm); Rua, Avril N.Item Ethical analyses: conscientious objection in the healing professions(IU Center for Bioethics, 2014-02-08) Odell, Jere D.; Abhyankar, Rahul; Comer, Amber (Malcolm); Rua, Avril N.Item General readings, overviews and sources: a bibliography. Conscientious objection in the healing professions(IU Center for Bioethics, 2014-02-15) Odell, Jere D.; Abhyankar, Rahul; Comer, Amber (Malcolm); Rua, Avril N.Item Institutions: Conscientious objection in the healing professions(IU Center for Bioethics, 2014-03-29) Odell, Jere D.; Abhyankar, Rahul; Comer, Amber (Malcolm); Rua, Avril N.Item Introduction: conscientious objection in the healing professions(IU Center for Bioethics, 2014-01-25) Odell, Jere D.; Abhyankar, Rahul; Comer, Amber (Malcolm); Rua, Avril N.