vortibird.blogg.se

Nightingale
Nightingale








Urban History." Journal of Urban History 29 (March 2003): 257-71.

  • "A Tale of Three Global Ghettos: How Arnold Hirsch Helps Us Internationalize U.S.
  • "The Transnational Contexts of Early-Twentieth-Century American Urban Segregationism." Journal of Social History 39 (Spring 2006): 668-702.
  • "Historical Geographies of the Color Line in Early Colonial Madras and New York.” American Historical Review 113 (2008): 48-71.
  • “Keep Our Eyes Wide Open on Segregation,"blog-post about the recent Manhattan Institute report on urban segregation in the United States (February 2012).
  • "Global Segregation" Human made Obstacles to Human Migration, Resettlement, and Residence.
  • "Segregation: A Global History of Divided Cities," University of Chicago Press, May 2012.
  • Nightingale’s first book, On the Edge: A History of Poor Black Children and Their American Dreams (Basic Books, 1993), combined ethnographic and archival research to show how broader currents in global popular and political culture affected low-income children’s collective experiences in black Philadelphia. Nightingale curates the exhibition “Buffalo Divided and Unequal: How it Happened and What People are Doing about It,” which is available for installation in appropriate venues. He is also the author of the blog “Global Segregation: Human-Made Obstacles to Human Movement across Oceans, Borders, and Urban Space”. Nightingale has published numerous articles on the intersections of urban history, world history and critical race theory in the American Historical Review, the Journal of Social History, and the Journal of Urban History among other places. It ties together primary research on cities in Asia, Europe, Africa and the Americas with an extensive synthetic reading of the history of urban politics worldwide. The book traces the spread of practices of racial segregationist in cities from their most ancient roots through the rise of racial segregation as a global phenomenon in the years from 1700 to the present. You should also be visited at home by a health visitor if you have recently had a baby or if you are newly registered with a GP and have a child under five years.Carl Nightingale’s new book " Segregation: a World History of Divided Cities." University of Chicago Press, 2012) is the co-winner of the 2012 Jerry Bentley Prize in World History from the World History Association and the American Historical Association. You can be visited at home by a community nurse if you are referred by your GP. Your GP will only visit you at home if they think that your medical condition requires it. You may only request a home visit if you are housebound or are too ill to visit the practice. Outside of our opening ours, and if urgent, please call 111 (or 999 in medical emergencies). You can request an urgent home visit at any time during opening hours, but if after 11.00am, the doctor will judge if that visit needs to be on the day, or arranged for another time. If you do not have access to the internet call the practice on on 020 8985 8388 before 11am/ However, you can check your results through the NHS App, without making an appointment.įor a routine home visit, that does not require urgent care, please submit a form on our online system before 11.00am on a day that your usual doctor works and say in the form that you would like a home visit when asked 'How would you like us to help?'. If you have had tests at the Nightingale Practice and have not been recalled, this usually means your test results are normal and don’t need further action.
  • Continuity: you can request to be contacted by a specific GP or member of staff – if they are available we will do what we can to honour your request.
  • nightingale

    Turnaround time: we will get back to you on the same working day if you submit your form before 4.30 (this will sometimes be the following day if demand is high) so it’s very quick.Fairer: We will be able to prioritise call backs, rather than those who got through on the phones first.Efficient: your request will be seen by the right person, first time.Faster: the requests are simple to submit, so you don’t need to wait on hold on the phone.Convenient: available Monday - Friday, so you can send in your request at a time that suits you, rather than having to wait for the phone-lines to open.Easy to access: no account needed - simply submit a query through the NHS App or directly through the practice website.

    nightingale

    You will help us by freeing up the phones for those patients who are the most vulnerable and find it most difficult to get through to us, and you will have the opportunity to upload photographs to show where the problem is. It is a simple online form which takes a few moments to fill out and can be accessed through the NHS App or click on the image above. You can use the online system to book a GP appointment and for any administration queries.










    Nightingale