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SANDERS, CHRIS
(2)
answer(s).
Srl
Item
1
ID:
052931
Black budget of the United States: Engine of a "Negative return
/ Sanders, Chris; Fitts, Catherine Austine
Apr-Jun 2004
Sanders, Chris
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication
Apr-Jun 2004.
Summary/Abstract
An analysis of the federal financial records reveals shocking evidence that a very large poportion of the nation's wealth is eing illegally diverted since several decades ino secret, unaccountable channels and programmes with unspecified purposes, including covert operations and subversions abroad and clandestine military R&D at home.Public institutions have been infiltrated and taken over by shadowy groups in the service of powerful private and vested interests, often at the expense of the common good.
Key Words
Military Expenditure
;
Research and Development
;
United States
;
Budget
;
Secret budgeting
;
Undocumentable transaction
;
Unacknowledged programme
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2
ID:
106443
Impact of shared location on the mental health of military and
/ Harrison, Deborah; Robson, Karen; Albanese, Patrizia; Sanders, Chris
Sanders, Chris
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication
2011.
Summary/Abstract
Preliminary results of our survey of 1066 adolescent members of a Canadian Forces (CF) community, comparing the mental health and well-being of CF and civilian youth in a secondary school adjacent to an army base, yielded surprising results. The data were collected in 2008 with an instrument that replicated parts of the National Longitudinal Survey of Children and Youth (NLSCY). Our findings suggested that there are few statistically significant differences between CF and civilian youth on mental health and well-being measures. On the other hand, both the CF and civilian youth scored lower on crucial health and well-being measures than their peers in the national NLSCY sample. This research note attempts to explain these complementary findings, using data from follow-up semi-structured interviews we conducted in 2009/10 with 60 of the CF adolescents. It also considers the possibility of a ''spillover effect'' of military life stressors on civilian youth.
Key Words
Canadian Forces
;
Mental Health
;
Spillover Effect
;
Youth/Adolescents
;
Well - being
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