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  1. Dame Janet Elizabeth Murray Kershaw DBE FRCN (née Gammie; born 11 December 1943) is an English nurse who served as professor of nursing and dean at the School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Sheffield from 1999 to 2006.

  2. Betty Kershaw was director of nursing education at the Manchester College of Nursing and Midwifery and in 1994 was president of the Royal College of Nursing. She studied nursing at Manchester Hospitals and graduated in nursing from the University of Manchester in 1976.

  3. www.wef.org.in › betty-kershawBetty Kershaw | WEF

    Professor Dame Betty Kershaw; DBE, OSt.J, FRCN, RN, RNT, MSc, LL.D (Hon) Emeritus Dean, The School of Nursing and Midwifery, The University of Sheffield. Honorary Posts: Member, Christie Hospital Education Committee Chair, Elizabeth Bryan Foundation Trust. Awards: Created DBE 1998 for Services to Nursing and Nursing Education; Education Officer ...

  4. 27 de fev. de 2020 · Janet Elizabeth Murray Kershaw (Gammie), DBE, FRCN, CStJ: Also Known As: "Betty" Birthdate: December 11, 1943: Immediate Family: Daughter of Ian Urquhart Gammie and Janet Gammie Wife of Sir Ian Kershaw. Occupation: Professor of Nursing and Dean at the School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Sheffield from 1999 to 2006. Managed by:

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ian_KershawIan Kershaw - Wikipedia

    • Background
    • Bavaria Project
    • The Nazi Dictatorship
    • Structuralist Views
    • "Working Towards The Führer" Concept
    • Later Career
    • Honours and Memberships
    • Works
    • Further Reading

    Ian Kershaw was born on 29 April 1943 in Oldham, Lancashire, England, to Joseph Kershaw, a musician, and Alice (Robinson) Kershaw. He was educated at Counthill Grammar School, St Bede's College, Manchester, where he was taught by Father Geoffrey Burke the University of Liverpool (BA), and Merton College, Oxford (DPhil). He was originally trained as...

    In 1975, Kershaw joined Martin Broszat's "Bavaria Project". During his work, Broszat encouraged Kershaw to examine how ordinary people viewed Hitler. As a result of his work in the 1970s on Broszat's "Bavaria Project", Kershaw wrote his first book on Nazi Germany, The "Hitler Myth": Image and Reality in the Third Reich, which was first published in...

    In 1985, Kershaw published a book on the historiography of Nazi Germany, The Nazi Dictatorship: Problems and Perspectives of Interpretation, in which he reflected on the problems in historiography of the Nazi era.Kershaw noted the huge disparity of often incompatible views about the Nazi era such as the debate between: 1. those who see the Nazi per...

    Like Broszat, Kershaw sees the structures of the Nazi state as far more important than the personality of Hitler (or any other individual for that matter) as an explanation for the way Nazi Germany developed. In particular, Kershaw subscribes to the view argued by Broszat and the German historian Hans Mommsen that Nazi Germany was a chaotic collect...

    Kershaw disagrees with Mommsen's "Weak Dictator" thesis: the idea that Hitler was a relatively unimportant player in Nazi Germany. However, he has agreed with his idea that Hitler did not play much of a role in the day-to-day administration of the government of Nazi Germany. Kershaw's way of explaining this paradox is his theory of "Working Towards...

    Kershaw retired from full-time teaching in 2008. In the 2010s, he wrote two books on the wider history of Europe for The Penguin History of Europe series: To Hell and Back: Europe, 1914–1949 and The Global Age: Europe, 1950–2017.

    Fellow of the British Academy
    Winner of the Wolfson History Prize, 2000, for Hitler, 1936–1945: Nemesis (Allen Lane)
    Co-winner of the British Academy Book Prize, 2001
    Bolton Priory Rentals and Ministers; Accounts, 1473–1539(ed.) (Leeds, 1969)
    Bolton Priory. The Economy of a Northern Monastery(Oxford, 1973)
    'The Great Famine and agrarian crisis in England 1315-22' in Past & Present, 59 (1973)
    "The Persecution of the Jews and German Popular Opinion in the Third Reich" pp. 261–289 from Yearbook of the Leo Baeck Institute, Volume 26, 1981
    Kershaw, Ian Working Towards the Führer: Essays in Honour of Sir Ian Kershaw, edited by Anthony McElligott and Tim Kirk, Manchester University Press, 2003, ISBN 0-7190-6732-4.
    Kershaw, Ian (19 October 2008). "The writing life: sometimes history just depends on that next cup of coffee". The Washington Post Book World. p. 11.
    Lukacs, John The Hitler of History, New York : Vintage Books, 1998, 1997, ISBN 0-375-70113-3.
    Marrus, Michael The Holocaust in History, Toronto: Lester & Orpen Dennys, 1987, ISBN 0-88619-155-6.
  6. 19 de mai. de 2004 · Free Access. Educating nursing students as individuals. Betty Kershaw. First published: 19 May 2004. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2648.2004.03106.x. Citations: 2. Sections. PDF. Tools. Share. The role of the nurse is as complex and varied as the people who call themselves nurses. and nurses themselves are all different.

  7. nurse. Dame Janet Elizabeth Murray "Betty" Kershaw, Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire, FRCN, CStJ, née Gammie, was Professor of Nursing and Dean at the School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Sheffield from 1999 to 2006. Career.