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                  <text>Final Projects Spring 2015</text>
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                <text>COMMUNICATION ETHICS AS SHOWN BY TWO PEOPLE NAMED HAL -- AN ESSAY &#13;
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                <text>This paper looks at how Hal, a character in Infinite Jest, communicates with other people. It tries to figure out a good ethics for talking to faceless strangers and getting to know them, also looking at Infinite Jest’s literary precedent, Hamlet, for examples. Finally, the paper follows my own experiences with acting, struggling to interact with other people during and afterward. The paper suggests that communication is a constant struggle to avoid facelessness, and that communication itself can also become the object instead of the person or place underneath it, which is why a constant attempt to rediscover the territory underneath is necessary. </text>
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                <text>Matt Krane</text>
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                <text>“Everything That Follows From Here On Out”: Choices in Writing the Walk in Sociology&#13;
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                <text>In my paper, I analyze the sociological use of the walk in a chapter of Small’s Villa Victoria by comparing it to other walks, including those of sociologists Robert Sampson and Elijah Anderson, Virginia Woolf’s walk in “Street Haunting: A London Adventure,” and the walk I took down Tremont Street. I start by contextualizing the walk and its mimetic difficulties with an overview of the tradition of writing about walks, which stretches from the Epic of Gilgamesh to contemporary novelists like Paul Auster. I then analyze the function of the walk in the work of Sampson and Anderson, before turning to Small to contrast his walk with that of these other sociologists. I end by highlighting the way in which Small is using the tools of literary nonfiction as outlined in Woolf’s essay to warn readers against the walk as sociological tool.</text>
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                <text>A Place to Call Home: Policy Moving From Homelessness to Permanent Housing in Boston</text>
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                <text>Though homeless shelters are a vital part of the livelihood, and survival, of many of Boston’s homeless, bouncing in and out of shelters is nowhere near a long-term solution to the problem of homelessness, or a stable lifestyle for homeless individuals. Additionally, the homeless shelter system is in itself flawed, as the vast majority of a shelter’s resources are taken up by the same repeated guests. For these reasons, and many others which I discuss in my paper, I advocate that long-term and permanent housing are the best solutions for homelessness in Boston, and I cite specific examples from the policy of Pine Street Inn, Boston’s most legendary shelter which now devotes much of its resource pool to housing, and Homes for Families, which advocates for financially stable and humane housing for Boston’s homeless families. </text>
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                <text>Annie Harvieux</text>
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                <text>Reading Libraries: A Study of Boston through the Codman Square and Honan-Allston Library Branches&#13;
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                <text>This paper presents a study of the City of Boston through two of its library branches. Insofar as ordinary people comprise the constituency of libraries, the premise of my research is that studying libraries and how they are utilized is a way of understanding local communities. This is a particularly fitting approach for studying Boston, a city that prides itself on its academic reputation and its rich library history. Boston was the home of the first free municipal library in the country, and was subsequently the first library system to establish branches in local neighborhoods. Local libraries have evolved to serve the unique needs of their communities. Whereas the Codman Square Library in Dorchester serves a population that is struggling to overcome poverty and violence, the Honan-Allston Library serves a neighborhood with less material need but more concerns about upcoming development in the area. My personal observations and my interviews with librarians at both the Codman Square and Honan-Allston Libraries lend insight into both the disparity between and the vibrancy of two distinct neighborhoods in Boston.</text>
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                <text>Fenway Park in the Context Fenway</text>
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                <text>	With my paper, I am examining Fenway Park in the greater context of the Fenway-Kenmore neighborhood. I originally hoped to hear from someone on the Fenway Community Development Committee, but no one returned my correspondences in time. So, I substituted by looking for older news stories about the Fenway CDC’s most recent revitalization efforts. After writing about that for a bit, I will move on to talking about my trip to Fenway. I went down during a game to examine that neighborhood and how the stadium fits in, but also the overall atmosphere of the people at the time. Finally, I would go to a bar during the game to see more of the atmosphere and how the game itself feeds into it (without spending the money on an actual game ticket). I visited during a Tuesday night home game, and after surveying the perimeter, went into The Lansdowne.</text>
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                <text>Retention of young Professionals in Boston</text>
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                <text>Research question – is Boston actually unappealing to young adults, specifically recent college graduates? The interviews and personal point-of-views from the four individuals offer some insight into the young professionals’ minds but they are by no means representative of all young professionals. The inclusion of these four individuals was simply to shed light on the thought of some Ivy League educated individuals and their retention. The decision of the Harvard University students to remain in the Boston area both serves as contradictory to the idea that Boston is unappealing to young professionals because they chose Boston as their post-graduate destination, but their long term plans demonstrate that Boston has not been and will not be appealing enough to remain here long term, which draws validity to the ideas that many professionals hoping to improve Boston have suggested and the initiatives to improve Boston. These individuals demonstrated short-term appeal for Boston because of opportunity or circumstance, but eventually plan to move away. The interesting addition was the Columbia University student who finds Boston appealing and would consider relocating to the Boston area at some point in the future. Nonetheless, among the reports demonstrating a higher than expected retention of young professionals and the idea that the “brain drain” exists, there is an inconsistency and room for improvement. A single conclusion cannot be drawn from the retention of young professionals in Boston. Many professionals believe more can be done to make Boston nightlife more appealing, affordable, and accessible in addition to providing more transportation for the suburb dwellers who cannot afford the city’s rent. The “brain drain” has not been disproven even though BRA / UMass report demonstrates that retention is higher than previously perceived, but as Hopper’s blog mentions, the report could be stronger if it included more comparison and more sources. There are initiatives in place but they require civic engagement, meaning they require more motivation from the busy young adults, and although the individuals I interviewed are staying or have stayed in Boston, their intentions are short term and Boston is weeded out by other options because their initial reasons for staying in Boston came out of circumstance or opportunity.</text>
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                <text>I report on research to investigate the availability of information and services in languages other than English at six M.B.T.A. subway stations, and frame these results with data regarding language usage in Boston. I then analyze the problem (almost complete lack of available services in foreign languages) and finish with policy recommendations for the M.B.T.A.</text>
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                <text>This project was done in an effort to reconnect with a lot of my friends that I have&#13;
made within the Latin American community here in Boston, and elsewhere. The idea&#13;
behind the project was to develop an overarching idea, if that was possible, of how&#13;
this particular community viewed Boston. Are there opinions to be skewed one way or&#13;
the other? Will their opinions of the city depend heavily on their personal experiences&#13;
within their community or will it depend on this ‘imaginary’ Boston that they carry&#13;
around with them? All-in-all, I was a little surprised at how little was said about the&#13;
food (sea-food), museums, symphonies, and historical significance of the area which&#13;
is to say that 0 of the 18 people that I interviewed mentioned any of those things. A lot&#13;
of the focus was on the weather, which is understandable, and the sports teams,&#13;
mostly the Red Sox.</text>
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                <text>Summary: My paper uses firsthand accounts of personal experiences during the aftermath of the Boston Marathon bombing, combined with speeches and newspaper articles, to describe the effect of the Boston Red Sox on the city of Boston throughout the 2013 MLB season, as Boston tries to recover from the tragic events that marred the Boston Marathon. The paper will go into detail on how the Red Sox became a symbol of strength and unity, a pillar on which the people of Boston and fans of Red Sox Nation all around the world rallied upon to recuperate as the Red Sox chased the World Series title, and how that social cohesion allowed Boston to come back even stronger than before the Marathon bombing.</text>
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                <text>Jeremy Dietrich</text>
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                  <text>Final Projects Spring 2015</text>
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                <text>Homelessness in Boston</text>
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                <text>Within my paper, I explore the issue of homelessness that is so prevalent in and around Boston.&#13;
In particular, past, present, and future measures taken and being taken by the local and state&#13;
governments, as well as various organizations, are a large focus of the paper, and are used to better&#13;
understand the nature of Boston's particular problem with homelessness. Risk factors for homelessness&#13;
and the more common causes in Boston are explored and analyzed, to help further understand why&#13;
some approaches might work and others might not, as well as what neighborhoods within Boston might&#13;
be at greatest risk. Ways to mitigate and eventually end homelessness in Boston are also explored and&#13;
discussed within the paper, questioning what homelessness may reveal about Boston and society at&#13;
large.</text>
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                <text>Jon Cruz</text>
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