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Labour versus the state : the conflicting policy interests and ideas of the Canadian trade union movement and the Federal Conservative Government, 1984-1988.Wise, Bruce (Bruce Douglas), Carleton University. Dissertation. Canadian Studies. January 1990 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Carleton University, 1990. / Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
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A disciplined progressive educator the life and career of William Chandler Bagley, 1874-1946 /Null, J. Wesley, January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2001. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references. Available also from UMI Company.
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Progressiveness and preprocessing in image compressionKopilović, Iván. Unknown Date (has links) (PDF)
University, Diss., 2004--Konstanz.
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The Organic-Progressive Principle in the Political Thought and Internationalism of Woodrow WilsonFlanagan, John Patrick 12 1900 (has links)
This is an investigation of the intellectual roots of the political thought and internationalism of Woodrow Wilson, the twenty-eightieth president of the United States. Exposed to the influence of Darwin, Wilson believed that politics had to be redefined as an evolutionary process. the older mechanical understanding of politics was to be replaced with an organic understanding of political development. This allowed Wilson to synthesize a concept of politics that included elements from the Christian tradition; the English Historical School, particularly Edmund Burke; and German idealism, including G.W.F. Hegel. However, because he placed a heavy emphasis on Burke and Hegel, Wilson moved away from a natural rights based theory of politics and more towards a politics based on relativism and a transhistorical notion of rights. Wilson had important theoretical reserves about Hegel, as a result, Wilson modified Hegel’s philosophy. This modification took the form of Wilson’s organic-progressive principle. This would greatly affect Wilson’s ideas about how nations formed, developed, and related to one another. This study focuses on Wilson’s concept of spirit, his theory of history, and his idea of political leadership. the organic-progressive principle is key to understanding Wilson’s attempts to reform on both the domestic and international levels.
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PROGRESSIVE COLLAPSE OF FRAME BUILDINGSWood, Curtis James January 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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The Clean Press: Local Civic Responsibility, News Ethics, and Pittsburgh's Professional Journalists Before Objectivity, 1890-1920Newberg, Caroline 21 April 2023 (has links)
No description available.
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Progressive Education in C. S. Lewis's Prince Caspian, Voyage of the Dawn Treader, and The Silver Chair: Narnia as a Remedy to The Green BookJohnson, Megan Marie 18 April 2023 (has links) (PDF)
Recent scholarship has taken an interest in C. S. Lewis's political views and how they are manifested in his fiction. However, few have thoroughly analyzed the specific political implications of his children's series, The Chronicles of Narnia. Part of this may be because Lewis himself insisted his fiction was nonpartisan. The heavily religious allegories in the series can also overshadow the political commentary. This thesis contributes to the growing discourse on political commentary in Lewis's fiction by identifying four concerns he had with progressive education and then demonstrating how he criticizes them in Prince Caspian, The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, and The Silver Chair. It then proposes that Lewis presents Narnia as a remedy to progressive education by providing a moral, classical, and literary education to its fictional visitors and real-life readers.
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Realistic Modeling of High Rise Structures subjected to Progressive CollapseStephen, D., Ye, J., Lam, Dennis January 2011 (has links)
No
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Effect of column removal time on progressive collapse of high rise structuresStephen, O.D., Lam, Dennis, Toropov, V.V. January 2013 (has links)
No / Accepted for conference.
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Analytical Modeling of the Mechanics of Nucleation and Growth of CracksGoyal, Vinay K. 10 December 2002 (has links)
With the traditional fracture mechanics approaches, an initial crack and self-similar progression of cracks are assumed. In this treatise, theoretical and numerical tools are developed to mathematically describe non-self-similar progression of cracks without specifying an initial crack. A cohesive-decohesive zone model, similar to the cohesive zone model known in fracture mechanics as Dugdale-Barenblatt model, is adopted to represent the degradation of the material ahead of the crack tip. This model unifies strength-based crack initiation and fracture based crack progression.
The cohesive-decohesive zone model is implemented with an interfacial surface material that consists of an upper and lower surface connected by a continuous distribution of normal and tangential nonlinear elastic springs that act to resist either Mode I opening, Mode II sliding, Mode III sliding, or mixed mode. The initiation of fracture is determined by the interfacial strength and the progression of fracture is determined by the critical energy release rate. The material between two adjacent laminae of a laminated composite structure or the material between the adherend and the adhesive is idealized with an interfacial surface material to predict interfacial fracture. The interfacial surface material is positioned within the bulk material to predict discrete cohesive cracks.
The proper work-conjugacy relations between the stress and deformation measures are identified for the interfacial surface theory. In the principle of virtual work, the interfacial cohesive-decohesive tractions are conjugate to the displacement jumps across the upper and lower surfaces. A finite deformation kinematics theory is developed for the description of the upper and lower surface such that the deformation measures are invariant with respect to superposed rigid body translation and rotation.
Various mechanical softening constitutive laws thermodynamically consistent with damage mechanics are postulated that relate the interfacial tractions to the displacement jump. An exponential function is used for the constitutive law such that it satisfies a multi-axial stress criterion for the onset of delamination, and satisfies a mixed mode fracture criterion for the progression of delamination. A damage parameter is included to prevent the restoration of the previous cohesive state between the interfacial surfaces. In addition, interfacial constitutive laws are developed to describe the contact-friction behavior. Interface elements applicable to two dimensional and three dimensional analyses are formulated for the analyses of contact, friction, and delamination problems. The consistent form of the interface element internal force vector and the tangent stiffness matrix are considered in the formulation. We investigate computational issues related to interfacial interpenetration, mesh sensitivity, the number of integrations points and the integration scheme, mathematical form of the softening constitutive law, and the convergence characteristics of the nonlinear solution procedure when cohesive-decohesive constitutive laws are used.
To demonstrate the predictive capability of the interface finite element formulation, steadystate crack growth is simulated for quasi-static loading of various fracture test configurations loaded under Mode I, Mode II, Mode III, and mixed-mode loading. The finite element results are in agreement with the analytical results available in the literature and those developed in this work.
A progressive failure methodology is developed and demonstrated to simulate the initiation and material degradation of a laminated panel due to intralaminar and interlaminar failures.
Initiation of intralaminar failure can be by a matrix-cracking mode, a fiber-matrix shear mode, and a fiber failure mode. Subsequent material degradation is modeled using damage parameters for each mode to selectively reduce lamina material properties. The interlaminar failure mechanism such as delamination is simulated by positioning interface elements between adjacent sublaminates. The methodology is validated with respect to experimental data available in the literature on the response and failure of quasi-isotropic panels with centrally located circular cutouts. Very good agreement between the progressive failure analysis and the experiments is achieved if the failure analyses includes the interaction of intralaminar and interlaminar failures in the postbuckling response of the panels.
In addition, ideas concerning the implementation of a fatigue model incorporated with a cohesive zone model are discussed. / Ph. D.
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