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Getting Started with DOIs in the Institutional RepositoryLowery, Ashley 21 January 2017 (has links)
Assigning DOIs in the institutional repository builds legitimacy and extends the reach of your IR content. This session will cover the basics of CrossRef membership and DOI management for institutional repositories, with special emphasis on Digital Commons. Topics will include membership costs and responsibilities, DOI structure and syntax, recommended workflows for manual and automated deposits, and considerations for Memoranda of Understanding.
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Engineering A New Form Of Enclosure: International Convergence In Gmo RegulationAltif, Jessica 01 January 2010 (has links)
As society begins to recognize its impact on ecological systems, the belief that modern political institutions can offer a sense of control and certainty, as well as protect the health of its citizens, is increasingly questioned. In an era of uncertainty, faith in science and technology to alleviate industrial impacts on the environment is often embraced by policymakers yet questioned by the public who see the authoritative role of the sciences in the political sphere as contributing to global risk. The development of biotechnology, specifically genetically modified food, places an anthropocentric focus on resolving and/or adapting to environmental degradation, further reflecting an adherence to the dominant social paradigm to address the consequences of modernization. In order to explicate the dualism of human/nature relations inherent in biotechnology, the focus of this research provides an exploration into two competing paradigms of genetically modified organism (GMO) regulatory policy: scientific rationality and social rationality. Through a careful examination of the evolution of GMO regulation in the United States and the European Union, the precarious relationships between science and politics and progress and precaution reveal an actual convergence instead of divergence between these two actors in the international system. Although existing literature proclaims a division between the values and ethics of U.S. and EU environmental policy, the end result of this comparison in GMO regulation illustrates that in both the risk assessment and precautionary approaches, nature is still viewed as an instrument for advancing enclosure of the commons.
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Débat sur les réclamations des ressources naturelles et des terres communales dans les montagnes centrales de l'IslandeRoy, Christine January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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Conflictual CommonsMalm, Sara January 2016 (has links)
Högdalen—Rågsved experiences a breakpoint of change which brings the definition of the ideal city and who is included or excluded to the negotiation table. Conflictual commons are the spaces used as common resources which becomes actualized for contestation. With organized movements and walking experiences, I explore conflicts over commons and look into actors involved, what understanding of space they act from, where maintenance responsibility is put and which scales is perceived as relevant.
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Irish Members of Parliament and the Home-Rule Bill of 1912Burke, Kenneth Alton 12 1900 (has links)
This thesis examines speeches made by Irish members of the British House of Commons concerning the Government of Ireland Bill (1912). The most significant source use was the Parliamentary Debates of the House of Commons, 1912 to 1914. The organization of the Irish political parties is outlined in Chapter One. The next two chapters deal with their view of Irish history during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The fourth chapter focuses upon the bill in committee, and the fifth chapter examines the more general debate on the bill. The conclusions of the final chapter suggest that advocates of the bill were motivated by Irish nationalism, while opponents were motivated by economic ties to Great Britain.
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DIREITO AUTORAL: PERSPECTIVAS NO DESENVOLVIMENTO EDUCACIONAL.Dallara, Keila Eiko Felipe Mori 19 September 2013 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2016-08-10T10:46:57Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1
KEILA EIKO FELIPE MORI DALLARA.pdf: 712675 bytes, checksum: 84f20ba60ba9cf5a016c41df8aeba410 (MD5)
Previous issue date: 2013-09-19 / The Copyright Office is essential that aims to preserve the credit and economic exploitation
by the authors over their creations. The present study deals with the analysis of protection
taking into account the application of civil liability duty to indemnify those who violate the
precepts of protection of copyright. Alongside is a survey of the current condition of the
educational system combined with parental economic deficiencies of the population and the
difficulty in gaining access to literary works in the learning process. Seeks to raise questions
about the need for change in order parental aiming flexibility regarding the copyright to allow
free access to works protected by the academic community. / O Direito Autoral é instituto fundamental que visa preservar os créditos e a
exploração econômica por parte dos autores em relação as suas criações. O
presente estudo trata da análise desta proteção levando em consideração a
aplicação da responsabilidade civil com dever de indenizar quem viola os preceitos
da proteção do direito de autor. Paralelamente é feito um levantamento da atual
condição do sistema educacional pátrio combinado com as deficiências econômicas
da população e a dificuldade em se ter acesso a obras literárias no processo de
aprendizagem. Busca-se levantar questionamentos a cerca da necessidade de
alteração do ordenamento pátrio visando flexibilizar o Direito Autoral no tocante a
permitir acesso livre a obras protegidas por parte da comunidade acadêmica.
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Karl Polanyi and the Law of Market SocietyFrerichs, Sabine January 2019 (has links) (PDF)
Karl Polanyi started his career as a doctor of law and practiced law
for a while; but he did not become a legal scholar. As an economic historian,
anthropologist, or sociologist, he was concerned with the relation of economy and
society. But even though law is an important factor in mediating this relationship,
Polanyi gave little attention to the law as such. As part of an endeavour to advance
a "Polanyian" economic sociology of law, this article develops the "law of market
Society" as an analytical category. For thi
s purpose, three argumentative strategies
are combined. First, the article draws on
The Great Transformation
to reconstruct the
role of law in the processes of commodification and decommodification. Second,
it turns to Marxist scholarship to explore the conceptual link between law and
economics and to ponder to what extent law itself can become a commodity. Third,
it links Polanyi's approach with American institutionalism, and Commons' work in
particular, to show how the evolution of the "law of market Society" can also be
understood as a collective enterprise which continuously evolves. It is argued that
these perspectives complement each other and help to bring the law back in where it is missing.
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Institutions, property rights and external effects : new institutional economics and the economics of John R. Commons /Stettler, Michael January 1999 (has links) (PDF)
Diss. Wirtschaftswiss. Zürich. / Literaturverz.
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Forging a New Global Commons Introducing common property into the global genetic resource debate.Mason, Nicholas Craig January 2004 (has links)
This thesis provides an analysis of recent attempts to regulate the governance of genetic resources through the initiation of new global commons regimes. These attempts have arisen out of a combination of the growing recognition of genetic resources' value and global nature; a new resurgence in support for the common property paradigm; and, during a period in which the world is becoming increasingly globalised, with many governance competencies moving to the supranational level. They can be viewed as part of a broader effort to proffer the common property approach as a legitimate alternative in the property regime debate: a debate that has increasingly become trapped in the public-private dichotomy at the dawn of the twenty-first century. The aim of this thesis is to investigate the success of these attempts, and offer suggestions about how future attempts might be more successful. While there are a multitude of books, articles, opinion pieces and media reports produced that concern themselves with property theory, intellectual property theory, the efficacy or morality of applying property regimes to living materials, and the threats and promises of globalisation, all of which influence the notion of a potential global genetic commons, relatively little has been written directly on the idea of applying global common property regimes to genetic resource governance issues. The first part of this thesis constructs a theory of a global genetic commons, drawing inspiration from a variety of sources, while the second part tests this theory in order to analyse the outcomes of the recent attempts, and suggest directions for future research. The thesis finds that the conception of a global genetic commons is indeed a valid one, and that while not all attempts so far have been successful, the common property paradigm does offer valuable insights for the future governance of genetic resources at the global level.
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The personnel of the House of Commons in 1422Roskell, John Smith January 1941 (has links)
No description available.
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