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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
71

Ações coletivas e movimento ambiental na Cantareira : 25 anos de resistência / Collective actions and environmental movement in Cantareira, 25 years of contention

Ferreira, Ivini Vaneska Rodrigues Ferraz 05 August 2013 (has links)
Nas últimas décadas do séc. XX, mais precisamente a partir do final da década de 80, uma questão fundamental começa a ser discutida multisetorialmente na Região Metropolitana de São Paulo (RMSP): Como lidar com as questões relacionadas à infra-estrutura urbana e aos limites do crescimento, considerando a necessidade de preservar o Cinturão Verde da RMSP? O objetivo principal desta dissertação de mestrado é descrever e analisar as ações coletivas e o movimento socioambiental, tomando como estudo de caso o movimento liderado por moradores do entorno da Cantareira que culminaram no reconhecimento internacional do Cinturão Verde da Cidade de São Paulo como Reserva da Biosfera pela UNESCO em 1994. Após mais de 20 anos de resistência, ainda hoje, este movimento persiste na forma de abaixo assinados, passeatas e ações judiciais, o que o transforma em uma das mais expressivas formas de ativismo ambiental em favor da preservação de uma floresta urbana. Ao traçarmos um panorama histórico, até os dias de hoje, das ações coletivas e do movimento ambiental em prol da Cantareira temos como objetivo investigar as razões pelas quais as populações urbanas participam de arenas políticas que decidem o futuro e a preservação de uma grande floresta dentro de uma cidade / In the last decades of the twentieth century, more precisely from the end of the decade of the eighties, a key issue started being discussed multisectorally in the Metropolitan Region of São Paulo (MASP): how to deal with the issues related to urban infrastructure and the limits of growth considering the need to maintain the green belt around the metropolitan region of São Paulo. The main objective of this master thesis is to describe and analyze the collective actions and the environmental movement taking as case study of the movement led by the Cantareira Park`s entour inhabitants, which resulted in the in international recognition of the Green Belt of the City of São Paulo as a Biosphere Reserve by UNESCO in 1994. After more than 20 years of resistence, still today, this movement continues in the form of undersigned, parades, lawsuits, which makes it one of the most expressive forms of environmental activism in favor of preserving an urban forest. When we draw a historical overview, until today, of collective action in environmental movement in favor of Cantareira, we have as objective to investigate the reasons for which the urban populations participate in policies that decide the future and the preservation of a great forest within a city
72

Extending radical space? : a historical comparative analysis of sub-state violent contention in Quebec and Corsica

Melanson, Megan Fabienne January 2016 (has links)
This thesis offers a comparative historical analysis of sub-state violent contention in Quebec and Corsica. It focuses specifically on the Front de Libération du Québec (FLQ) and the Fronte di Liberazione Naziunale Corsu (FLNC), in 1963 to 1971 and 1976 to 1990, respectively. The thesis argues that the FLQ and the FLNC sought to extend radical ideological space to promote independence in order to achieve revolutionary social and economic change through campaigns of violence and kidnappings. Theoretically, the thesis draws on the contentious politics and social movements literatures, which it notably combines with Radical Flank Effect (RFE). RFEs are interactive processes that aim to map the beneficial and/or detrimental impact of radical group action on moderate groups. Whilst commonly used to understand the political outcomes of social movements, RFE is used in this thesis in conjunction with social movement literature to compare the relationship between these violent movements and their more moderate opponents. To understand the internal dynamics of these movements, I have identified four key elements of contrast: membership, ideology, network structure and strategy. I draw on, for example, McAdam, Tarrow and Tilly's (2001) mobilization method, which aids an understanding of membership and ideology by framing the interaction amongst challengers, their opponents and the media. This thesis seeks to understand FLQ and FLNC mobilization in light of the aim to shape and develop radical ideological space in the sub-states of Quebec and Corsica. It draws on an extensive study of archival data that includes police reports that have only recently been made available in Canada, transcripts of court cases, newspapers, and an interview with a former member of the FLNC, as well as secondary sources. The central orienting question is: what explains the contrasting patterns of sub-state violent contention in Quebec and Corsica? More specifically, why did the FLQ dissolve in 1971, yet the FLNC continued its violent trajectory, albeit less political and nationalist, until 2014? The FLQ and the FLNC differently subscribed to Marxism and postcolonialism. The FLQ was committed to a Marxist program of revolutionary change, and this commitment was shared by the FLNC until the collapse of communism in central and Eastern Europe in 1989. FLQ members considered themselves 'urban revolutionaries' and employed Marxism to understand the economic disparity in industrial Montreal. Early Corsican violent contention, in contrast, included Maoist influences, in particular, through their demand for agrarian reform. The two groups viewed the relationship between their sub-states (Quebec and Corsica) and central states (Canada and France) through a colonial lens, and understood their mobilization against these states and elite minorities (the Anglophone elite in Quebec and the pieds noirs in Corsica) in this light. Both violent movements targeted this colonial relationship. Both the FLQ and FLNC manifestos were economically and politically focused, land and culture were additionally highlighted by the FLNC. This thesis found that sub-state violent contention in the very different contexts of Quebec and Corsica shared an overall pattern, an arc of violent mobilization. The initial mobilization developed from a frustration with moderate political groups; radicalization grew and new tactics were embraced; until turning points that included the assassination of Pierre Laporte by the FLQ and the division of the FLNC into competitive factions, and then a decline of activity, mobilization and recruitment. Although the FLQ and the FLNC contrasted greatly in terms of membership, ideology, organization and strategy, both groups attempted to extend radical space through the use of violent contention in these two very different nations. Ultimately, however, while the FLQ and the FLNC were able to extend or maintain radical space at times, yet they failed to sustain the extension of ideological radical space on the basis on their revolutionary manifestos.
73

Abortable and Query-abortable Types and Their Efficient Implementation

Horn, Stephanie Lorraine 24 September 2009 (has links)
We introduce abortable and query-abortable object types intended for implementation in asynchronous shared-memory systems with low contention. Implementations of such types behave like ordinary objects when accessed sequentially, but may abort operations when accessed concurrently. An aborted operation may or may not take effect, i.e., cause a state transition, and it returns no indication of which possibility occurred. Since this uncertainty can be problematic, a query-abortable type supports a QUERY operation that each process can use to determine its last non-QUERY operation on the object that caused a state transition, and the response associated with this state transition. Our research is closely related to obstruction-free implementations (introduced by Herlihy, Luchangco and Moir) and responsive obstruction-free implementations (introduced by Attiya, Guerraoui and Kouznetsov). Like abortable and query-abortable types, these implementations may exhibit degraded behaviour in the face of contention. We show that abortable registers--registers strictly weaker than safe registers--can be used to obtain obstruction-free and responsive obstruction-free implementations for any type. We present universal constructions for abortable and query-abortable types that are novel and efficient in the number of registers used. Specifically, they are based on a simple timestamping mechanism for detecting concurrent executions, and, in systems with n processes, use only n abortable registers or only O(n^2) single-reader, single-writer abortable registers. The timestamping mechanism we introduce is based on the inc&read counter type and appears to be interesting in its own right. As a generalization, we study the k-inc&read counter types, for k>0. We also identify a potential problem with correctness properties based on step contention: with such properties, the composition of correct object implementations may result in an implementation that is not correct. In other words, implementations defined in terms of step contention are not always composable. To avoid this problem, we introduce a property based on interval contention, namely non-triviality, to define the correct behaviour of abortable and query-abortable object implementations.
74

Abortable and Query-abortable Types and Their Efficient Implementation

Horn, Stephanie Lorraine 24 September 2009 (has links)
We introduce abortable and query-abortable object types intended for implementation in asynchronous shared-memory systems with low contention. Implementations of such types behave like ordinary objects when accessed sequentially, but may abort operations when accessed concurrently. An aborted operation may or may not take effect, i.e., cause a state transition, and it returns no indication of which possibility occurred. Since this uncertainty can be problematic, a query-abortable type supports a QUERY operation that each process can use to determine its last non-QUERY operation on the object that caused a state transition, and the response associated with this state transition. Our research is closely related to obstruction-free implementations (introduced by Herlihy, Luchangco and Moir) and responsive obstruction-free implementations (introduced by Attiya, Guerraoui and Kouznetsov). Like abortable and query-abortable types, these implementations may exhibit degraded behaviour in the face of contention. We show that abortable registers--registers strictly weaker than safe registers--can be used to obtain obstruction-free and responsive obstruction-free implementations for any type. We present universal constructions for abortable and query-abortable types that are novel and efficient in the number of registers used. Specifically, they are based on a simple timestamping mechanism for detecting concurrent executions, and, in systems with n processes, use only n abortable registers or only O(n^2) single-reader, single-writer abortable registers. The timestamping mechanism we introduce is based on the inc&read counter type and appears to be interesting in its own right. As a generalization, we study the k-inc&read counter types, for k>0. We also identify a potential problem with correctness properties based on step contention: with such properties, the composition of correct object implementations may result in an implementation that is not correct. In other words, implementations defined in terms of step contention are not always composable. To avoid this problem, we introduce a property based on interval contention, namely non-triviality, to define the correct behaviour of abortable and query-abortable object implementations.
75

Adaptive transaction scheduling for transactional memory systems

Yoo, Richard M. 01 April 2008 (has links)
Transactional memory systems are expected to enable parallel programming at lower programming complexity, while delivering improved performance over traditional lock-based systems. Nonetheless, there are certain situations where transactional memory systems could actually perform worse. Transactional memory systems can outperform locks only when the executing workloads contain sufficient parallelism. When the workload lacks inherent parallelism, launching excessive transactions can adversely degrade performance. These situations will actually become dominant in future workloads when large-scale transactions are frequently executed. In this thesis, we propose a new paradigm called adaptive transaction scheduling to address this issue. Based on the parallelism feedback from applications, our adaptive transaction scheduler dynamically dispatches and controls the number of concurrently executing transactions. In our case study, we show that our low-cost mechanism not only guarantees that hardware transactional memory systems perform no worse than a single global lock, but also significantly improves performance for both hardware and software transactional memory systems.
76

Ações coletivas e movimento ambiental na Cantareira : 25 anos de resistência / Collective actions and environmental movement in Cantareira, 25 years of contention

Ivini Vaneska Rodrigues Ferraz Ferreira 05 August 2013 (has links)
Nas últimas décadas do séc. XX, mais precisamente a partir do final da década de 80, uma questão fundamental começa a ser discutida multisetorialmente na Região Metropolitana de São Paulo (RMSP): Como lidar com as questões relacionadas à infra-estrutura urbana e aos limites do crescimento, considerando a necessidade de preservar o Cinturão Verde da RMSP? O objetivo principal desta dissertação de mestrado é descrever e analisar as ações coletivas e o movimento socioambiental, tomando como estudo de caso o movimento liderado por moradores do entorno da Cantareira que culminaram no reconhecimento internacional do Cinturão Verde da Cidade de São Paulo como Reserva da Biosfera pela UNESCO em 1994. Após mais de 20 anos de resistência, ainda hoje, este movimento persiste na forma de abaixo assinados, passeatas e ações judiciais, o que o transforma em uma das mais expressivas formas de ativismo ambiental em favor da preservação de uma floresta urbana. Ao traçarmos um panorama histórico, até os dias de hoje, das ações coletivas e do movimento ambiental em prol da Cantareira temos como objetivo investigar as razões pelas quais as populações urbanas participam de arenas políticas que decidem o futuro e a preservação de uma grande floresta dentro de uma cidade / In the last decades of the twentieth century, more precisely from the end of the decade of the eighties, a key issue started being discussed multisectorally in the Metropolitan Region of São Paulo (MASP): how to deal with the issues related to urban infrastructure and the limits of growth considering the need to maintain the green belt around the metropolitan region of São Paulo. The main objective of this master thesis is to describe and analyze the collective actions and the environmental movement taking as case study of the movement led by the Cantareira Park`s entour inhabitants, which resulted in the in international recognition of the Green Belt of the City of São Paulo as a Biosphere Reserve by UNESCO in 1994. After more than 20 years of resistence, still today, this movement continues in the form of undersigned, parades, lawsuits, which makes it one of the most expressive forms of environmental activism in favor of preserving an urban forest. When we draw a historical overview, until today, of collective action in environmental movement in favor of Cantareira, we have as objective to investigate the reasons for which the urban populations participate in policies that decide the future and the preservation of a great forest within a city
77

Authoritarian Landscapes: State Decentralization, Popular Mobilization and the Institutional Sources of Resilience in Nondemocracies

Hess, Stephen E. 22 November 2011 (has links)
No description available.
78

A Framework for Dynamic Selection of Backoff Stages during Initial Ranging Process in Wireless Networks

Mufti, Muhammad R., Afzal, Humaira, Awan, Irfan U., Cullen, Andrea J. 06 August 2017 (has links)
Yes / The only available solution in the IEEE 802.22 standard for avoiding collision amongst various contending customer premises equipment (CPEs) attempting to associate with a base station (BS) is binary exponential random backoff process in which the contending CPEs retransmit their association requests. The number of attempts the CPEs send their requests to the BS are fixed in an IEEE 802.22 network. This paper presents a mathematical framework that helps the BS in determining at which attempt the majority of the CPEs become part of the wireless regional area network from a particular number of contending CPEs. Based on a particular attempt, the ranging request collision probability for any number of contending CPEs with respect to contention window size is approximated. The numerical results validate the effectiveness of the approximation. Moreover, the average ranging success delay experienced by the majority of the CPEs is also determined.
79

Resource Optimized Scheduling For Enhanced Power Efficiency And Throughput On Chip Multi Processor Platforms

Kundan, Shivam 01 May 2024 (has links) (PDF)
The parallel nature of process execution on Chip Multi-Processors (CMPs) has boosted levels of application performance far beyond the capabilities of erstwhile single-core designs. Generally, CMPs offer improved performance by integrating multiple simpler cores onto a single die that share certain computing resources among them such as last-level caches, data buses, and main memory. This ensures architectural simplicity while also boosting performance for multi-threaded applications. However, a major trade-off associated with this approach is that concurrently executing applications incur performance degradation if their collective resource requirements exceed the total amount of resources available to the system. If dynamic resource allocation is not carefully considered, the potential performance gain from having multiple cores may be outweighed by the losses due to contention for allocation of shared resources. Additionally, CMPs with inbuilt dynamic voltage-frequency scaling (DVFS) mechanisms may try to compensate for the performance bottleneck by scaling to higher clock frequencies. For performance degradation due to shared-resource contention, this does not necessarily improve performance but does ensure a significant penalty on power consumption due to the quadratic relation of electrical power and voltage (P_dynamic ∝ V^2 * f).This dissertation presents novel methodologies for balancing the competing requirements of high performance, fairness of execution, and enforcement of priority, while also ensuring overall power efficiency of CMPs. Specifically, we (1) Analyze the problem of resource interference during concurrent process execution and propose two fine-grained scheduling methodologies for improving overall performance and fairness, (2) Develop an approach for enforcement of priority (i.e., minimum performance) for specific processes while avoiding resource starvation for others, and (3) Present a machine-learning approach for maximizing the power efficiency (performance-per-Watt) of CMPs through estimation of a workload's performance and power consumption limits at different clock frequencies.As modern computing workloads become increasingly dynamic, and computers themselves become increasingly ubiquitous, the problem of finding the ideal balance between performance and power consumption of CMPs is of particular relevance today, especially given the unprecedented proliferation of embedded devices for use in Internet-of-Things, edge computing, smart wearables, and even exotic experiments such as space probes comprised entirely of a CMP, sensors, and an antenna ("space chips"). Additionally, reducing power consumption while maintaining constant performance can contribute to addressing the growing problem of dark silicon.
80

Residents' perception of the use of protective stabilization in pediatric dentistry

Bossé, Kristelle 06 1900 (has links)
Introduction : La contention médicale est définie comme toute méthode manuelle, physique ou par équipement qui immobilise ou réduit la capacité d’un patient à bouger librement son corps. Avec le développement de la sédation et de l’anesthésie générale, l’utilisation de cette méthode controversée de gestion du comportement a diminué. Objectifs : L’objectif principal de la recherche est de comparer la perception des résidents en dentisterie pédiatrique à l’égard des différentes formes de contention médicale en début et en fin de résidence. L’objectif secondaire est de déterminer les facteurs influençant la perception et l’acceptation des résidents quant à la contention médicale. Méthode : Cette étude est basée sur une approche à méthodes mixtes explicatives séquentielles. Le volet 1 est composé d’une étude transversale par enquête avec questionnaire. Le volet 2 comprend une étude qualitative avec entrevues semi-dirigées. Le questionnaire a été envoyé à 850 résidents membres du AAPD et les résidents inscrits en dernière année de leur programme ont été invités à participer à l’entrevue. Résultats: Un taux de réponse de 11% a été obtenu pour le volet 1. Huit entrevues ont été réalisées. La majorité des résidents utilisent la contention active (85%) et passive (99%). L’éducation est un des facteurs qui influencent la perception des résidents. Une distinction doit être faite entre deux concepts : capable et confortable. L’utilisation de la contention est associée avec la détresse morale pour l’intervenant. Conclusion : Ce projet dresse un aperçu de l’acceptation de la contention dans les programmes de résidences et identifie les facteurs qui influencent la perception des résidents. La contention médicale a encore sa place parmi l’armamentarium des dentistes pédiatriques. Les résidents se sentent capable d’utiliser la contention médicale. Leur niveau de confort augmente lorsque cette technique est utilisée en dernier recours dans un but précis. / Introduction: Protective stabilization (PS) is defined as any manual, physical, or equipment-based method that immobilizes or reduces the patient’s movements in order to safely deliver dental treatment. With the development of sedation and general anesthesia, the use of this behavior management technique has decreased. Additionally, there are polarized opinions on the subject among both parents and healthcare professionals. Few recent studies have been published on PS in pediatric dentistry, and none have focused on the perception of pediatric dentistry residents. Objectives: The main objective of the research is to compare the perception of pediatric dentistry residents towards different forms of PS at the beginning and at the end of their residency. The secondary objective is to determine the factors that influence the residents' perception and acceptance of PS. Method: This study is based on a sequential explanatory mixed-methods approach. Phase 1 consists of a cross-sectional survey with a questionnaire. Phase 2 includes a qualitative study with semi-structured interviews. The questionnaire was sent to 850 resident members of the AAPD. Only residents in their final year of the program were invited to participate in the interview. Results: A response rate of 11% was obtained for the first part. Most residents use active PS (85%) and passive PS (99%). Eight interviews were conducted. Education influenced the residents’ perception. There is a distinction to be made between capable and comfortable. Didactic teaching and clinical exposure made the residents capable of using PS in certain specific scenarios. PS use can be associated with moral distress for the clinician. Conclusion: This project provides an overview of the acceptance of restraint use in residency programs and identifies factors influencing residents' perception. PS still has a place in the armamentarium of pediatric dentists. Residents feel capable to use PS. Their comfort level increases when PS is used as a last resort option and for a specific purpose.

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