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noneLin, Pei-yau 15 February 2005 (has links)
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En kritik av Hardins livbåtsetikBohman, Jerker January 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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A Descriptive Study of the Public Relations Practices at Hardin- Simmons UniversitySchmucker, Susan Parker 08 1900 (has links)
This study examined the public relations practices-- the concept, structure, functions, goals and objectives, procedures, and standards of performance--at Hardin-Simmons University in Abilene, Texas. The study concluded that the public relations practices provide an effective, well-organized, well-planned and well-executed program based on formal goals and objectives, definite philosophy and purpose, and criteria for measurement of effectiveness. Although the program has a good sense of direction, it lacks focus, largely because of the mingling of public relations and fund-raising responsibilities in some staff positions and a lack of separate standards of performance for each staff member. Recommendations to strengthen the program include separate and distinct public relations and fund-raising responsibilities in each staff position and standards of performance for each staff member.
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Acting Ethically: Behavior and the Sustainable SocietySewell, Patrick 08 1900 (has links)
One of the most important factors for creating the sustainable society is that the individuals in that society behave in an environmentally sustainable fashion. Yet achieving appropriate behavior in any society is difficult, and the challenge is no less with regards to sustainability. Three of the most important factors for determining behavior have recently been highlighted by psychologists: personal efficacy, social influence, and internal standards. Because these three factors play a prominent role in behavior, it is necessary to examine what role they play in creating sustainability and how they may be utilized to achieve optimal behavior patterns. Ultimately, in order to achieve sustainability solutions must focus on individual action, realistic governmental regulation, and sustained, direct encounters with the natural world. While much time and energy has been spent on social influence and personal efficacy, less has been devoted to internal standards and this area needs more attention if there is to be any realistic attempt at creating proper behavior patterns.
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El delito de colusión de precios en Chile a la luz de la doctrina del delito de cuello blancoBlanch Navarro, Jean Cloude, Lara Koenig, Matías Ignacio January 2019 (has links)
Memoria (licenciado en ciencias jurídicas y sociales) / El trabajo que a continuación se desarrollará se propone describir el fenómeno de la incorporación del concepto de "White Collar Crime", introducido por Edwin Sutherland en la doctrina estadounidense de la época y que más tarde se expandiría al resto del mundo. Junto con ello se pretende revisar sus problemáticas actuales y relación con la doctrina más tradicional, para posteriormente centrar la atención en una especie de delito en particular: el de colusión de precios y especialmente la figura penal chilena. En este punto se pretende revisar la vigencia de los principales puntos de la doctrina del Delito de Cuello Blanco en las características singulares de este tipo penal. Para ello, junto con analizar la conducta descrita por la legislación nacional sobre el delito de colusión de precios, se revisarán casos de relevancia nacional relacionados con este, buscando características comunes entre ellos y contrastándola con los postulados de la doctrina del Delito de Cuello Blanco.
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A comparison of nutrition and health in pre-agricultural and agricultural Amerindian skeletal populationsCassidy, Claire Monod. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1972. / Typescript. Vita. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references.
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El delito de cuello blanco como resultado de la formación entregada en los colegios de la élite social capitalinaAravena Bendeck, Javiera January 2017 (has links)
Memoria (licenciado en ciencias jurídicas y sociales)
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A Terrain And Meteorological Analysis Of The Battlefield At Shiloh, TennesseeMcClendon, Charles Blakely 09 December 2011 (has links)
A terrain analysis of the Shiloh Battlefield is presented in conjunction with a meteorological assessment of the conditions prevalent during the battle. The intent of the analysis was to ascertain the effect that conditions might have played upon the strategic and tactical actions prior to, and during the Battle of Shiloh, 1862. The significance of this study was to determine the influence of meteorological and geographical factors upon the two armies. Values for temperature and precipitation were estimated using the PDSI and data from NOAA. According to the model it was a very wet year. Weather and geography clearly played a role in how and when the Battle of Shiloh was fought. Due to the high number of casualties, however, the Battle of Shiloh would change how warfare would be conducted in the United States.
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Rule-based Decision Support System For Sensor Deployment In Drinking Water NetworksPrapinpongsanone, Natthaphon 01 January 2011 (has links)
Drinking water distribution systems are inherently vulnerable to malicious contaminant events with environmental health concerns such as total trihalomethanes (TTHMs), lead, and chlorine residual. In response to the needs for long-term monitoring, one of the most significant challenges currently facing the water industry is to investigate the sensor placement strategies with modern concepts of and approaches to risk management. This study develops a Rule-based Decision Support System (RBDSS) to generate sensor deployment strategies with no computational burden as we oftentimes encountered via large-scale optimization analyses. Three rules were derived to address the efficacy and efficiency characteristics and they include: 1) intensity, 2) accessibility, and 3) complexity rules. To retrieve the information of population exposure, the well-calibrated EPANET model was applied for the purpose of demonstration of vulnerability assessment. Graph theory was applied to retrieve the implication of complexity rule eliminating the need to deal with temporal variability. In case study 1, implementation potential was assessed by using a small-scale drinking water network in rural Kentucky, the United States with the sensitivity analysis. The RBDSS was also applied to two networks, a small-scale and large-scale network, in “The Battle of the Water Sensor Network” (BWSN) in order to compare its performances with the other models. In case study 2, the RBDSS has been modified by implementing four objective indexes, the expected time of detection (Z1), the expected population affected prior to detection (Z2), the expected consumption of contaminant water prior to detection, and the detection likelihood (Z4), are being used to evaluate RBDSS’s performance and compare to other models in Network 1 analysis in BWSN. Lastly, the implementation of iv weighted optimization is applied to the large water distribution analysis in case study 3, Network 2 in BWSN.
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Early Identification of Dropout-Prone Students and Early Intervention Strategies to Improve Student Retention at a Private UniversityBray, Carolyn Scott 12 1900 (has links)
The problem of this study was first year student retention at a private university. The purpose of the study was to identify high risk students (dropout prone) by use of the Stratil Counseling Inventory -_ College Form (SCI-C) in order to initiate early intervention counseling and advising. Intrusive counseling was started within the first six weeks of the 1984 fall semester to facilitate the students' transition to college. The population of the study was first-time full-time freshmen students in attendance at Freshmen Orientation the week prior to the beginning of the 1984 academic year. SCI-C instrument consisted of six scales designed to elicit attrition-related information about the firsttime, freshmen students. The scales identified students who were in need of assistance, and they provided a profile of their problem areas. This information, available within ten days after the beginning of classes enabled Student Development personnel to select the students out of the freshman class who needed help and to refer them to university resources for assistance. The conclusions drawn from the analysis of the SCI-C data were: (1) students who needed assistance to integrate into the academic and social envrionment of the university were identified by the SCI-C; (2) students at Hardin-Simmons University value adult/student relationship outside of the classroom; (3) attitudes of caring service creates a "staying environment;1* (4) although the SCI-C indicates students' interests in support services, not all students who request assistance, avail themselves of the opportunities provided for them; (5) a relationship seems to exist between the intervention strategies provided particular freshmen and their succesful performance in the classroom (CPA of 1.60 or greater) and their persistence at the university for their second year; (6) the SCI-C provides attrition-related counseling information about students rather than predicting college academic success; and (7) the SCI-C i s a valid instrument to use to facilitate student retention at Hardin-Simmons University,
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