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The Demand for & Value of Hunting, Fishing and General Rural Outdoor Recreation in ArizonaMartin, William E., Gum, Russell L., Smith, Arthur H. 06 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Changes in the status and distribution of mammals of the order Carnivora in Yorkshire from 1600 : county history of the fox, badger, otter, pine marten, stoat, weasel, polecat, American mink, wildcat and domestic catHowes, Colin Anthony January 2009 (has links)
Data derived largely from ecclesiastical (mostly churchwardens') accounts, foxhunting statistics, local scientific society records and 19th and 20th century literature sources from a wide range of published material, have provided detailed evidence of the status and changes in distribution over the past four centuries in Yorkshire for fox (Vulpes vulpes), badger (Meles meles), otter (Lutra lutra), pine marten (Martes martes), stoat (Mustela erminea), weasel (M. nivalis), polecat (M. putorius), American mink (M. vison), wildcat (Felis silvestris) and domestic cat (Felis catus). In the case of the domestic cat, questionnaire surveys quantified population sizes and predatory activity in rural, suburban and urban situations. Evidence of the former distribution of all the carnivores studied provides a credible historical basis for biodiversity action planning and the substantial archived database and bibliography provide further research opportunities.
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Recruitment and promotion : the role of social ties in publishingLau, Pui Yan Flora January 2011 (has links)
This thesis is an in-depth study of the labour market in the UK publishing sector. The aim is to study the role of social ties in publishing in external recruitment and internal promotion. Conventional sociological studies on social ties and labour market outcomes either neglect the perspective of the recruiter and the referrer or fail to explore the mechanisms by which social ties bring about labour market outcomes. This thesis fills these gaps. I used qualitative research methods, i.e. semi-structured interviews and participant observation for this research. The semi-structured interviews were with 40 interviewees, who were working in different roles (e.g. editorial and design) and levels (e.g. senior and junior) in Oxford and London-based publishing houses. I also served as a committee member of a publishing association in Oxford for seven months. Participant observation serves to triangulate the information I obtained through semi-structured interviews. This thesis examines different aspects of the labour market process and mechanisms. Regarding recruitment methods, I found that whether recruiters use formal or informal (word of mouth) methods depend on the level of uncertainty of recruiting a wrong person and the cost of making such mistakes. The greater the uncertainty and the cost, the more likely recruiters are to use social ties. Social ties serve to provide information about the availability of suitable employees. With regard to selection processes, I found that professional skills are a must but not enough in themselves. Recruiters use informal method at the final stage of selection to ensure the recruits possess the relevant qualities. As for job-hunting methods, I found that most newcomers introduce themselves using formal methods to get into publishing but in fact informality is often embedded in formal methods. Interviewees at managerial level almost entirely got their job through informal channels. Social ties have different functions as people rise through the different levels: whereas first entrants use social ties to obtain information about job opportunities, senior level staff members and freelancers carry with them reputation of their fitness to fill a particular position. Finally, when it comes to internal promotion, employers in my sample promote staff from within the company who already possesses the relevant skills, so as to minimize training costs and get around the uncertainties in settling in new staff. From the employees’ point of view, so long as they perform well in the job and establish a cooperative link with their boss and team members, they would be able to be promoted.
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Behavior patterns in Florida's middle archaic: activity induced articular facets from the Gauthier (SBR-193) Mortuary complexUnknown Date (has links)
This study examines activity induced articular facets and osteoarthritis in the ankle and foot complex of an Archaic hunter-gatherer population from the Gauthier (8BR-193) mortuary complex. To determine the frequency at which these characteristics occur, I scored the tibiae, tali, proximal phalanges, and metatarsals of adults and juveniles using methods developed by Buikstra and Ubelaker (1994) for scoring osteoarthritis and a synthesis of methods developed by Barnett (1954), and Boulle (2001a; 2001b), Buikstra and Ubelaker (1994). Molleson (1989), Ubelaker (1979), for scoring articular facets. Despite significant skeletal fragmentation observed, articular facets were remarkbly complete, allowing for analysis of joint degeneration. While there does not appear to be a correlation between characteristics, the high prevalence of activity induced articular facets and osteoarthritis is indicative of extreme hyperdorsiflexion. Habitual kneeling and squatting postures are characteristic of hunter-gatherer subsistence activities as suggested by researchers such as Ubelaker (1975), Molleson (1969), and Trinkaus (1975). / by Kassandra Nelson. / Thesis (M.A.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2011. / Includes bibliography. / Electronic reproduction. Boca Raton, Fla., 200?. Mode of access: World Wide Web.
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Indigenous resource taboos : a practical approach towards the conservation of commercialized speciesMonson, Clark S January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 134-149). / Also available by subscription via World Wide Web / vi, 149 leaves, bound ill. (some col.), col. map 29 cm
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Slutvandrat? aspekter på övergången från rörlig till bofast tillvaro /Knutsson, Helena. January 1995 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Uppsala universitet, 1995. / Extra t.p. with thesis statement and English abstract inserted. Includes bibliographical references (p. [207]-219).
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Slutvandrat? aspekter på övergången från rörlig till bofast tillvaro /Knutsson, Helena. January 1995 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Uppsala universitet, 1995. / Extra t.p. with thesis statement and English abstract inserted. Includes bibliographical references (p. [207]-219).
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Hunting and power : class, race and privilege in the Eastern Cape and the Transvaal Lowveld, c. 1880-1905Gess, David Wolfgang 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch University, 2014. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This dissertation examines the identity of hunters, sportsmen and their associated communities in
two diverse regions of southern Africa during the last two decades of the nineteenth and the first
decade of the twentieth centuries. It argues that this was a critical period during which new patterns
of hunting and local tradition were created. In the eastern Cape districts of Albany, Fort Beaufort
and Bathurst kudu and buffalo were hunted pursuant to permits granted in terms of the Game Act,
1886. An analysis of the identity of those to whom these permits were granted or refused provides
insights into power, connection and influence amongst the English-speaking colonial elite of the
region who sought to control the right to hunt “royal game”. It also reveals their interaction with
civil servants who exercised the power to grant or withhold the privilege. Kudu were transferred
from public to private ownership, through a process of “privatization” and “commodification” on
enclosed private land, and there preserved for sporting purposes by the local rural gentry. The
survival – and even growth – in numbers of kudu in the region was achieved in these private spaces.
Buffalo, on the other hand, were hunted into local extinction notwithstanding their protection as
“royal game”. In the north-eastern Transvaal Lowveld wild animals in public ownership were
hunted by a wide variety of hunters with competing interests. The identity of the “lost” Lowveld
hunters, previously hidden from history, including an important but overlooked component of elite
recreational hunters from the eastern Cape, is explored as a window into the history of hunting in
the region prior to the establishment of game reserves. Both the identity and networks of these
hunters and sportsmen are considered in the context of enduring concerns about race, class, gender and the exercise of power. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie tesis ondersoek die identiteit van die jagters, sportmanne en die gepaardgaande
gemeenskappe in twee verskillende streke van Suider-Afrika gedurende die laaste twee dekades van
die negentiende en die eerste dekade van die twintigste eeu. Dit voer aan dat hierdie 'n kritieke
tydperk was waartydens nuwe patrone van jag en plaaslike tradisie geskep is. In die Oos-Kaapse
distrikte van Albany, Fort Beaufort en Bathurst is die jag op koedoes en buffels toegelaat op grond
van permitte toegestaan in terme van die Wild Wet, 1886. Die ontleding van die identiteit van
diegene aan wie hierdie permitte toegestaan of geweier was, bied insae oor die uitoefening van mag,
verhoudings en invloed onder die Engelssprekende koloniale elite van die streek, wat probeer het
om beheer uit te oefen oor die jag van die “koninklike wild”. Dit openbaar ook hul interaksie met
staatsamptenare wat hulle magte gebruik het om permitte uit te ruik of te weerhou. Eienaarskap van
koedoes was oorgedra vanaf openbare na privaat besit, deur 'n proses van "privatisering " en
"kommodifikasie" op geslote private grond, met die verstandhouding dat dit vir sport – doeleindes
deur die plaaslike landelike burger gebruik kon word. Die oorlewing – en selfs groei – in die getal
koedoes in die streek is behaal in die private besit. Buffels, aan die ander kant, is tot plaaslike
uitwissing gejag ondanks hul beskerming as "koninklike wild". In die Noord-Oos Transvaalse
Laeveld is wilde diere in openbare besit gejag deur 'n wye verskeidenheid van jagters met
mededingende belange. Die identiteit van die "verlore" Laeveld jagters, voorheen verborge in die
geskiedenis, wat 'n belangrike maar oor die hoof verwaarloosde komponent van elite rekreasionele
jagters van die Oos-Kaap insluit, word ondersoek as 'n venster op die geskiedenis van jag in die
streek voor die totstandkoming van wildreservate. Beide die identiteit en netwerke van hierdie
jagters en sportmanne word beskou in die konteks van blywende belangstelling met ras, klas, geslag
en die uitoefening van mag.
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Právní úprava myslivosti / The regulation of huntingFlax, Lukáš January 2016 (has links)
in english The thesis provides general look at the legal regulation of hunting in Czech republic. Review of legal regulations and selected practice of courts is at given places supplemented with practical notes. As basis for the thesis served the obligations of human society in relationship to nature and animal wild life. The wide range of activities associated with hunting is construed in unity to those obligations. Hunting itself is subject to a short teoretical research, even on the ground of it's ethics. The history of hunting so many times already elaborated has been structured and arranged according to additional viewpoints.
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Lovecký řád sv. Huberta v českých zemích / Hunting Order of St. Hubert in Bohemian LandsRutnerová, Eliška January 2016 (has links)
The author's aim is to describe Bohemian Hunting Order of the Saint Hubert and the personality of it's founder František Antonín Count Sporck. Further attention will be paid to the charakter of Saint Hubert, with emphasis on Saint Hubert legend and the representation of this saint in visual art. Master's thesis will be closed ty the historical story of Order regulation and connected emblematic.
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