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Perceived and constructed landscapes in Neolithic IrelandJones, Carleton January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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Sexual offending & predictors of general & sexual recidivismO'Hare, Geraldine January 2016 (has links)
Supervision of sexual offenders can only work to reduce risk when it monitors and addresses factors related to both general and sexual recidivism. It is well known that many sexual offenders commit other types of offences, such as violent and general offending, but other types of offenders rarely commit sexual offences (Hanson & Bussiere, 1998). It is therefore necessary to distinguish sexual offenders from other offenders when we study the different recidivism types, and the key risk factors for the prediction of any reoffending. This study assessed the predictive utility of several commonly used psychometrics in Northern Ireland, namely the Stable and Acute 2007, Risk Matrix 2000, and the STEP battery. Risk assessments were collected from a sample of 325 participants each of whom had been convicted of a sexual offence in Northern Ireland. The data is archival, sourced from risk assessments and psychometrics conducted on offenders subject to supervision under the Public Protection Arrangements for Northern Ireland (PPANI) between 2008 and 2010. Overall levels of risk and individual risk factors as measured by these instruments were compared to rates of reoffending. A number of salient individual factors were identified from the sample, such as capacity for relationship stability, sexual deviancy, rejection of supervision and victim access, which links to distinguishing typologies of offending in sexual offenders supervised within the Public Protection Arrangements for N. Ireland (PPANI). While it was not possible to statistically link individual factors 9 to re-offending rates, results indicated that overall risk levels obtained by all three assessment tools have predictive utility in relation to non-sexual offending and breaches of probation conditions or licensing. Statistical analysis of sexual re-offending was not possible due to the small number of such offences within this sample. Findings from this study have both strategic and practical implications for the management of sexual offenders in N. Ireland. The main findings were that all three instruments predicted offending behaviour, breaches of probation, or breaches of licence. Recommendations and directions to inform future policy and practice are outlined in the Discussion Section.
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Peat Failure in Ireland : A review based on three different case studiesMcCourt, Brendan January 2017 (has links)
The main objective of this thesis was to determine how and why peat fails with the aim of reducing the threat caused by this and also for prevention of the occurrence. Peat is a very common soil in both the UK and Ireland so knowing how it fails and how to prevent it is hugely beneficial. To do this three seperate case studies where analysised, all located in Ireland but in different areas, to see if the failure methods had any similarities or differences that could be linked together. The main finding was that therewas not one sole causal factor for all peat slides but instead a combination of different factors; although some factors are more influential than others for example rainfall. A number of solutions where put forward such as a drainage system for the peat slopes and while they are limited, due to most of the factors being of natural origin, they have the potential to reduce the likelihood and frequnecy of failures if properly implemented.
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Press bias in northern Ireland /Corbett, James R. January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
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Prehistoric Pottery in Britain and IrelandGibson, Alex M. January 2002 (has links)
No
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Irish-Scottish connections in the 1st millennium AD: an evaluation of the links between souterrain ware and Hebridean ceramicsArmit, Ian January 2008 (has links)
No / Although some limited consideration has been given to the possibility of links between the early medieval ceramic traditions of the Western Isles and the souterrain ware of north-east Ireland, these have tended to be framed in the context of supposed Dalriadic cultural infl uence fl owing from Ireland to Scotland. A re-evaluation of the possible relationships between these pottery styles suggests that souterrain ware might instead be seen as part of a regional expansion of western Scottish pottery styles in the seventh¿eighth centuries AD. This raises the question of what social processes might underlie the cross-regional patterning evident in what remains a vernacular, rather than a high-status, technology.
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Seeing beyond the site - an innovative approach to examining prehistoric IrelandBecker, Katharina, Gearey, B., Eogan, J., McClatchie, M., Nagle, C., Armit, Ian January 2016 (has links)
Yes
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The layout of the temple of Jerusalem as a paradigm for the topography of religious settlement within the early medieval Irish churchJenkins, David January 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Irish civil society and the Great War, 1914-1918Gallagher, Niamh Aislinn January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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The Irish body : in sickness and in healthGray, Teresa January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
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