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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.
41

Differentiating levels of poverty a case study of Jefferson County/Metropolitan Louisville, Ky. for 1990 and 2000 /

Allen, Ross E. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--State University of New York at Binghamton, Department of Geography, 2008. / Includes bibliographical references.
42

Jeffersonian moment : feudalism and reform in Virginia, 1774-1786

Clinkman, Daniel Edward January 2013 (has links)
In his autobiography, Thomas Jefferson argued that his goal in the American Revolution had been to eliminate “feudal and unnatural distinctions” in colonial American society as part of the struggle for independence. This thesis focuses on Jefferson’s years as a revolutionary legislator in the new state of Virginia, and argues that while he was correct in labelling Virginia a feudal society, his reforms were insufficient to the scale of social reformation that he identified. Material addressed includes Jefferson’s synthesis of British feudal and mercantile history that he constructed during the early years of the revolution, his proposed constitution for the state of Virginia, and his legislative reforms to the judiciary, landownership, the established church, education, citizenship, and slavery.
43

Deeply Virtual Compton Scattering Studies at Jefferson Lab

Sabatié, Frank 02 November 2010 (has links) (PDF)
Ce document décrit les premières investigations expérimentales à Jefferson Lab des Distributions de Partons Generalisées (GPDs), en utilisant la diffusion Compton Profondément Virtuelle (DVCS). Les GPDs incluent les facteurs de forme et densités partoniques habituelles, mais aussi les correlations entre états différents de partons. Les GPDs donnent donc accès a une description tri-dimensionnelle du nucléon. le DVCS est le processus le plus direct pour extraire les GPDs, et des l'année 2000 une série d'expériences ont été proposée dans ce but. Les résultats des premières expériences exploratoires sont presentés ainsi que les premières mesures de combinaisons linéaires de GPDs. Une discussion detaillée s'ensuit sur ce que l'on a appris de ces expériences, en liaison avec les outils théoriques utilises pour extraire les GPDS a partir des données. Enfin, on décrit les améliorations futures possibles, et les nouvelles expériences qui sont proposées.
44

Fulfilling the Drive: Dutch Morial and the 1982 New Orleans Mayoral Election

Braud, Daniel 15 December 2007 (has links)
This study examines the impact of racial politics on the New Orleans mayoral election of 1982. Ernest "Dutch" Morial, the city's first black mayor, sought re-election against a popular white candidate, Ron Faucheux, and a well-liked black candidate, William Jefferson. Race played an integral role throughout the campaign as Morial continually battled attacks from both the conservative white community and the traditional black politicians, all of whom resented the oftentimes brash mayor and his push for change. Controversy also surrounded his handling of the police strike of 1979 and the Fischer Housing Project shootings of 1980. This study argues that despite these obstacles, Ernest "Dutch" Morial was able to win a second term in 1982 by appealing to a broad racial coalition of voters who approved of his vigorous efforts to apply the ideals of the Civil Rights Movement to municipal reform in New Orleans.
45

Survey of Bicycle Trail-Users in New Orleans: Characteristics, Attitudes and Implications for Planning

Judge, Coleen 17 December 2010 (has links)
This thesis focuses on bicyclists using the Jefferson Davis multi-use, off-street trail in the City of New Orleans. Understanding user characteristics and perceptions of bicyclists will help inform planning, policy, and design related to bicycle infrastructure. This thesis uses a review of the relevant literature, intercept surveys of bicyclists, and automatic bicycle counts to understand how user characteristics can influence successful bicycle design, policies, and planning. The user characteristics of the bicyclists on the Jefferson Davis Trail provide us with information on who is using the trail, how often, why, and what users would like to see improved. Planners need to understand the motivations of the current and potential trail users. Making bicycling a safe mode of travel in an urban area involves influencing citizens at both the socialecological level and the travel-behavioral level, providing the culture around bicycling and the facilities available to do so.
46

The Inverted Compass: Geography and the Ethics of Authorship in Nineteenth-Century America

Nurmi, Tom January 2012 (has links)
The Inverted Compass traces the influence of geography on early American writing. Maps, quadrants, and compasses are at the heart of America’s most celebrated stories, and these geographic tools shaped how Americans understood themselves and their relationship to the landscape in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. But the emerging discipline also provided writers a way to address the young Republic’s most pressing political and ethical problems. The word geography itself - from the Greek geo (earth) and graphia (writing) - articulates the central paradox. Mapping, even as it claims to represent the world, continuously produces it. Literary works follow a similar logic. The Inverted Compass argues that certain early American writers recognized the parallels between mapping and writing and confronted their political implications through narrative fiction. These writers imagined counter-spaces. They created alternate geographies. They inverted the compass. Their allegories, hoaxes, and satires sharpened readers’ awareness of the role of writing and rhetoric in law and government, directing attention to the often-obscured ethical responsibilities related to Westward expansion and the treatment of minority bodies in nineteenth-century America. The Inverted Compass examines the work of Jefferson, Poe, Melville, and Twain alongside exploration narratives, maps, journals, ship logs, field manuals, land surveys, city plans, political cartoons, spelling primers, court cases, land laws, and Congressional documents to uncover the patterns of reading that guide the spatial imagination and its material products.
47

Ambiguous Union: Madison, Jefferson and the Principles of '98, 1798-1834

Morrison, Jeffrey E 11 August 2015 (has links)
The Constitution of the United State has never been a document with a fixed and determinable meaning and demanded continual reinterpretation. During the early republic, legal and political battles over constitutional meaning were commonplace, leading to claims of disloyalty as well as threats of violence. Challenges to actions of the federal government often were done in the name of the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions and the “Principles of ‘98.” Reflecting a strand of mainstream political thought, the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions were employed by Pennsylvanians, who militarily resisted federal efforts to enforce a Supreme Court decision, by New Englanders, who effectively nullified certain federal laws during the War of 1812, and by South Carolinians, who attempted to nullify a federal tariff. Authored by James Madison and Thomas Jefferson, respectively, in 1798, the Resolutions offered differing visions of the nation’s founding. Jefferson interpreted the Constitution as a contract between state governments, akin to a treaty between independent nations. Thus, unconstitutional actions by the federal government were a breach of the compact, and each state had a right to nullify the offending action. For Madison, the thirteen peoples of the several states, acting in their highest sovereign capacity, were the parties to the compact. Madison did not interpret the Constitution as a contract or treaty and did not deem every breach of the compact as justifying nullification by the people. Only a majority of the people could nullify actions of the federal government.
48

Textual selves /

Dunaway, Tasha, January 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A.)--Eastern Illinois University, 2008. / Subtitle on abstract: Appetite in the construction of identity in the writing of William Byrd II and Thomas Jefferson. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 71-75).
49

The promise of hope in pastoral counseling

Paige, Charles Randall, January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (D. Min.)--Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, 2006. / Includes bibliographical references.
50

Freedom and the ideal republican state Kant, Jefferson, and the place of individual freedom in the republican constitutional state /

Creighton, Theresa A. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Georgia State University, 2008. / Title from file title page. Melissa M. Merritt, committee chair; Andrew J. Cohen, Sandra Dwyer, committee members. Electronic text (85 p.) : digital, PDF file. Description based on contents viewed October 9, 2008. Includes bibliographical references (p. 82-85).

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