• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 1061
  • 454
  • 349
  • 197
  • 147
  • 78
  • 36
  • 22
  • 19
  • 17
  • 15
  • 15
  • 15
  • 12
  • 11
  • Tagged with
  • 2888
  • 437
  • 431
  • 371
  • 317
  • 306
  • 273
  • 204
  • 174
  • 173
  • 171
  • 167
  • 149
  • 148
  • 148
  • 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.
351

Elderly adults' perceptions of home lifestyle monitoring technology

Booker, Cortlan G. 06 August 2011 (has links)
The following is a qualitative study designed to collect and study elderly (>65) perceptions of in home lifestyle monitoring technology. Data were collected through three focus groups, organized and analyzed for results. The focus groups were run in a semi-structured manner with the co-moderators presenting questions from an original valid instrument. The study suggests that nearly all of the participants are comfortable with current technologies and around 50% of the sample group would be interested in using the new proposed technologies. The study also suggests that the participants have a high level of current wellness and are generally comfortable in their current residence. / Fisher Institute for Wellness and Gerontology
352

The economic consequences of declining real wages in the United States, 1970-2010

Saltis, Zachary Alexandre 13 September 2011 (has links)
The present thesis is a study of the economic consequences of declining real wages in the United States. It proposes that, when the real wages of the majority of the U.S. workforce declined in the 1970s, 1980s and the first half of the 1990s, household labour supply increased. Consequently, real family income in the bottom eighty percent of the income distribution rose. Wage-earning households were not only struggling to maintain their acquired standard of living as real wages were declining, but they were also, perhaps more importantly, trying to raise their standard of living. It was precisely when household labour supply hit a ceiling in the second half of the 1990s, that household debt exploded. Surging household debt from the late 1990s until 2007 – driven primarily by home mortgage debt – suggests that the culturally powerful “American Dream” motivated wage-earning households to seek and expect a continuously rising standard of living via home ownership even in the face of topped out work hours and historically low real wages.
353

The Community Support Worker of the 1980s, as She was Imagined: A Genealogy

Cambiazo, Pamela 25 August 2014 (has links)
I am a community support worker who supports people with intellectual disabilities to live full lives with dignity in the community. This is a role that can trace its heritage to the 1980s when large institutions in BC closed in favour of community group homes. Current scholarship suggests that the requisite full lives promised at the time the institutions closed have not materialized in the years since. Further, this scholarship suggests that it is the community support worker who has failed to deliver on important social goals. As a worker I can attest that I do at times feel unsettled in my work, like my mere presence is problematic, as if I fail by showing up. Based on the premise that I can learn about the worker of present by looking at how she was first imagined, in this genealogical study I explore how the community support worker of the 1980s was produced in archival documents of groups involved in the development of community group homes after the closure of Woodlands in New Westminster, BC. My findings suggest that the community support worker role served many interests, and that her purpose was not solely trained to the social needs of the people she supported. A confluence of economic rationalities, family concerns, and regulatory demands shaped her as an invisible domestic idealized as a temporary solution to a problem that was expected to dissipate through the increased independence of people with disabilities, and the participation of a welcoming community that steps up to help when needed. The ongoing presence of the worker calls into question her original mandate. / Graduate / 0630 / 0452 / pcambiazo@telus.net
354

Reinventing the self : identity, agency and AIDS/HIV

Heaphy, Brian January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
355

Vertical Urbanity: Urban Dwelling in an Age of Programmatic Promiscuity

Panacci, Michael January 2011 (has links)
Welcome to CityPlace. Thirty-five hectares of formerly unoccupied rail-lands in downtown Toronto are currently undergoing a transformation into an instant neighbourhood. Eventually, CityPlace will be the home to over 15,000 people within 23 buildings, sequestered by the Gardiner Expressway on its southern border and by the still functioning rail-lines on its northern border, it is truly an island of suburban stacked living which is at once surrounded and yet at a distance from downtown Toronto. In CityPlace we are witnessing what the Belgian philosopher Lieven De Cauter describes as the rise of the capsular civilization. Impossible to ignore, condominiums have become the dominant form of new housing in the city of Toronto; a process that has been driven by demographics, political imperative and most of all by the pursuit of profits in the high-stakes game of real-estate development. But lost in this torrent of development is a genuine dialogue about the city we are building. This thesis explores the current state of condo development in downtown Toronto; from the myriad of political, economic and physical factors that have led to Toronto’s vernacular condo typology to the marketing onslaught that targets the base consumerist hyper-individual within all of us and aims to hide the fact that these buildings are more similar than distinct. From the optimistic aims of a city council which seeks to achieve civic benefits from increased density, to the cynical de urbanizing and social polarization that the type typically brings into the downtown. The thesis explores the promise of downtown condominium living and the hybridisation of programme that accompanies the rising real estate values of the downtown core. Programmatic promiscuity and complexity are exploited to bring different user-types from the outside city into the tower. With its unique vertical properties and inherent density, the residential high-rise tower presents new opportunities for urban collective spaces. From introvert to extrovert, the new condo becomes a catalyst for urbanity in the instant neighbourhood of CityPlace.
356

Consumption and cost of food for college women at Oregon State College

Grace, Minerva Vermilyea 10 May 1929 (has links)
Graduation date: 1929
357

Taxonomy and phylogeny of endosymbiotic ciliates (Ciliophora: Trichostomatia) occurring in herbivorous Australian marsupials

Cameron, S. L. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
358

Pesticide and Heavy Metal Concentrations in Great Barrier Reef Sediment, Seagrass and Dugong

Haynes, David Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
359

Modelling Sea Turtle Growth, Survivorship and Population Dynamics

Chaloupka, M. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
360

Population and behavioral ecology of water monitor lizard (Varanus salvator)

Ahmad, A. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.

Page generated in 0.033 seconds