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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.
1

A lycense to travaile, 1542-1631 /

Fournie, Helen Dorothy. January 1974 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (B.A.Hons. 1975) -- University of Adelaide, Dept. of History,1974.
2

An empirical analysis of the State's monopolization of the legitimate means of movement : evaluating the effects of required passport use on international travel /

Holder, Floyd William. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (M. P. A.)--Texas State University-San Marcos, 2009. / "Fall 2009." Includes bibliographical references (leaves 52-55).
3

Americans on Paper: Identity and Identification in the American Revolution

Huffman, John Michael 18 October 2013 (has links)
The American Revolution brought with it a crisis of identification. The political divisions that fragmented American society did not distinguish adherents of the two sides in any outward way. Yet the new American governments had to identify their citizens; potential citizens themselves had to choose and prove their identities; and both sides of the war had to distinguish friend from foe. Subordinated groups who were notionally excluded from but deeply affected by the Revolutionary contest found in the same crisis new opportunity to seize control over their own identities. Those who claimed mastership over these groups struggled to maintain control amid civil war and revolution. / History
4

Insecurity Communities: Technologies of Insecurity Governance Under the European Neighbourhood Policy

Mutlu, Can E. 24 July 2013 (has links)
This dissertation explores the European Union’s (EU) European Neighbourhood Policy (ENP) as a technology of insecurity governance in order to better understand insecurity management practices of the EU bureaucracies and policy elites. The central argument of the project is that security communities are insecurity communities. Rather than trying to maintain a state of non-war, insecurity communities establish and further develop a constant productive field of insecurity management that aims to identify and govern threats and unease. The projects core contributions rest with the security community theory and the literature on the EU’s external governance literatures. Empirically, the dissertation focuses on the human mobility and transportation insecurity management practices of the EU in relation to the uses of e-Passports and intermodal containers.
5

Insecurity Communities: Technologies of Insecurity Governance Under the European Neighbourhood Policy

Mutlu, Can E. January 2013 (has links)
This dissertation explores the European Union’s (EU) European Neighbourhood Policy (ENP) as a technology of insecurity governance in order to better understand insecurity management practices of the EU bureaucracies and policy elites. The central argument of the project is that security communities are insecurity communities. Rather than trying to maintain a state of non-war, insecurity communities establish and further develop a constant productive field of insecurity management that aims to identify and govern threats and unease. The projects core contributions rest with the security community theory and the literature on the EU’s external governance literatures. Empirically, the dissertation focuses on the human mobility and transportation insecurity management practices of the EU in relation to the uses of e-Passports and intermodal containers.
6

Blockchain-based Data Sharing of Vehicle Passports

Saqib, Mohammed Fattah 30 May 2022 (has links)
Cryptocurrency has been one of the sectors which arguably saw the biggest technological innovation in the past decade. The technology behind this new revolution is called blockchain and it has the potential to innovate other sectors too. Its core concepts of decentralization, immutability and anonymity are traits that can revolutionize any sector if implemented properly. In this work, we investigate how blockchain technology can be beneficial for the used vehicle market without intervention of any third party. Currently, most people cannot get basic information of the used vehicle they are buying and even when they do they cannot verify most of them. Thus various companies proposed solutions centered around vehicle passport. Staying true to its name, a vehicle passport contains all the relevant information of the vehicle which will help both the buyer and seller. The buyer will have a detailed report on any vehicle he is potentially buying and will have more chance of safeguarding himself against any kind of fraud. On the other hand, the seller will be able to sell his vehicle for the correct valuation because he has proof of the vehicle condition. The goal of this work is to provide a better solution where blockchain-based decentralized data sharing of vehicle passports prevents any centralized authority from possessing all the power. By using smart contract of blockchain we provided fair exchange. This removes the necessity of having an entity overseeing the transaction because no transaction will take place unless all parties are guaranteed service/payment. One of the main requirements is proving the authenticity of the vehicle passport before the transaction takes place. Accordingly, we design a zero-knowledge proof system that verifies the consistency of encrypted data against its publicly committed value. The verification is done onchain. After all the requirements for the transaction are met, fair exchange takes place where the buyer receives the vehicle passport encrypted with their public key and service providers receive their payments. / Graduate
7

International graduate students, the F-1 visa process, and the dark side of globalization in post 9/11 American society

Toutant, Ligia Elena, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--UCLA, 2009. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 186-200).
8

"Passport Politics": Passportization and Territoriality in the De Facto States of Georgia / Passportization and Territoriality in the De Facto States of Georgia

Artman, Vincent M., 1981- 06 1900 (has links)
ix, 161 p. : maps / In 2002, the Russian government began distributing tens of thousands of Russian passports in the de facto states of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Some scholarly attention has been devoted to this process, known as passportization, but most of the literature treats passportization as a primarily political process, ignoring its geographic aspects. This thesis shows that passportization in Abkhazia and South Ossetia amounted to a process of "biocolonization," wherein the populations of the de facto states were discursively captured by Russia through individual naturalization. Consequently, passportization served to create "Russian spaces" within the internationally recognized borders of Georgia and, in the process challenged international legal norms rooted in the logic of the modern state system. / Committee in charge: Dr. Alexander Murphy, Chair; Dr. Shaul Cohen, Member; Dr. Julie Hessler, Member
9

Vårt fredliga samhälle : ”Lösdriveri” och försvarslöshet i Sverige under 1830-talet

Johnsson, Theresa January 2016 (has links)
Between 1664 and 1885 labour in Sweden was regulated by compulsory-service statutes. Able-bodied but idle persons could be compelled to submit to em­ployment as a servant. Compulsory service was part of a larger system of laws and regulations that regulated mobility, settlement, begging, and poor relief, all of which aimed at restricting the labouring poor’s freedom and agency. Some parts of this system had medieval roots, such as vagrancy laws. From the per­spective of the propertied classes, this system of interacting regulations served several purposes, such as fighting idleness, labour shortage, high wages, begging, demands for poor relief, unwanted settlement in the parishes, and geographical movement. The obligation to serve was abolished in 1885. Failure to comply with these service statutes was punishable by being treated as a ‘vagrant’, which could mean being jailed in a house of correction, or simply being ordered to find employment within a specific time. In short, it was illegal to be without work or other means of supporting oneself, such as property. The purpose of this thesis is to analyse the social practices of the compulsory-service statutes and related issues such as mobility and settlement. The thesis has dealt with four areas of inquiry: the judicial framework, the policing of ‘vagrancy’, in what situations people were exempt from having to comply with the compulsory service statues, and the identity of the ‘vagrant’. The system for dealing with ‘vagrancy’ has left a large number of sources, and different sources give different images of the poor. This applies most clearly in the case of the Swedish Romani population, the Resande.  The thesis deals with the county (län) of Västmanland during the 1830s. It highlights how the compulsory-service statutes and related vagrancy laws shaped the lives of people and points to how these institutions restricted poor people’s agency and formed their experiences.
10

Vaccinpassets rättfärdigande : En utredning av ett libertarianskt försvar avvaccinpass / Justification of the Vaccine Passport : An Investigation Into a Libertarian Defense ofVaccine Passports

Spetz, Johanna January 2022 (has links)
In times of crisis and disaster, history can testify to humanity's tendency to burst at the seamsof morality. This thesis aims to investigate and prove that the introduction of vaccinepassports can be considered ethically justified on the basis of a theory whose basic values canbe said to be furthest from such a conclusion. Based on paternalism, freedom and autonomy, Iintend to examine whether the state is justified in introducing measures that restrict people'sfreedom with the aim of preventing them from harming others. The discussion is based onJason Brennan's ‘clean hands principle’ and examines arguments concerning collectivelyharmful activities and unacceptable risk. What does it really say about libertarians'propensity, or obligation, to accept vaccine passports? The conclusion is that libertarians donot have to be too sure that the justification of vaccine passports is beyond reason, but neithermust those who have been convinced abandon the basic values of libertarianism.

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