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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.
131

Securely Handling Inter-Application Connection Credentials

Lieberman, Gary 01 January 2012 (has links)
The utilization of application-to-application (A2A) credentials within interpretive language scripts and application code has long been a security risk. The quandaries being how to protect and secure the credentials handled in the main body of code and avoid exploitation from rogue programmers, system administrators and other users with authorized high levels of privilege. Researchers report that A2A credentials cannot be protected and that there is no way to reduce the risk of the inevitable successful attack and subsequent exploit. Therefore, research efforts to date have primarily been focused on mitigating the impact of the attack rather than finding ways to reduce the attack surface. The work contained herein successfully addresses this serious cross-cutting concern and proves that it is in fact possible to significantly reduce the risk of attack. This reduction of risk was accomplished through implementing a method of credential obfuscation which applied advice with concerns utilizing a composition filter. The filter modified messages containing the credentials as they were sent from the interpretive language script to the remote data store. The modification extracted credentials from a secure password vault and inserted them into the message being sent to the remote data store. This modification moved the handling of the credentials from the main body of code to a secure library and out of the reach of attackers with authorized high levels of privilege. The relocation of the credential handling code lines significantly reduced the attack surface and the overall risk of attack.
132

論證人不自證己罪特權 / The privilege of a witness

陳雪玉, Chen, Hsueh Yu Unknown Date (has links)
證人以不自證己罪為由主張拒絕證言權之相關問題,在刑事審判過程中主要牽涉四大層面:一為此項拒絕證言權之適用範圍為何,亦即證人所得主張權利之射程範圍是否僅止於供述證據,抑或涵蓋其他刑事訴訟中的強制處分、提出命令;二為審判程序中證人應如何主張、行使此項權利,而一旦證人主張此權利,司法機關應如何審查以為准駁;三為證人行使拒絕證言權之舉,對於本案被告案件中,乃至於證人日後改列被告時,可否評價(是否具有證據能力)、抑或應如何評價之(證明力問題);四為若檢察官或法院未盡告知義務告知證人有此項權利致使證人為自陷己罪之陳述時,該陳述對於本案被告案件中,乃至於證人日後改列被告時,可否評價(是否具有證據能力)、抑或應如何評價(證明力問題)。上開層面即為本文探討之主軸。
133

White Privilege in Environmental Policy: An Analysis of Hazardous Waste Management and Operations in Southeast Los Angeles

Chen, Lindsey 01 January 2017 (has links)
This thesis takes an unconventional approach to environmental racism. Through the lens of white privilege and racial capitalism, I analyze hazardous waste procedures, work site dynamics, and governmental enforcement. Southeast Los Angeles encompasses 26 neighborhoods and the communities racial demographic is 85.8% people of color. The region is home to an abundance of hazardous waste generators, and the area is disproportionately burdened by pollution compared to the rest of LA County. I chose white privilege as a framework because more often than not, discrimination in the workplace is unintentional and covert. White privilege manifests through hazardous waste management in four forms: devaluation of worker training, lack of language accommodations, disenfranchisement of employees of color, and enforcement-heavy regulation. The four factors listed impact facility operations and risk health and safety of personnel, especially employees of color working in closest proximity to toxic chemicals. To prioritize the needs of workers of color, I recommend creating a free hazardous waste consultation service modeled after the Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s service. Ineffective online instruction must be eliminated and replaced with learner-centered empowerment training. Finally, generator management must facilitate a more supportive culture that empowers employees of color as agents of change in the workplace.
134

Administrative secrecy: the uses and abuses of information in the security classification system

Sturmer, Ronald T., Sturmer, Ronald T. January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
135

Mechanismen des Immunprivilegs im Zentralen Nervensystem nach axonaler Läsion

Bechmann, Ingo 29 May 2001 (has links)
Myelin-assoziierte Epitope können Ziel destruktiver T-Zell Antworten während autoimmuner Erkrankungen wie der Multiplen Sklerose oder der experimentellen autoimmunen Enzephalomyelitis werden. Dagegen reagieren selbstspezifische T-Zellen nach axonaler Degeneration nicht mit destruktiver Autoimmunität, obwohl die entsprechenden Epitope durch Myelin-phagozytierende Mikroglia präsentiert werden. Im Modell der entorhinalen Kortexläsion von Ratte und Mause zeigten wir, daß Autoimmunität nach solchen Läsionen durch die Expression des Todesliganden CD95L (FasL, Apo1L) auf Astrozyten verhindert wird, da hochaktivierte T-Zellen durch CD95L apoptotisch eliminiert werden. Myelin-phagozytierende Mikroglia reguliert MHC-II und B7-2 hoch, nicht aber das kostimulatorische B7-1 Moleküle, das mit Autoimmunität im Gehirn assoziiert ist. In Zonen retrograder Degeneration, wo Axone am Sproutingprozess beteiligt sind, zeigen Mikrogliazellen bis mindestens 90 Tage nach Läsion einen MHC-II und B7-2 positiven Immunphänotyp. Trotz Anwesenheit von CD4/B7-2 positiven a/b T-Zellen, behält Mikroglia ihre ramifizierte, ruhende Morphologie. Im Gegensatz zu autoimmunen Erkrankungen im Gehirn, erfolgt die Antigenpräsentation nach axonaler Läsion durch Mikroglia also nicht über das B7-1 Molekül. Dies kann der Grund für das Ausbleiben destruktiver Autoimmunität nach axonaler Schädigung sein. / Myelin-associated epitopes are targets of destructive T cell responses during autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis (MS) and its animal model, experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). On the other hand, autoimmune T cells do not respond in a destructive way to mechanically-induced axonal degeneration despite myelin phagocytosis and presentation by local microglia. Using entorhinal cortex lesion, a model of axonal degeneration and reactive sprouting, we showed that autoimmunity in the brain is prevented by the expression of the death Ligand CD95L expressed on astrocytes lading to apoptosis of highly activated T cells. Moreover, myelin phagocytosing microglia upregulate MHC-II and B7-2, but lack expression of B7-1, a costimulatory molecule related to destructive immunity. In zones of retrograde axonal degeneration, where axons undergo secondary damage and later contribute to the sprouting response, MHC-II/B7-2 positive microglia are still found at 90 days post lesion. These cells exhibit the ramified morphology of resting microglia in the presence of CD4/B7-2 positive a/b T cells. Thus, in contrast to autoimmune brain disease, axonal degeneration is lacking a signal to induce B7-1 on microglial cells and the recruited T cells do not induce microglial activation. Differences in B7-phenotype of local antigen-presenting cells might provide an explanation for the important finding that autoimmune T cells elicit protective rather than destructive effects following axonal degeneration in the CNS.
136

The Role Mentoring Plays in a White Female Novice Teacher's Perceptions of Her Enculturation into a Culturally Diverse Campus

Noble, Erica Michelle 2012 May 1900 (has links)
Many of America's schools are populated with diverse student populations, while the teaching population remains largely White. This creates dissonance for White teachers and students of color. Possibly mentoring can assist novice White teachers as they enculturate into the profession and their culturally diverse campuses. This qualitative research, conducted from an Interpretivism paradigm, used a case study of a White female novice teacher at a culturally diverse campus to understand the role mentoring played in a White female novice teacher's perceptions of her enculturation into a culturally diverse campus. Several methods of data collection were used, including 9 semi-structured interviews with the novice teacher, email dialogues, 3 days of shadowing, as well as two semi-structured interviews with the subject's principal and mentor. The data was analyzed using the constant comparative method. This White female novice teacher taught at a campus with a large Hispanic student population. She struggled to feel confident in her work and in her relationships with her mentor, her fellow teachers, her administrators, her students and their parents. She relied heavily on her faith and her fellow novice teacher and teammate. Her mentor visited her once a week. She liked her mentor, but never felt she received the assistance desired. She recognized she knew little about the Hispanic culture of her students; she was willing to learn more, but failed to see her own privileged membership in the dominant White culture and its effect on interactions with her students. The discussion of this study looks at the structuring of an effective mentoring program for novice teachers, and the new teacher?s frustrations with the mentoring received; her relationship struggles with her principal and other staff, but also some successes in forming friendly relationships; her desire to understand her Hispanic students and their culture, yet her inability to see her membership in the dominant culture, as well has her school and district's "color-blind" approach to race; and her perceptions of her enculturation into the profession of teaching. The conclusions of this study discuss mentoring new teachers, the role of principals in the induction of new teachers, cultural differences between teachers and students, and the influence of faith and character with a teacher and his/her teaching.
137

Racializing Spaces: Harlem, Housing Discrimination, and African American Community Repression in the War on Drugs

Hershewe, Mary 01 April 2013 (has links)
This thesis explores how government and society are invariably against the racial sharing of spaces. It examines how impoverished Black communities are created, sustained and perpetuated. The thesis is concerned with two main theories about race repression, race castes and racialization of space, both of which posit race as the main factor shaping the existing power relations. The work first draws upon the era of de jure segregation to highlight features of castes and racialized space. The first chapter looks at how housing discrimination caused Harlem to develop into a ghetto space. In the post-de jure era, the second chapter examines how the economics of racialized space access continued to inform a national framework defined by race-neutrality. It examines how, against the wake of Civil Rights era and community rioting, politicians discursively campaigned by demonizing and criminalizing Black rioters and Black culture. The War on Drugs, which emerged against the backdrop of Rights activism, called for crime control in Black communities. By targeting Blacks already isolated in “ghetto” spaces, politicians ensure that they over-compensate White communities with the public benefits and economic resources that are taken away from Blacks spaces. In media as well as in politics, our nation continuously fails to contextualize the costs of the War on Drugs on Black communities. The final chapter examines a film to show how popular depictions of Black ghettos and misconceptions about the War on Drugs, continue to feed our ideological and actual understandings of racialized space and privileged access.
138

Exploring My “Unfinished” Self: A Narrative Inquiry Into the Life of an Educational Activist

Goodreau, Jill Catherine 29 November 2011 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to explore tensions and themes that have influenced my activist identity. Drawing on theories of reflective practice, self study and autoethnography I use a narrative inquiry approach to trace significant experiences in my life, from student to high school teacher, to teacher educator. Themes that arise include a shift from a political to a “student voice”-focused approach to educational activism, the ongoing influence of my privileged identities, the importance of mentorship, the recognition that social change is possible, and the awareness and embracing of my “unfinishedness”. This study attempts to add to literature on educational or teacher activism and speak to the value of narrative inquiry approaches in teacher education and professional development programs.
139

Exploring My “Unfinished” Self: A Narrative Inquiry Into the Life of an Educational Activist

Goodreau, Jill Catherine 29 November 2011 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to explore tensions and themes that have influenced my activist identity. Drawing on theories of reflective practice, self study and autoethnography I use a narrative inquiry approach to trace significant experiences in my life, from student to high school teacher, to teacher educator. Themes that arise include a shift from a political to a “student voice”-focused approach to educational activism, the ongoing influence of my privileged identities, the importance of mentorship, the recognition that social change is possible, and the awareness and embracing of my “unfinishedness”. This study attempts to add to literature on educational or teacher activism and speak to the value of narrative inquiry approaches in teacher education and professional development programs.
140

Loving loving? problematizing pedagogies of care and chela sandoval's love as a hermeneutic

Brimmer, Allison 01 June 2005 (has links)
My thesis project is an argument for and an investigation into the complex dynamics of what I term a critical, feminist, anti-racist pedagogy. Drawing from scholarly work in the fields of feminist theory, cultural studies, whiteness studies, and rhetoric and composition, in what follows I argue for a blurring of the traditional reason-emotion split that, I believe, continues to stifle learners in todays U.S. educational system. I then offer a pedagogical theory that rejects or blurs this split, acknowledges and examines the affective realm, and is fueled by the more holistic notion and theory of love as a hermeneutic put forth by self-identified U.S. third-world feminist ChlÌ?a Sandoval. Next, I make connections between Sandovals theory and the work of several contemporary feminist scholars who theorize love and the formation of powerful coalitions that can work toward fostering democratizing social change in U.S. society today.

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