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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

Toward a Poetics of Green Building

Hughes, Jonathan 22 June 2015 (has links)
No description available.
2

”New era towards gender equality in Uganda?” : A case study in rural Lukonko on households’ perceptions towards sending their girls and boys to primary school

Lund, Matilda January 2018 (has links)
Background: Worldwide, gender inequality has existed for a long time due to culture, religion and patriarchal structures, sometimes maintained by law. As a result, millions of girls lose their right to schooling, and it is affecting the development of entire nations. Uganda one the other hand, has for the past decade had many girls accessing school and hence, an increase in the quantitative perspective of gender equality. This is a result of efforts and different projects to bring girls to school mobilised by many organizations, together with the government. Uganda implemented free universal primary education over 20 years ago, and was the first of all nations in Sub-Saharan Africa to apply free universal secondary education in 2007. However, do these structural changes contribute to a development in the qualitative perspective of gender equality in Uganda? Have this led to changed perceptions in the rural households regarding education for their girls and boys respectively? Purpose: The purpose of this thesis is to understand the development of gender equality in Uganda focusing on school attendance. This will be identified through listening to the perceptions of rural households towards sending their girls and boys to primary school. The result intends to contribute to a greater understanding of the qualitative development of gender equality in Uganda, in line with the Sustainable Development Goal number 5 implemented by the United Nations. Research question: What are the perceptions of rural households in Uganda towards sending their girls and boys respectively to primary school? Method: A qualitative method through 18 interviews, one focus group discussion and discussions with 22 children in a rural area. The village Lukonko in Eastern Uganda was chosen based on a convenience selection and since the number of girls attending school has grown rapidly in this area. Conclusion: Girls’ access to primary school was more valued than boys’ access which constitutes reversed gender inequality. The main reason was that girls provide more future support to the household. Yet, many of the reasons for sending girls to primary school were rooted in issues of gender inequality. The qualitative development of gender equality has progressed in terms of the value of the girls’ education, but not regarding the underlying societal issues of gender inequality.
3

Atmospheric Transformation of Polycyclic Aromatic Compounds

Fernando, Sujan 09 1900 (has links)
<p> The profiles of polycyclic aromatic compounds (PAC) were compared in three separate studies involving air samples collected in urban and rural locations across Canada. In the Freelton/Pier 25 study (conducted near Hamilton, Ontario) a total of 32 NPAH were analyzed for in 12 composite air particulate samples from Freelton (a rural site) and Pier 25 (an urban site) using negative ion chemical ionization gas chromatography-mass spectrometry.</p> <p> The NPAH levels at the two sites were found to be similar except for the two samples at Pier 25. These results were consistent with the PAH levels determined previously which showed significantly increased levels at Pier 25 under the same condition when the sampling site was downwind of the urban/industrial core. NPAH may be significant contributors to mutation induction due to exposures to ambient air since the offspring of male mice from the Pier 25 site exposed to ambient air showed inherited mutation rates about 2 times greater than offspring of mice exposed at the Freelton site. NPAH are highly mutagenic and carcinogenic compounds that act via reductive metabolism and can be readily metabolized to potent reactive intermediates within all cells.</p> <p> Concentration data for a set of polycyclic aromatic compounds were obtained for samples collected during the day and night during a study in Simcoe (rural) and Toronto (urban) as well as at three sites in British Columbia as part of the Pacific 2001 study (Slocan (urban), Langley (suburban/rural) and Sumas (rural)). The conversion of these concentration data into particulate loadings data (using elemental carbon data) enabled us to perform a number of unique interpretations and analyses of the data sets. Since particulate loadings values are not affected by air dispersion it was possible to compare samples and individual PAC across a range of samples.</p> <p> Principal components analysis of the loadings data showed dramatic differences between the urban and rural sites from each study. Day-night samples at the rural sites also showed dramatic profile differences. The urban sites showed significantly less differences in profiles, consistent with lesser degree of air transformation and closer proximities to sources.</p> / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)
4

Étude des particules fines et ultrafines en suspension dans l'air au Liban : caractérisation physicochimique et évaluation des effets toxicologiques sur des cellules pulmonaires humaines BEAS-2B / The study of air suspended fine and ultrafine particles in Lebanon : physicochemical characterization and evaluation of toxicological effects on human lung cells BEAS-2B

Borgie, Mireille 15 April 2014 (has links)
Les principaux objectifs de cette étude, une des premières menée au Liban, étaient d’acquérir une meilleure connaissance des caractéristiques physico-chimiques des particules atmosphériques fines (PF ou PM₂.₅₋₀.₃) et ultrafines (PUF ou PM₀.₃), et d’évaluer in vitro, leur potentiel toxique sur des cellules épithéliales bronchiques humaines (BEAS-2B). L’échantillonnage de PF et de PUF a été mené au Liban à la fois sur un site urbain (Sin El-Fil, du 18 mai au 2 sept. 2011) et un site rural (Beije, du 5 sept. au 28 oct. 2011). Les PF et les PUF ont fait l’objet d’une caractérisation physico-chimique par la détermination de leur composition en éléments et ions inorganiques, carbone total et composés organiques. Ensuite, des échantillons composites de PF et de PUF ont été préparés afin d’exposer les cellules BEAS-2B et évaluer les mécanismes toxiques sous-jacents. Nos résultats ont montré une influence des sources de combustion plus notable pour les particules collectées sur le site urbain, et cela par la présence de carbone total, de composés organiques, de métaux et d’ions inorganiques secondaires à des niveaux de concentration supérieurs à ceux rencontrés sur le site rural. D’autre part, une cytotoxicité plus prononcée a été provoquée par les PUF par comparaison aux PF. Les mécanismes de génotoxicité et de modifications épigénétiques que nous avons étudiés, à savoir l’activation métabolique des composés organiques, la modification de l’expression de trois microARNs, l’activation de la télomérase et l’induction de cassures au niveau de l’ADN, ont été induits par les deux échantillons de PF, avec un effet plus prononcé pour les particules d’origine urbaine. L’exposition des cellules BEAS-2B aux PF collectées, notamment celles d’origine urbaine, pourraient donc favoriser la transformation des cellules pulmonaires en cellules immortelles, et par conséquent, l’initiation ou la promotion de la cancérogenèse broncho-pulmonaire. / The objectives of this study, one of the first conducted in Lebanon, were to acquire a better knowledge on the physico-chemical characteristics of atmospheric fine particles (FP or PM₂.₅₋₀.₃) and ultrafine ones (UFP or PM₀.₃), and to assess their potential toxicity. Particles were collected at two coastal sites between may and sept. 2011 at Sin El-Fil (urban site in Greater Beirut), and between sept. and oct. 2011 at Bejje (rural site). After sampling, FP and UFP were subjected to a physico-chemical characterization by quantifying their inorganic ions and elements, total carbon and organic compounds contents. Then, composite samples of FP and UFP were prepared in order to expose bronchial epithelial cells (BEAS-2B) in culture, and therefore to assess the underlying toxic mechanisms. Our results showed an influence of combustion sources especially for urban particles that are richer in total carbon, organic compounds, metals and secondary inorganic ions than rural ones. On the other hand, a more pronounced cytotoxicity was caused by UFP when compared to FP. In addition, epigenetic modifications and genotoxicity mechanisms, such as metabolic activation of organic compounds, changes in three microRNAs expression, telomerase activation and DNA breaks induction, which are potentially involved in the initiation and promotion of carcinogenesis, were induced by the two samples of FP, with a more pronounced effect of urban particles. Exposure of BEAS-2B cells to collected FP, especially urban ones, may therefore induce the transformation of lung cells to immortal cells, and consequently the initiation or the promotion of broncho-pulmonary carcinogenesis.

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