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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

Whistle blowing, ethics and the law: an ethical evaluation of the Protected Disclosures Act 26 of 2000 using Hans Jonas’s theory of responsibility

October, Lydia Joy January 2015 (has links)
Magister Theologiae - MTh / South Africa has progressed towards the realisation of an expressive culture of disclosure. Significant implementation and enforcement of the Protected Disclosures Act (26 of 2000 – hereafter referred to as “the Act” or “the PDA”) of South Africa has assisted to enforce the practices and protections provided in terms of the enabling laws and a societal culture which is receptive to and respectful of whistle blowers. This thesis seeks to make a contribution to the discourse on whistle blowing and the PDA from an ethical perspective, by means of using ethical concepts and analysing and discussing ethical dilemmas to provide a greater understanding of the real cases of whistle blowing that has occurred. Various aspects of whistle blowing are defined and reviewed with reference to Hans Jonas’s theory of an ethics of responsibility. One such aspect is the idea of collective responsibility as understood by Hans Jonas. Hans Jonas describes responsibility; in terms of the future responsibility present individuals have as a collective in order to ensure that the future human being are able to actively engage in the world with the same familiarities as is experienced today. This thesis will investigate, more specifically, the contribution made by Hans Jonas’s theory of responsibility in understanding the PDA in terms of an ethics of responsibility. The research question is posed and attempts to discuss and analyse whether Hans Jonas’s theory of an ethics of responsibility may help to identify, analyse and assess ethical issues embedded in the Protected Disclosures Act 26 of 2000.
42

Validation of Steins/Arla Foods method for lactate fermenting clostridia in milk

Flodin, Jessica January 2009 (has links)
<p>One of the most serious and economically important defects caused by clostridia in milk products is the late blowing of semi-hard cheeses.</p><p>Clostridia occur naturally in soil and can contaminate milk through crops contaminated by dung and soil followed by a less successful silage process, that give them opportunity to grow unaerobically. When anaerobic conditions occur, such as storage of semi-hard cheese, they ferment lactic acid to butyric acid and the gases CO<sub>2</sub> and H<sub>2</sub>.</p><p>At the fusion of Arla and MD Foods, a series of changes were conducted on the MPN method for lactic acid fermentation for clostridia in milk. These changes resulted in an increased accuracy due to an increased number of test tubes and the change of media from MRCM to BBB, Bryant & Burkey Broth, that was thought to be more selective for <em>Cl. tyrobutyricum</em>, the organism mostly found in hard cheese. When the number of dairy farmers that were given quality reduction fines increased, the new method was suspected and a validation was conducted.</p><p>The validation included inoculation of different clostridia and bacillus strains into BBB substrate and enzymatic testing of positive samples with Rapid ID 32A. The inoculation result showed that almost all tested different clostridia strains could grow in BBB substrate.</p><p>Test on BBB positive tubes with Rapid ID 32A resulted in 95% clostridia of which 70% was <em>Cl. tyrobutyricum</em>. These results correlated well with earlier studies on MRCM substrate and the increase in quality reduction fines probably depended on the larger number of test tubes used in the new method rather than the change of substrate.</p> / <p>Clostridier eller främst <em>Cl. tyrobutyricum</em> är den art som i de flesta fall orsakar feljästa ellersönderjästa ostar, vilket är ett välkänt problem inom mejeriindustrin. Clostridiesporer finns naturligt i jord och hamnar i mjölkråvaran via gröda som kontaminerats med gödsel och jord och som tillsammans med en mindre lyckad ensileringsprocess gör att clostridierna växer till. När anaeroba förhållanden uppstår, såsom vid lagring av hårdost, förjäser clostridierna laktat och smörsyra varvid vätgas och koldioxid bildas.</p><p>I samband med fusionen av Arla/MD Foods, genomfördes metodförändringar för MPN-metoden för laktatjäsande clostridier i mjölk, som används inom mjölkbedömningen. Dessa förändringar innebar en skärpning i noggrannheten genom att man ökade antal rör, samt ett substratbyte från MRCM till BBB, Bryant & Burkey Broth, som ansågs mer gynnsamt för <em>Cl. tyrobutyricum</em>.</p><p>Då antalet mjölkproducenter som fick kvalitetsavdrag ökade, riktades misstankar mot den nya metoden och en validering genomfördes.</p><p>Resultatet av valideringen, som innebar ympning av renkulturer, utodling av positiva rör med efterföljande typning, visade att de flesta av de tillsatta stammarna av clostridier hade förmågan att ge ett positivt utslag vid tillsats av renkulturer. Utodling och typning av positiva rör visade att ca 70 % av de positiva utslagen innehöll <em>Cl. tyrobutyricum</em> och hela 95 % någon clostridieart. Dessa resultat korrelerar med tidigare studier på MRCM-substrat och ökningen av positiva utslag berodde troligtvis på det ökade antalet rör som den nya metoden innebar.</p>
43

Equivariant Resolution of Points of Indeterminacy

Z. Reichstein, B. Youssin, zinovy@math.orst.edu 02 October 2000 (has links)
No description available.
44

Validation of Steins/Arla Foods method for lactate fermenting clostridia in milk

Flodin, Jessica January 2009 (has links)
One of the most serious and economically important defects caused by clostridia in milk products is the late blowing of semi-hard cheeses. Clostridia occur naturally in soil and can contaminate milk through crops contaminated by dung and soil followed by a less successful silage process, that give them opportunity to grow unaerobically. When anaerobic conditions occur, such as storage of semi-hard cheese, they ferment lactic acid to butyric acid and the gases CO2 and H2. At the fusion of Arla and MD Foods, a series of changes were conducted on the MPN method for lactic acid fermentation for clostridia in milk. These changes resulted in an increased accuracy due to an increased number of test tubes and the change of media from MRCM to BBB, Bryant &amp; Burkey Broth, that was thought to be more selective for Cl. tyrobutyricum, the organism mostly found in hard cheese. When the number of dairy farmers that were given quality reduction fines increased, the new method was suspected and a validation was conducted. The validation included inoculation of different clostridia and bacillus strains into BBB substrate and enzymatic testing of positive samples with Rapid ID 32A. The inoculation result showed that almost all tested different clostridia strains could grow in BBB substrate. Test on BBB positive tubes with Rapid ID 32A resulted in 95% clostridia of which 70% was Cl. tyrobutyricum. These results correlated well with earlier studies on MRCM substrate and the increase in quality reduction fines probably depended on the larger number of test tubes used in the new method rather than the change of substrate. / Clostridier eller främst Cl. tyrobutyricum är den art som i de flesta fall orsakar feljästa ellersönderjästa ostar, vilket är ett välkänt problem inom mejeriindustrin. Clostridiesporer finns naturligt i jord och hamnar i mjölkråvaran via gröda som kontaminerats med gödsel och jord och som tillsammans med en mindre lyckad ensileringsprocess gör att clostridierna växer till. När anaeroba förhållanden uppstår, såsom vid lagring av hårdost, förjäser clostridierna laktat och smörsyra varvid vätgas och koldioxid bildas. I samband med fusionen av Arla/MD Foods, genomfördes metodförändringar för MPN-metoden för laktatjäsande clostridier i mjölk, som används inom mjölkbedömningen. Dessa förändringar innebar en skärpning i noggrannheten genom att man ökade antal rör, samt ett substratbyte från MRCM till BBB, Bryant &amp; Burkey Broth, som ansågs mer gynnsamt för Cl. tyrobutyricum. Då antalet mjölkproducenter som fick kvalitetsavdrag ökade, riktades misstankar mot den nya metoden och en validering genomfördes. Resultatet av valideringen, som innebar ympning av renkulturer, utodling av positiva rör med efterföljande typning, visade att de flesta av de tillsatta stammarna av clostridier hade förmågan att ge ett positivt utslag vid tillsats av renkulturer. Utodling och typning av positiva rör visade att ca 70 % av de positiva utslagen innehöll Cl. tyrobutyricum och hela 95 % någon clostridieart. Dessa resultat korrelerar med tidigare studier på MRCM-substrat och ökningen av positiva utslag berodde troligtvis på det ökade antalet rör som den nya metoden innebar.
45

Hydrological response unit-based blowing snow modelling over mountainous terrain

MacDonald, Matthew Kenneth 25 January 2011
Wind transport and sublimation of snow particles are common phenomena across high altitude and latitude cold regions and play important roles in hydrological and atmospheric water and energy budgets. In spite of this, blowing snow processes have not been incorporated in many mesoscale hydrological models and land surface schemes. A physically based blowing snow model, the Prairie Blowing Snow Model (PBSM), initially developed for prairie environments was used to model snow redistribution and sublimation by wind over two sites representative of mountainous regions in Canada: Fisera Ridge in the Rocky Mountain Front Ranges in Alberta, and Granger Basin in the Yukon Territory. Two models were used to run PBSM: the object-oriented hydrological model, Cold Regions Hydrological Modelling Platform (CRHM) and Environment Canadas hydrological-land surface scheme, Modélisation Environmentale Communautaire Surface and Hydrology (MESH). PBSM was coupled with the snowcover energy and mass-balance model (SNOBAL) within CRHM. Blowing snow algorithms were also incorporated into MESH to create MESH-PBSM. CRHM, MESH and MESH-PBSM were used to simulate the evolution of snowcover in hydrological response units (HRUs) over both Fisera Ridge and Granger Basin.<p> To test the models of blowing snow redistribution and ablation over a relatively simple sequence of mountain topography, simulations were run from north to south over a linear ridge in the Canadian Rocky Mountains. Fisera Ridge snowcover simulations with CRHM were performed over two winters using two sets of wind speed forcing: (1) station observed wind speed, and (2) modelled wind speed from a widely applied empirical, terrain-based windflow model. Best results were obtained when using the site meteorological station wind speed data. The windflow model performed poorly when comparing the magnitude of modelled and observed wind speeds. Blowing snow sublimation, snowmelt and snowpack sublimation quantities were considerably overestimated when using the modelled wind speeds. As a result, end-of-winter snow accumulation was considerably underestimated on windswept HRUs. MESH and MESH-PBSM were also used to simulate snow accumulation and redistribution over these same HRUs. MESH-PBSM adequately simulated snow accumulation in the HRUs up until the spring snowmelt period. MESH without PBSM performed less well and overestimated accumulation on windward slopes and the ridge top whilst underestimating accumulation on lee slopes. Simulations in spring were degraded by a large overestimation of melt by MESH. The early and overestimated melt warrants a detailed examination that is outside the scope of this thesis.<p> To parameterize snow redistribution in a mountain alpine basin, snow redistribution and sublimation by wind were calculated for three winters over Granger Basin using CRHM. Snow transport fluxes were distributed amongst HRUs using inter-HRU snow redistribution allocation factors. Three snow redistribution schemes of varying complexity were evaluated. CRHM model results showed that end-of-winter snow accumulation can be most accurately simulated when the inter-HRU snow redistribution schemes take into account wind direction and speed and HRU aerodynamic characteristics, along with the spatial arrangement of HRUs in the catchment. As snow transport scales approximately with the fourth power of wind speed (u4), inter-HRU snow redistribution allocation factors can be established according to the predominant u4 direction over a simulation period or can change at each time step according to an input measured wind direction. MESH and MESH-PBSM were used to simulate snow accumulation and ablation over these same HRUs. MESH-PBSM provided markedly better results than MESH without blowing snow algorithms.<p> That snow redistribution by wind can be adequately simulated in computationally efficient HRUs over mountainous terrain has important implications for representing snow transport in large-scale hydrology models and land surface schemes. Snow redistribution by wind caused mountain snow accumulation to vary from 10% to 161% of seasonal snowfall within a headwater catchment in the Canadian Rocky Mountains, and blowing snow sublimation losses ranged from 10 to 37% of seasonal snowfall.
46

Hydrological response unit-based blowing snow modelling over mountainous terrain

MacDonald, Matthew Kenneth 25 January 2011 (has links)
Wind transport and sublimation of snow particles are common phenomena across high altitude and latitude cold regions and play important roles in hydrological and atmospheric water and energy budgets. In spite of this, blowing snow processes have not been incorporated in many mesoscale hydrological models and land surface schemes. A physically based blowing snow model, the Prairie Blowing Snow Model (PBSM), initially developed for prairie environments was used to model snow redistribution and sublimation by wind over two sites representative of mountainous regions in Canada: Fisera Ridge in the Rocky Mountain Front Ranges in Alberta, and Granger Basin in the Yukon Territory. Two models were used to run PBSM: the object-oriented hydrological model, Cold Regions Hydrological Modelling Platform (CRHM) and Environment Canadas hydrological-land surface scheme, Modélisation Environmentale Communautaire Surface and Hydrology (MESH). PBSM was coupled with the snowcover energy and mass-balance model (SNOBAL) within CRHM. Blowing snow algorithms were also incorporated into MESH to create MESH-PBSM. CRHM, MESH and MESH-PBSM were used to simulate the evolution of snowcover in hydrological response units (HRUs) over both Fisera Ridge and Granger Basin.<p> To test the models of blowing snow redistribution and ablation over a relatively simple sequence of mountain topography, simulations were run from north to south over a linear ridge in the Canadian Rocky Mountains. Fisera Ridge snowcover simulations with CRHM were performed over two winters using two sets of wind speed forcing: (1) station observed wind speed, and (2) modelled wind speed from a widely applied empirical, terrain-based windflow model. Best results were obtained when using the site meteorological station wind speed data. The windflow model performed poorly when comparing the magnitude of modelled and observed wind speeds. Blowing snow sublimation, snowmelt and snowpack sublimation quantities were considerably overestimated when using the modelled wind speeds. As a result, end-of-winter snow accumulation was considerably underestimated on windswept HRUs. MESH and MESH-PBSM were also used to simulate snow accumulation and redistribution over these same HRUs. MESH-PBSM adequately simulated snow accumulation in the HRUs up until the spring snowmelt period. MESH without PBSM performed less well and overestimated accumulation on windward slopes and the ridge top whilst underestimating accumulation on lee slopes. Simulations in spring were degraded by a large overestimation of melt by MESH. The early and overestimated melt warrants a detailed examination that is outside the scope of this thesis.<p> To parameterize snow redistribution in a mountain alpine basin, snow redistribution and sublimation by wind were calculated for three winters over Granger Basin using CRHM. Snow transport fluxes were distributed amongst HRUs using inter-HRU snow redistribution allocation factors. Three snow redistribution schemes of varying complexity were evaluated. CRHM model results showed that end-of-winter snow accumulation can be most accurately simulated when the inter-HRU snow redistribution schemes take into account wind direction and speed and HRU aerodynamic characteristics, along with the spatial arrangement of HRUs in the catchment. As snow transport scales approximately with the fourth power of wind speed (u4), inter-HRU snow redistribution allocation factors can be established according to the predominant u4 direction over a simulation period or can change at each time step according to an input measured wind direction. MESH and MESH-PBSM were used to simulate snow accumulation and ablation over these same HRUs. MESH-PBSM provided markedly better results than MESH without blowing snow algorithms.<p> That snow redistribution by wind can be adequately simulated in computationally efficient HRUs over mountainous terrain has important implications for representing snow transport in large-scale hydrology models and land surface schemes. Snow redistribution by wind caused mountain snow accumulation to vary from 10% to 161% of seasonal snowfall within a headwater catchment in the Canadian Rocky Mountains, and blowing snow sublimation losses ranged from 10 to 37% of seasonal snowfall.
47

Frigger tactics

Klenell, Simon January 2011 (has links)
My work centers around the fact that I am a glassblower working with glass objects within a glasstradition. My BFA project from 2009 entitled ”the bastards have landed” was my first attempt atmapping out what that ultimately meant to me as a practitioner in a contemporary craft context. Theresult of that project was a discovery of my making as a way of using tradition to tell stories aboutitself. My conclusion was that by using the traditional objects as symbols I had a channel throughwhich I could communicate. Glass is a material who´s domains are closely connected to a domesticand consumeristic environment. It is put in a position where we react to its appearance with ourbody memory while also carries different social and material values depending on its appearance.When entering the master program at Konstfack University of Art Craft and Design, my idea wasthat over the next coming two years my focus would lie in the exploration and research of thesemechanisms as well as my own position as a maker and practitioner within these mechanisms.Craft, design and making are subjects that are constantly being talked about and analyzed from anumber of perspectives. There are philosophers, sociologists, historians and art historians constantlynegotiating what the field of craft is dealing with. This is something that I over the years have foundas something quite disturbing in some cases. This leaves me in a situation where I am no longerdefining my own practice. And when I am to define my practice I always do it through the ideas ofpeople from ”outside” my own position. There are many good writers from variousdisciplines writing about craft and making that I have had great use of and input from but I feel thatthere is a big lack of craft practitioners who are defining their discipline from their own standpoint.This situation is to me a bit outdated.So as mentioned above I have entered the master program with an idea to find out how to deal withveiled subjects such as tacit knowledge and material culture in order to try to transform them into acommunicative body of knowledge. My work during the past three semesters have been spread outover a number of different projects dealing with these subjects both based on objects as well asforming a discussion together with my master group.The main cause in this thesis is as always in my case to shed light on and to formulate questionsand hopefully answers around my own practice and its related subjects.The main reason for this is that craft and making as a tool for knowledge production is a cloudedsubject but according to me it holds a lot of potential. Not only for understanding questions outsidethe field but also to unveil and strengthen the practice itself.
48

Whistleblowing : the other side of the coin

January 2009 (has links)
No abstract available / Thesis (LL.M.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2009.
49

Effective ethics management and culture : examination of internal reporting and whistleblowing within a NAFTA member context

Mac Nab, Brent Robert January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 71-80). / Also available by subscription via World Wide Web / xii, 80 leaves, bound 29 cm
50

The ethical resister's last resort news coverage over the allegations of a national security whistleblower /

Amundson, Ryan. Lo, Clarence Y. H. January 2009 (has links)
The entire thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appears in the short.pdf file; a non-technical public abstract appears in the public.pdf file. Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on October 14, 2009). Thesis advisor: Dr. Clarence Lo. Includes bibliographical references.

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