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Control, compulsion and controversy: venereal diseases in Adelaide and Edinburgh 1910-1947 / by Susan Lemar / Venereal diseases in Adelaide and Edinburgh 1910-1947Lemar, Susan January 2001 (has links)
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 280-305). / iii, 305 leaves ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Argues that despite the liberal use of social control theory in the literature on the social history of venereal diseases, rationale discourses do not necessarily lead to government intervention. Comparative analysis reveals that culturally similar locations can experience similar impulses and constraints to the development of social policy under differing constitutional arrangements. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of History, 2001
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Fire imposed heat fluxes for structural analysisJowsey, Allan January 2006 (has links)
The last two decades have seen new insights, data and analytical methods to establish the behaviour of structures in fire. These methods have slowly migrated into practice and now form the basis for modern quantitative structural fire engineering. This study presents a novel methodology for determining the imposed heat fluxes on structural members. To properly characterise the temperature rise of the structural elements, a post-processing model for computational fluid dynamics tools was developed to establish the heat fluxes imposed on all surfaces by a fire. This model acts as a tool for any computational fluid dynamics model and works on the basis of well resolved local gas conditions. Analysis of the smoke layer and products of combustion allow for heat fluxes to be defined based on smoke absorption coefficients and temperatures. These heat fluxes are defined at all points on the structure by considering full spatial and temporal distributions. Furthermore, heat fluxes are defined by considering directionality and both characteristic length and time scales in fires. Length scales are evaluated for different structural member geometries, while time scales are evaluated for different structural materials including applied fire protection. It is the output given by this model that provides the input for the thermal analysis of the structural members that is a necessary step prior to the structural analysis to be undertaken. The model is validated against the experimental results of the previously mentioned large scale fire tests, showing good agreement. In addition, comparisons are made to current methods to highlight their potential inadequacies.
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La festivalisation : approche du Festival d’Avignon par l’anthropologie de la communication / Festivalisation : an anthropological approach of the communicationHan, Sohee 21 December 2018 (has links)
De nos jours, nombre de villes ont développé leur propre festival. Un festival est un événement qui transforme la ville et constitue un atout qui contribue à la distinguer. Dans cette situation, l’analyse d’une ville ne peut ainsi faire abstraction de l’événement festivalier et de la relation qui l’unit à la société de la ville. Cette relation est examinée à partir de la notion de festivalisation et conduit à envisager conjointement deux points de vue, celui des habitants et celui des visiteurs. On analyse ainsi ce qui se passe autour des habitants qui vivent au rythme du festival et autour des visiteurs, à la fois pendant le festival et pendant le reste de l’année. A travers ces points de vue dits « endogène » et « exogène », la festivalisation amène à se poser la question du « rassemblement » au niveau international à l’ère du numérique en privilégiant l’approche de l’anthropologie de la communication. Dans cette thèse, on analyse la festivalisation en s’appuyant sur la société avignonnaise : le Festival d’Avignon, les Avignonnais et les visiteurs asiatiques avec, en miroir, le Festival d’Édimbourg et les Écossais. / Nowadays many towns have developed their own festival. A festival is an event that transforms the town and establishes an asset which goes towards distinguishing it from others. In this situation the analysis of a town cannot ignore the festival event and the relationship which links it to the community of the town. This relationship is examined from the notion of festivalisation and brings about the consideration of two points of view simultaneously, that of the inhabitants and that of the visitors. We thus analyse what happens around the inhabitants who live to the rhythm of the festival and around the visitors, both during the festival and throughout the rest of the year. Through these points of view called « endogenous » and « exogenous », festivalisation leads us to ask the question of « gathering » on an international level in the digital era, favouring the approach of the anthropology of communication. In this dissertation, we are analysing festivalisation based on the community of Avignon : the Avignon Festival, the inhabitants and Asian visitors, in comparison with the Festival of Edinburgh and the Scots.
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アダム・スミス思想体系と啓蒙思想の遺産SHINOHARA, Hisashi, 篠原, 久 31 March 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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'The inlegebill scribling of my imprompt pen' the production and circulation of literary miscellany manuscripts in Jacobean Scotland, c. 1580-c. 1630 /Verweij, Sebastiaan Johan. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.) - University of Glasgow, 2008. / Includes bibliographical references. Print version also available.
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Forensic medicine in Scotland, 1914-39Duvall, Nicholas January 2013 (has links)
This thesis examines the practice of forensic medicine in Scotland in the period 1914 to 1939. This was a time of significant dynamism for the discipline, in which it enjoyed a high public profile and played an important role in the investigation of crime. The project focuses in particular on medico-legal practice at an elite level, based in specialist departments in the universities of Edinburgh and Glasgow. As well as producing a significant amount of research and textbook material, and thus constituting authorities within the discipline, representatives of these institutions gave expert evidence in a number of high-profile trials. Thus, an examination of their work can show how medico-legal knowledge was constructed, presented and challenged. To this end, four main areas of forensic medical practice are analysed, including the post-mortem examination, the laboratory analysis of trace evidence, the investigation of shootings and the use of photography. The development of the techniques contained within these categories is charted, as is the range of situations to which they were applied and the various ways in which their use was challenged in court by hostile legal counsel. Sources including textbooks and journal articles, medical case reports, photograph albums and trial transcripts are used. A fifth section explores an area of the public face of the discipline, specifically the popular output of two of its most famous practitioners, Sydney Smith and John Glaister Jr. Both produced memoirs and newspaper serials after retirement. These are used to explore the ways they reflected on their careers and spun their legacies, portraying themselves as impartial servants of science and justice. The thesis argues that the place of forensic medicine in wider institutional, investigative and geographical networks was central to its existence. The discipline collaborated extensively, both with representatives of other areas of the medical profession and with external authorities, professions and trades. Means of communication, such as written reports and samples taken at autopsy, allowed experts in the universities to lend their expertise to the non-specialists in peripheries by providing expert opinions based on materials sent to them. The scrutiny of post-mortem reports produced by peripheral generalists allowed medico-legists’ expertise to be spread over a wide geographical area. The thesis also reflects on the ways in which medico-legists guarded against error. Techniques derived from other areas of medicine and science were not adopted for use in court until their reliability could be demonstrated satisfactorily, and controls and standards were built in to procedures.
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Actants and Networks in 'Skagboys' – Thatcher, Crime and Mundane Artifacts as MediatorsPedersen, Thomas January 2020 (has links)
While Skagboys portrays the descent into heroin addiction of young, working class Scots during the Thatcher era, shifting the analysis from a strictly human perspective to one focusing on the agency of objects opens up the novel to new readings wherein morality emerges through nonhuman actors. Welsh’s work has traditionally been hailed as Scottish working-class realism that portrays its characters unideologically, to the point that the novels, through the characters, appear without morality. Drawing upon Latour’s notion of Actor-Network Theory, ANT, reveals a Thatcherite materiality permeating the story, prescribing the moral behaviour which the characters of Skagboys repeatedly clash with as their heroin addiction and junk desperation grows. The impacts of the security camera, the smoke detector and the collection tin provide the basis for the analysis. This highlights two types of marginalization for the characters. Firstly, in the characters’ hopeless prospects with regards to employment due to Thatcher’s neoliberal politics, and secondly as objects of detection and control exerting agency in the world which the characters navigate. These objects presuppose and foil crime, effectively becoming extensions of Thatcherite morality, keeping the criminal and unemployed in check.
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Organizace a řízení veřejného knihovnictví ve Velké Británii / Management and organisation of public libraries in Great BritainBradáčová, Ivana January 2012 (has links)
The aim of this thesis is to describe public librarianship in Great Britain, its organisation and the services. The practice way will be demonstrate on the public libraries in the cities of the four countries of the United Kingdom. The core of the thesis is devided into six main chapters. The brief history of the public librarianship will be introduce in the first chapter with focus on the first public libraries in the UK. The four main chapters analyse organisation and services of the public library networks of the cities - City of London Libraries, Cardiff's Libraries, Edinburgh City Libraries and Belfast NI Libraries. These four chapters describe and analyse organisation, services, equipment, culture events, libraries's PR. At the end of these chapters there are a summaries of the libraries's strenghts and weaknesses. In the last, summary chapter, there is a final analyse of all libraries services and organisation, there is also comparation and at least description how the british public libraries work. Demonstration of this will be shown on the public library network of the cities and on the model of typical british library. At the end there are advices for czech public libraries. [Authors' abstract]. Keywords: public librarianship, public libraries, services, Great Britain, United Kingdom,...
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Protestant Christian Missions, Race and Empire: The World Missionary Conference of 1910, Edinburgh, ScotlandSanecki, Kim Caroline 25 July 2006 (has links)
This thesis explores prevailing and changing attitudes among Protestant Christians as manifested in the World Missionary Conference of 1910, held in Edinburgh, Scotland. It compares the conference to missionary literature to demonstrate how well it fit the context of the missionary endeavor during the Edwardian era. It examines the issues of race and empire in the thinking of conference participants. It pays particular attention to the position of West Africa and West Africans in conference deliberations. It suggests that the conference, which took place soon after the scramble for empire and just before World War I and the subsequent upsurge of nationalism and anti-colonialism, offers a valuable historical perspective on the uneven nature of globalizing Christianity.
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Hermeneutic phenomenology as a methodology in the study of spiritual experience : case study : contemporary spirituality in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St Andrews and Edinburgh, ScotlandBarclay, Gordon T. January 2014 (has links)
This work considers the theoretical, epistemological and methodological criteria for a hermeneutic phenomenological approach to the study of spiritual experience founded within a qualitative paradigm. Spirituality is noted to be of increasing significance in society and as a developing discipline within the academy and spiritual experience is offered as an opening to greater understanding and appreciation of an individual's understandings of their spirituality. The methodology provides an interpretative approach towards an opportunity for resonance, identification and empathy between individual and reader through richly descriptive narratives offering insights into such experiences and developing themes and threads of particular interest prior to seeking universal and semi universal traits between or amongst narratives. Practical methods for applying the methodology are considered, including ethical and researcher reflexive issues. The assessment of the methodology includes its application to a case study, located within contemporary Christianity in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St Andrews and Edinburgh, Scotland, which due to limitations of space focuses particularly on the notion of the Gift and assists in the determination of the efficacy and validity of hermeneutic phenomenology in the study of spiritual experience.
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