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The NOW Map: consistent, dynamic and contemporary geospatial informationBaker, Anthony John January 2005 (has links)
[Abstract]: Mapping agencies, national and regional, are finding it increasingly difficult to maintain the currency of their suite of map related products and services. These products include topographic maps and the provision of up to date topographic data. The maintenance of this socially important spatial information is at issue through the duplication of effort that presently exists within government agencies at all levels. A dedicated data sharing and topographic maintenance program has the potential to solve all of these issues. The "NOW Map" gives the "map hungry" public the ability to obtain spatially located data and products in time frames and formats of their choosing. This system is capable of delivering consistent, dynamic and contemporary geospatial information. It will be flexible, in response to a modern ever-changing society, and capable of providing up to date topographic maps and data that not only meets current standards, but also continually exceeds them. After the development of initial procedures, a pilot study was conducted to expand and further refine data collection and analysis procedures. This was followed by a final data-gathering research phase. The research used relevant local, interstate and international examples in all areas of the study. The outcomes of the pilot study and analysis of the second research segment demonstrated that maps can be maintained more efficiently through the utilisation of accurate up to date information. These topographically significant updates can be provided incrementally by organisations that maintain data as part of their own core business.
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The Role of Architecture in Systemic Gender Inequality: National Organization for Women's HeadquartersGhodousi, Shayan 28 June 2021 (has links)
Nowadays, the world is facing an ocean of social problems and different types of oppressions and systemic inequality from east Asia all the way to North America can be found regarding this issue. With pointing social oppression out, a long list of groups of people is considered including immigrants, religious people, LGBTQ, black society, native Americans, Latinos and etc. as well as the difficulty of relationship between these people with other groups. Many of these problems are the outcomes of the government behavior and written laws in the country's constitution which caused an inequality in society and daily life.
Having said that, one of the most important questions is "what is the role of architecture here or what more can architecture do to solve any of those social problems?" In fact, the role of the governments is determinative and some of the social problems should be solved by the government, but architecture, in many different programs, could educate people to learn more about each other which in this case, in society scale, lots of social inequalities would be mitigated.
While looking at several studies about social oppression and learning more about different types of groups in society, I decided to narrow down the strata to find an appropriate audience for my thesis project. In my opinion, one of the most interesting group of people in every society all around the world is women. My main focus in this research is to discuss more about women's future in society and argue political issues that women are facing nowadays. According to the rich history of the National Organization for Women (NOW) and the wide range of activities that this organization has done for women's rights, I decided to choose NOW as my case study to re-imagine a new Headquarter at the middle of the Washington D.C in a very fast growing Navy Yard neighborhood at the intersection of the M Street SE which is main corridor of this neighborhood and New Jersey Avenue SE which is a direct way to the U.S. Capitol Building . To sum up, my goal in this project is to bring architecture to help the oldest women's organization in the U.S. in a new decade of politics for women. / Master of Architecture / All around the world people must deal with social problems and systemic inequality issues. Women as the most vulnerable and valuable group of people in the world we live are the main audience for this thesis project. This study focuses on discussing more about the women's future in society regarding political issues that they are facing nowadays, also it emphasizes the role of architecture in solving any of these social problems. This project is about designing a new headquarters for the National Organization for Women (NOW), currently located in Washington D.C, as the main case study to help the oldest women's organization in the U.S. in a new decade of politics for women. The outcome of developing this research is to send a greater symbolic message about the women's future, a symbol that represents efforts and movements. In a way of educating people about future politics or trying to get the people together, hosting some of the most important conferences in the country, and making a platform to identify different cultures, this project is going to be a new landmark of the neighborhood.
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Provincialisme et art conceptuel : l'exemple de l'art belge (1969-1974) / Provincialism and conceptual art : the Belgian instance (1969-1974)Pen, Laurence 01 February 2013 (has links)
Située au centre du triangle formé par la France, les Pays-Bas et l’Allemagne, la Belgique est au cœur du réseau de diffusion des tendances conceptuelles dans les années 1970. La scène artistique belge est cependant sous-représentée dans les études consacrées à ce sujet. Il s’agit donc de montrer la place occupée par les travaux réalisés par Jacques Charlier, Jacques Lizène, Schwind et Alain D’Hooghe entre 1969 et 1974, en les analysant à la lumière des œuvres, mais aussi des textes qui ont contribué à la définition de l’art conceptuel. Cette approche permet de voir qu’ils en utilisent les codes afin de mettre en évidence leur position extérieure à ce réseau, tout en démontrant leur connaissance des débats provoqués par cette nouvelle manière de définir l’art. Au moyen des stratégies subversives puisées dans l’histoire du surréalisme belge, ils y participent en testant dans la pratique les limites de cette définition. Reconsidérer leur situation par rapport aux centres amène ainsi à réévaluer la position occupée par les travaux de ces artistes au sein des conceptualismes européens / Located in the centre of the geographical triangle formed by France, the Netherlands and Germany, Belgium is a merging point in the network that developed the conceptual art trends in the Seventies. The Belgian art scene is, however, under-represented in the critical and academic studies on this topic. The aim of this PhD thesis is therefore to show the relevance of the works by outstanding Belgian artists - Jacques Charlier, Jacques Lizène, Schwind and Alain D'Hooghe - between 1969 and 1974 in the light of those of conceptual art, but also in relation to the essays that have contributed to define it. Although their awareness of the international debate and even if they made use of the conceptual art codes, this comparative approach allows to underline how the above mentioned Belgian artists positioned their practices and how they operated independently from the main conceptual art network. Through subversive strategies inherited from Belgian surrealism, their works contributed to challenge the limit of the notion of conceptual art. To reconsider their stance leads to reassess the position of their work in the scope of the European conceptualisms
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Proleptic spiritual transformation : living in the not yet / Darryl WooldridgeWooldridge, Darryl January 2014 (has links)
God is at the centre of an, often inarticulate, innate human desire and pursuit to enjoy and reflect the divine image in which every human being was created. The purpose of this research project is to affirm that human elemental pursuit as God‘s intent to fulfill this created, intrinsic human desire in the now or, what is referred to in this doctoral thesis as, proleptic spiritual transformation (PrōST).
It seems that the world, and the extent, of spiritual transformation range from an etiolated theology to experiential fullness. Considered herein is God‘s heart, in relationship, and its implication toward an image-bearing human spiritually and how the Edenic fall interrupted this intent. From this is considered God‘s active interest in recovery of his fully-expressed image in humanity especially as experienced in PrōST. To corroborate this purpose, the means and methods of God‘s revelation in unveiling his heart, truth, and intents toward creation and humanity in particular toward spiritual recovery and PrōST, is examined. Moreover, the transformative and soteriological implications of proleptic spiritual transformation (PrōST) are investigated and whether a unified theory regarding PrōST emerges.
The primary aim of this work investigates whether individuals must wait for the afterlife to have purification and spiritual transformation fully or largely "worked out", This thesis investigate the provisions of God‘s economy to include a present enjoyment of the imago Dei (image of God) in transformation as inclusive of the existential life of Christ as the imago Christi, reflected and represented by humans in relation to God and creation. That is, this study demonstrates that PrōST, an experience of transformation usually reserved for heaven in eternity, is greatly available today.
The central theoretical argument of this study, as set out, is that humans were created in the image of God; however, the enjoyment and expression of this imago Dei, not its essence, has been greatly blemished, marred, and damaged by a God-defying wilfulness of humanity. Despite this rebellion, God desired a full restoration of the enjoyment and expression of his image. God has not forgotten or abandoned this intent. Moreover, the imago Dei now carries something more—the God-man (imago Christi). God‘s image in Jesus now carries the existential realities of his incarnate life toward which PrōST drives. This study re-examines the conventional partitioning of the "now" and "not yet" for a new balance and paradigm in expressed PrōST toward imago Dei. / PhD (Dogmatics), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus in co-operation with Greenwich School of Theology, United Kingdom, 2014
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Characterization in James Agee's Let us now praise famous men : an exercise in consciousness.Smith, David Lyttleton Leach. January 1970 (has links)
No description available.
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The management of SPMD based parallel processing on clusters of workstations.Hobbs, Michael J, mikewood@deakin.edu.au January 1998 (has links)
Current attempts to manage parallel applications on Clusters of Workstations (COWs) have either generally followed the parallel execution environment approach or been extensions to existing network operating systems, both of which do not provide complete or satisfactory solutions. The efficient and transparent management of parallelism within the COW environment requires enhanced methods of process instantiation, mapping of parallel process to workstations, maintenance of process relationships, process communication facilities, and process coordination mechanisms.
The aim of this research is to synthesise, design, develop and experimentally study a system capable of efficiently and transparently managing SPMD parallelism on a COW. This system should both improve the performance of SPMD based parallel programs and relieve the programmer from the involvement into parallelism management in order to allow them to concentrate on application programming. It is also the aim of this research to show that such a system, to achieve these objectives, is best achieved by adding new special services and exploiting the existing services of a client/server and microkernel based distributed operating system. To achieve these goals the research methods of the experimental computer science should be employed.
In order to specify the scope of this project, this work investigated the issues related to parallel processing on COWs and surveyed a number of relevant systems including PVM, NOW and MOSIX. It was shown that although the MOSIX system provide a number of good services related to parallelism management, none of the system forms a complete solution. The problems identified with these systems include: instantiation services that are not suited to parallel processing; duplication of services between the parallelism management environment and the operating system; and poor levels of transparency.
A high performance and transparent system capable of managing the execution of SPMD parallel applications was synthesised and the specific services of process instantiation, process mapping and process interaction detailed. The process instantiation service designed here provides the capability to instantiate parallel processes using either creation or duplication methods and also supports multiple and group based instantiation which is specifically design for SPMD parallel processing. The process mapping service provides the combination of process allocation and dynamic load balancing to ensure the load of a COW remains balanced not only at the time a parallel program is initialised but also during the execution of the program. The process interaction service guarantees to maintain transparently process relationships, communications and coordination services between parallel processes regardless of their location within the COW. The combination of these services provides an original architecture and organisation of a system that is capable of fully managing the execution of SPMD parallel applications on a COW.
A logical design of a parallelism management system was developed derived from the synthesised system and was shown that it should ideally be based on a distributed operating system employing the client server model. The client/server based distributed operating system provides the level of transparency, modularity and flexibility necessary for a complete parallelism management system. The services identified in the synthesised system have been mapped to a set of server processes including: Process Instantiation Server providing advanced multiple and group based process creation and duplication; Process Mapping Server combining load collection, process allocation and dynamic load balancing services; and Process Interaction Server providing transparent interprocess communication and coordination. A Process Migration Server was also identified as vital to support both the instantiation and mapping servers.
The RHODOS client/server and microkernel based distributed operating system was selected to carry out research into the detailed design and to be used for the implementation this parallelism management system. RHODOS was enhanced to provide the required servers and resulted in the development of the REX Manager, Global Scheduler and Process Migration Manager to provide the services of process instantiation, mapping and migration, respectively. The process interaction services
were already provided within RHODOS and only required some extensions to the existing Process Manager and IPC Managers.
Through a variety of experiments it was shown that when this system was used to support the execution of SPMD parallel applications the overall execution times were improved, especially when multiple and group based instantiation services are employed. The RHODOS PMS was also shown to greatly reduce the programming burden experienced by users when writing SPMD parallel applications by providing a small set of powerful primitives specially designed to support parallel processing. The system was also shown to be applicable and has been used in a variety of other research areas such as Distributed Shared Memory, Parallelising Compilers and assisting the port of PVM to the RHODOS system.
The RHODOS Parallelism Management System (PMS) provides a unique and creative solution to the problem of transparently and efficiently controlling the execution of SPMD parallel applications on COWs. Combining advanced services such as multiple and group based process creation and duplication; combined process allocation and dynamic load balancing; and complete COW wide transparency produces a totally new system that addresses many of the problems not addressed in other systems.
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Štey mapwt laGadah : Gwš ʼemwniym, Šalwm ʼakšayw wʻiyṣwb hamerḥab bYiśraʼel /Feige, Michael, January 1900 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Diss. Ph. D.--sociology--Jerusalem--Hebrew university of Jerusalem, 1995. / Mention parallèle de titre ou de responsabilité : One space, two places : Gush Emunim, Peace now ans the construction of Israeli space / Michael Feige. Bibliogr. p. 247-260. Index.
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Characterization in James Agee's Let us now praise famous men : an exercise in consciousness.Smith, David Lyttleton Leach. January 1970 (has links)
No description available.
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Proleptic spiritual transformation : living in the not yet / Darryl WooldridgeWooldridge, Darryl January 2014 (has links)
God is at the centre of an, often inarticulate, innate human desire and pursuit to enjoy and reflect the divine image in which every human being was created. The purpose of this research project is to affirm that human elemental pursuit as God‘s intent to fulfill this created, intrinsic human desire in the now or, what is referred to in this doctoral thesis as, proleptic spiritual transformation (PrōST).
It seems that the world, and the extent, of spiritual transformation range from an etiolated theology to experiential fullness. Considered herein is God‘s heart, in relationship, and its implication toward an image-bearing human spiritually and how the Edenic fall interrupted this intent. From this is considered God‘s active interest in recovery of his fully-expressed image in humanity especially as experienced in PrōST. To corroborate this purpose, the means and methods of God‘s revelation in unveiling his heart, truth, and intents toward creation and humanity in particular toward spiritual recovery and PrōST, is examined. Moreover, the transformative and soteriological implications of proleptic spiritual transformation (PrōST) are investigated and whether a unified theory regarding PrōST emerges.
The primary aim of this work investigates whether individuals must wait for the afterlife to have purification and spiritual transformation fully or largely "worked out", This thesis investigate the provisions of God‘s economy to include a present enjoyment of the imago Dei (image of God) in transformation as inclusive of the existential life of Christ as the imago Christi, reflected and represented by humans in relation to God and creation. That is, this study demonstrates that PrōST, an experience of transformation usually reserved for heaven in eternity, is greatly available today.
The central theoretical argument of this study, as set out, is that humans were created in the image of God; however, the enjoyment and expression of this imago Dei, not its essence, has been greatly blemished, marred, and damaged by a God-defying wilfulness of humanity. Despite this rebellion, God desired a full restoration of the enjoyment and expression of his image. God has not forgotten or abandoned this intent. Moreover, the imago Dei now carries something more—the God-man (imago Christi). God‘s image in Jesus now carries the existential realities of his incarnate life toward which PrōST drives. This study re-examines the conventional partitioning of the "now" and "not yet" for a new balance and paradigm in expressed PrōST toward imago Dei. / PhD (Dogmatics), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus in co-operation with Greenwich School of Theology, United Kingdom, 2014
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The Interrelationship Between A Tax Revolt And The Pay-Now-Argue-Later PrincipleMitole, Denis Pokani January 2021 (has links)
Tax revolts have existed since time immemorial and have been caused by many factors. The pay-now-argue-later principle, as used by South African Revenue Services is a provision in tax administration to compel a taxpayer to settle their tax debt despite their intention to challenge the assessment for instance in a tribunal. The interrelationship between a tax revolt and the pay-now-argue-later principle researches the history, development, and psychology of a tax revolt. It also looks at the pay-now-argue-later principle, the dynamics, its rationale, and constitutionality. Some of the questions considered are whether a challenge to the pay-now-argue-later principle amounts to a tax revolt and what is the impact of the pay-now-argue-later principle on the rights of a taxpayer, including the right to protest in section 17 of the Constitution. The study looks at whether South African Revenue Service can use the pay-now-argue-later principle in dealing with a tax revolt. There is dearth of legal literature and case law about a tax revolt in South Africa and the region while many studies exist on the pay-now-argue-later principle. This study endeavors to fill that gap. This is a desk-based research. In its conclusion, the research makes recommendations that could be adopted especially by the fiscus. / Mini Dissertation (LLM)--University of Pretoria, 2021. / Mercantile Law / LLM / Unrestricted
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