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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

Colombia's war on drugs : can Peru provide the recipe for success? /

Hobaugh, Michael Eric. January 2000 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A. in National Security Affairs) Naval Postgraduate School, Dec. 2000. / "December 2000." Thesis advisor(s): Jeanne K. Giraldo. Includes bibliographical references. Also available online.
2

Predictive models for integrated pest management of the leaf beetle Chrysophtharta bimaculata in Eucalyptus nitens plantations in Tasmania

Candy, Steven Gregory. January 1999 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Tasmania, 1999. / Includes bibliographical references.
3

Hurricane Katrina and the Television News Industry

Koonce, Hilda 22 May 2006 (has links)
This thesis is about the relationship between Hurricane Katrina and the television news industry. My goal was to record the experiences of my fellow co-workers at WWL-TV, which was the only local television station to remain on the air throughout the hurricane. I also wanted to perform a review of the news industry up until the point of the storm, in order to analyze any affects the hurricane may have had on news coverage in general.
4

Ideology versus reality: the rise and fall of social revolution in Peru

Templeman, Matthew Andrew 07 September 2010 (has links)
In Latin America, a social revolution is statistically far more likely to fail than to succeed. Yet there is little understanding as to the contributory factors of revolutionary failure or success. Many researchers look for commonalities by examining multiple revolutions across the region or even around the globe and throughout large periods of time, but their analysis frequently lacks commonality in the underlying conditions of the insurgencies. The case of Peru, however, provides a unique opportunity to examine multiple revolutions in the fairly homogenous environment of one state during a short and constrained timeframe of thirty years. In the history of the Republic of Peru, there have been only four social revolutions. These insurgencies were contained within two discreet periods of time: the MIR and ELN in the 1960’s, and Shining Path and MRTA in the 1980’s to 1990’s. While each of these revolutions experienced varying levels of success, each ultimately failed due, in no small part, to a particular set of structural and socioeconomic variables. / text
5

A questão indígena na Comissão da Verdade e Reconciliação do Peru / The indigenous issue in the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Peru

Fávari, Flávia Eugênia Gimenez de 28 February 2018 (has links)
Esse trabalho é uma análise do Relatório Final da Comissão da Verdade e Reconciliação do Peru (CVR) e problematiza o tratamento dado pela Comissão na avaliação dos impactos da luta armada do Partido Comunista do Peru - Sendero Luminoso (PCP-SL) e da resposta do Estado peruano a ela. A referência territorial do nosso trabalho é a serra sul central andina, particularmente o departamento de Ayacucho. Essa é uma das regiões de maior população quéchua-falante do país, é o local onde o PCP-SL surgiu e concentrou suas ações, sobretudo nos primeiros seis anos da década de 1980, e onde o conflito deixou mais vítimas e teve uma dinâmica mais acentuada de violência. Por este motivo, o foco deste trabalho é a questão indígena a partir da pergunta: de que modo ela é apresentada no Relatório Final da CVR? Para interpretar o Relatório, realizamos uma análise do discurso a partir de uma contextualização histórica e comparada do documento, e pela seleção de uma série de categorias-chave relacionadas ao horizonte étnico-racial colonial da sociedade peruana: índio, indígena, camponês(a), mestiço(a), misti e cholo(a). Como estratégias complementares para levantar e sintetizar outro tipo de dados e informações foram feitas duas viagens de campo ao Peru. A criação e o trabalho da Comissão têm uma importância histórica evidente no contexto latino-americano. Seu Relatório deve ser apreciado como ponto de partida importante para novas hipóteses, trabalhos de campo e na construção coletiva e popular de projetos de país que sejam plurais e democráticos. Quanto à questão indígena, o Relatório Final é produto de décadas de disputa de posições políticas e intelectuais, e como tal apresenta avanços, potencialidades, contradições e limites. A invisibilização dos povos indígenas andinos e o obscurecimento da questão remetem mais, portanto, a problemas próprios desses debates que antecedem à Comissão. A CVR localiza-se em um contexto de esgotamento dos discursos de mestiçagem como aposta das elites políticas e intelectuais para resolver a questão nacional pendente, mas situa-se em um momento que a valorização e o reconhecimento das diferenças como potencialidade na construção de um Estado popular e democrático é limitada / This work aims to analyze the Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Peru (CVR in Portuguese), and discusses the Commission\'s treatment of the impacts of the armed struggle of the Communist Party of Peru - Shining Path (Sendero Luminoso, PCP-SL) and the response of the Peruvian state for it. The territorial reference of our report is the southern Andean mountain range, particularly the department of Ayacucho. This region has one of the largest Quechua-speaking population in the country, it is where PCP-SL emerged and concentrated its actions, overall in the first six years of the 1980s, when the conflict left more victims and was more violent. For this reason, the focus of this work is the indigenous issue based on the question: howis it presented in the CVR Final Report? In order to interpret the Report, a discourse analysis was conducted on a historical and comparative contextualization of the document, and the selection of categories related to the ethnic-racial colonial horizon of Peruvian society: Indian, indigenous, peasant, mestizo, misti and cholo. Two field trips to Peru were made in order to complement strategies to collect and synthesize other data and information. The creation and work of the Commission have historic importance in the Latin American context. Its Report should be appreciated as an important starting point for new hypotheses, fieldwork and the collective and popular construction of plural and democratic country projects. As for the indigenous issue, the Final Report is the product of decades of dispute over political and intellectual positions, and as such, it presents advances, potentialities, contradictions and limits. The invisibility of the Andean indigenous people and the obscuring of the issue are, therefore, more akin to the problems inherent in these debates which preceded the Commission. The CVR is in a context of the depletion of mestizaje discourses as a bet by the political and intellectual elites to solve the pending national question, but it is at a time when the valorization and recognition of differences as potentialities in the construction of a Popular and democratic state is limited
6

MORTEN LAURIDSEN’S CHORAL CYCLE, <em>NOCTURNES</em>: A CONDUCTOR’S ANALYSIS

Owens, Margaret B. 01 January 2019 (has links)
Morten Lauridsen is one of the most prolific composers of choral music in the 20th and 21st centuries. His characteristic tone is both readily identifiable and timeless. Works such as Lux Aeterna, Les Chansons des Roses, “Sure on this Shining Night” (from Nocturnes) , and “O magnum mysterium” have solidified his place as one of the most important compositional voices in modern choral music. Lauridsen’s most often-performed choral works have been individual movements excerpted from his larger choral works, due to their accessibility for advanced high school and collegiate choirs. For example, the popular “Dirait-on” comes from the cycle Les Chansons des Roses; “O nata lux” from Lux Aeterna; and “Sure on this Shining Night” from Nocturnes. Although “Sure on this Shining Night” is performed across the United States on a variety of concert programs from high school to professional choirs, it is rare to encounter a performance of the choral cycle Nocturnes in its entirety. Morten Lauridsen composed Nocturnes as the Raymond W. Brock Commissioned Work for the 2005 American Choral Directors Association (ACDA) National Convention in Los Angeles. At the time of its composition, Nocturnes was a choral cycle consisting of three movements: “Sa Nuit d’Été,” “Soneto de la Noche,” and “Sure on this Shining Night.” Later, in 2008, he added a fourth piece, “Epilogue: Voici le Soir,” which would round out the cycle. Interesting elements of both unity and contrast weave through this choral cycle, potentially leaving the listener and performer to wonder what inspired Lauridsen to select the variety of languages, poetry, and instrumentation. Three different languages and poets are utilized throughout the cycle: “Sa nuit d’Été” in French, set to a poem by Rainer Maria Rilke, “Soneto de la Noche” in Spanish, set to a poem by Pablo Neruda, “Sure on this Shining Night” in English, set to a poem by James Agee, and “Epilogue: Voici le Soir returning to French and the poetry of Rilke. Another element of contrast exists in the instrumentation, with three out of the four pieces utilizing the piano. “Soneto de la Noche,” however, is a cappella with much more pervasive vocal divisi than the other pieces, making it the most technically difficult piece in the cycle. The variety of languages and difference in level of difficulty is one reason that this song cycle is not widely performed in its entirety. This monograph draws on background information regarding other similar works by Lauridsen, information regarding the poetry of these works, and musical analysis of these works, in addition to an interview with Lauridsen himself.
7

Le témoignage et les formes de la violence dans la littérature péruvienne (1980-2008) / The testimony and the forms of the violence in the Peruvian literature (1980-2008)

Herry, Mylène 07 December 2013 (has links)
Dans une approche superficielle de l’Histoire péruvienne récente, la violence a d’abord eu pour nom Sentier Lumineux ; elle s’appelle aussi « armée » et « groupes para-militaires ». Chronologiquement, elle peut être située entre 1980 et 1992 (date de l’arrestation d’Abimael Guzmán, le leader incontesté du groupe maoïste). Une façon de dénoncer cette violence a été de faire appel à une forme discursive dont le premier sens est juridique : le témoignage. Les témoignages, alors réunis du temps de cette guerre sale (appelée aussi « conflit interne ») et dans les années qui ont suivi, ont permis à la Commission de la Vérité et de la Réconciliation (C.V.R., créée en 2001) de mettre en évidence des mécanismes qui tiennent autant à cette expérience de la violence qu’à une mise en mots de cette expérience. La réalité de ces décennies de terreur engendre donc deux réactions. Une réaction politique, journalistique et juridique (par exemple, la commission présidée par Mario Vargas Llosa en 1984, après le massacre de journalistes à Uchuraccay), d’abord. Ensuite, une réaction artistique et littéraire, souvent en décalage par rapport à la chronologie historique. Dans tous les cas, on pourrait dire que le témoignage est une forme privilégiée de ce dire. Ainsi, l’écriture des écrivains péruviens, empreinte du contexte national, tente d’informer le lecteur à l’aide de données historiographiques, journalistiques, politiques et/ou personnelles plus ou moins avérées, et au-delà cherche à réfléchir sur la crédibilité du politique, sur la légitimité du pouvoir, sur la permanence de l’Humain. Dans la plupart de ces œuvres, dont notre corpus est un échantillon, nous nous interrogeons sur les formes littéraires que peut prendre cette violence. Mêlant prose, vers et bande dessinée, on trouve chez les auteurs, d’une part, la nécessité de dire ce que l’on a vu ou entendu -le témoin de cette Histoire s’impose donc souvent comme protagoniste de l’œuvre littéraire- mais aussi, d’autre part, la nécessité de guider le lecteur dans la fiction proposée. Pour ce faire, nous avons choisi dix auteurs, consacrés ou relativement inconnus, dont une partie de l’œuvre traite de cette problématique. Ce sont les romanciers Mario Vargas Llosa (Lituma en los Andes, 1993), Alonso Cueto (La hora azul, 2005) et Santiago Roncagliolo (Abril rojo, 2007). Dans le domaine de la nouvelle, nous avons retenu aussi trois auteurs : Julián Pérez (« Los alzados », 1986), Pilar Dughi (« El cazador », 1989) et Sócrates Huaita Zuzunaga (« Ayataki », 1989). Quant à la poésie, elle est représentée ici par Rodrigo Quijano (Una procesión entera va por dentro, 1998), Rocío Silva Santisteban (Las hijas del terror, 2005) et Luis Rodríguez Castillo (El monstruo de los cerros, 2005). Enfin, nous avons sélectionné la bande dessinée de Jesús Cossío, Alfredo Villar et Luis Rossell (Rupay, 2008). / In Peru’s recent History, violence can first be superficially referred to under the name of Shining Path, or synonyms such as « army » and « paramilitary groups ». Chronologically speaking, this violence can be dated from 1980 until 1992–the year when the Maoist group’s undisputed leader, AG, was arrested. One way to denounce such violence has been to use a discursive (though originally legal) form: witness statements. All the witness statements gathered over the years of this dirty war (also named « internal conflict ») and over the following years, have made it possible for the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (T. R. C., established in 2003) to highlight mechanisms owing to both the experience of violence and the voicing of such experience. The reality of these decades of terror therefore triggered two reactions: first, a political, journalistic and legal reaction–for example, the committee chaired by MVL in 1984, after some journalists were murdered in Uchurracay; then, an artistic and literary reaction often taking a distance with historical chronology. In both cases, witness statement is the form chosen to best express such commitment. The writing of Peruvian authors, relying on national context, thus wishes to inform the reader through the use of more or less reliable historiographical, journalistic, political and/or personal data. It further intends to ponder over the credibility of politics, the legitimacy of power, and human resistance. The selection from these works we have made in our corpus wishes to question the literary forms such violence can take. Writing in prose, in verse and under the form of comic books, the authors express on the one hand the necessity to say what was seen or heard–the witness of this History often becomes in this case the protagonist of the work – but also, on the other hand, the necessity to guide the reader through the fiction itself. Our selection thus includes ten established or relatively unknown authors whose work partly tackles such issue: three novelists, Mario Vargas Llosa (Lituma en los Andes, 1993), Alonso Cueto (La hora azul, 2005) and Santiago Roncagliolo (Abril rojo, 2007), and three short-story writers, Julián Pérez (Los alzados, 1986), Pilar Dughi (El cazador, 1989) and Sócrates Huaita Zuzunaga (Ayataki, 1989). Poetry is represented through the work of Rodrigo Quijano (Una procesión entera va por dentro, 1998), Rocío Silva Santisteban (Las hijas del terror, 2005) and Luis Rodríguez Castillo (El monstruo de los cerros, 2005), and the comic book we have selected is that of Jesús Cossío, Alfredo Villar and Luis Rossell (Rupay, 2008).
8

Investigations of evolutionary arms races and host diversity in avian brood parasite systems.

Rasmussen, Justin Lee January 2013 (has links)
Obligate brood parasites rely solely on other species, the hosts, to incubate their eggs and raise their offspring, which often reduces the host’s reproductive output. This reproductive cost has led to the evolution of anti-parasite adaptations among hosts, which in turn, has led to better trickery by parasites, a process termed an evolutionary arms race. The objective of this thesis was to investigate host-parasite coevolutionary arms races to address questions of host-use diversity. Host diversity varies dramatically among brood-parasitic species, but reasons for variations in host-use among brood parasites are not well understood. In Chapter 2, I address questions on host diversity specifically, whereas I address questions about coevolutionary interaction between hosts and parasites in Chapters 3, 4 and 5 using two host-parasite systems, one in New Zealand and one in North America. Chapter 2 investigates if host diversity is constrained by aggressive nest defence behaviour. I compared the nest defence behaviour of the exclusive host of the shining cuckoo Chrysococcyx lucidus lucidus on the main islands of New Zealand, the grey warbler Gerygone igata, to two other potentially suitable hosts that are not currently parasitised, the fantail Rhipidura fuliginosa and the silvereye Zosterops lateralis. The results suggest that grey warblers are as aggressive as fantails and silvereyes towards shining cuckoos at the nest and thus, host specialisation in shining cuckoos in New Zealand, at least, does not appear to be the result of nest-defence constraints imposed by potential but unused host species. Chapter 3 investigates if red-winged blackbirds Agelaius phoeniceus, a species that typically accepts the eggs of parasites, recognises, as indicated by changes in incubation behaviour, when they have been parasitised by brown-headed cowbirds Molothrus ater. Recognition without rejection suggests that rejection may be context-dependent but the results suggest that red-winged blackbirds do not recognise when their nests have been parasitised by brown-headed cowbirds, at least at the egg stage. This study was the first to investigate if hosts that almost invariably accept the eggs of parasites recognise when they have been parasitised. Chapter 4 investigated the possibility of coevolutionary arms races occurring through olfactory channels in contrast to earlier work that focussed only on visual and auditory cues. Recent research has revealed that olfactory abilities in birds are more common than previously thought. Uropygial gland secretions are posited to be a key source of avian body odour and its composition has been found to vary among species and individuals as well as between the sexes. I compared gas-chromatography (GC-FID) traces of shining cuckoo preen wax to the GC-FID traces of the grey warbler, the only host of the shining cuckoo in mainland New Zealand, as well as the preen wax of seven other species for evidence of mimicry. Preliminary results suggest there is evidence for mimicry and the potential for odour-based nestling discrimination in grey warblers. Further tests recording the response of grey warblers to odour-manipulated nestlings are necessary. Finally, in Chapter 5, I investigated the response of the song thrush Turdus philomelos, a species that rejects the eggs of the common cuckoo Cuculus canorus and conspecifics at intermediate and low frequencies, respectively, to nest-odour manipulations using the preen wax of conspecifics and heterospecifics. The results suggest song thrush do not use odour to assess the risk of parasitism at least as indicated in terms of changes in incubation behaviour. Investigations of the role of olfaction in avian brood parasite systems can provide a better understanding of brood-parasite coevolution. Only by considering all channels of communication can we be sure to completely understand the coevolutionary dynamics between brood parasites and their hosts.
9

Development of an advanced generation breeding strategy for Eucalyptus Nitens (Deanne and Maiden) Maiden.

Swain, Tammy-Lyn. January 2013 (has links)
The objective of this study was to develop and implement an advanced generation breeding programme at the Institute for Commercial Forestry Research (ICFR) to manage and integrate the many and disjunct breeding and production populations of Eucalyptus nitens established by various entities over the past 30 years at multiple sites in South Africa. To develop such a breeding strategy, a good understanding of the population genetics, and the underlying assumptions made by tree breeders about the species, was needed. Eucalyptus nitens is an important forestry species grown for pulp and paper production in the temperate, summer rainfall regions of South Africa. A tree improvement programme has been ongoing at the ICFR for three decades. The measurement and statistical analysis of data from eight F1 trials established during the 1980s and 1990s have enabled characterisation of the ICFR’s breeding population. Provenance testing showed that the more northerly New South Wales (Australia) Eucalyptus nitens provenances of Barren Mountain and Barrington Tops are distinctly better suited to growth in South Africa than the southern New South Wales provenances and the Victorian provenances, Penny Saddle and Bendoc. Generally, the species was not badly affected by Coniothyrium canker. High Type B genetic correlations for all sites pairs, except one comparison, ranged from 0.75 to 0.99 for diameter at breast height at 76 to 113 months, indicating very little, or no, genotype by environment interaction for diameter at breast height for the genotypes tested in the F1 generation. Narrow sense heritability estimates ranged from 0.01 to 0.34, indicating that the species provides a breeding opportunity for improvement of diameter growth. High genetic correlations of greater than 0.90 between diameter measurements at 52 to 62 months after establishment and diameter measurements at 94 or 113 months were found, indicating that selections can be made reliably at five or six years. Diameter measurements at both 60 months and full rotation (94 to 113 months) were highly correlated with the final height measurements in these trial series (rg > 0.71 and > 0.83, respectively). Predicted genetic gains for the F2 over the F1 generation were highest in the trials at Goedehoop and Arthur’s Seat, with predicted increases in diameter at breast height of 3.07 cm (17.1%) and 3.17 cm (20.7%), respectively, at full rotation. Genetic improvement in the species has been slower than anticipated due to delayed and infrequent flowering and seed production. Three genetic gain trials were established, firstly, to quantify the gains that have been made in the first generation of improvement in the breeding programme; and secondly, to establish whether a number of seed source and orchard variables influence the performance of the progeny. These variables were: the number of flowering trees in the seed orchard, year of seed collection, seed orchard origin and composition of seed orchard seed bulks. Diameter at breast height and tree height were measured in the trials at between 87 and 97 months after establishment, and timber volumes and survival were calculated. Improved seed orchard bulks performed significantly better (p < 0.01) than unimproved controls in the field trials, and genetic gains ranging from 23.2 to 164.8 m3ha-1 were observed over the unimproved commercial seed. There were significant differences (p < 0.01) in progeny growth between the levels of flowering, with higher levels of flowering (R 40 %) producing substantially greater progeny growth than lower flowering levels (S 20 %). The seed orchard origin had no effect on progeny growth in this trial series. This suggests that seed collected from any of the four seed orchards tested will produce trees with significant improvement in growth. Various scenarios investigating a range of assumptions were developed and used to predict genetic gain in the F2 populations. These were compared with realised gains achieved in the genetic gain trials. The family nested within provenance scenarios proved to be closer to realised gain than the family across provenance predictions. Two scenarios were used for family nested within provenance: Firstly, actual flowering for family nested within provenance; and secondly, estimated flowering after a 30% roguing of poor families. For both scenarios, a coefficient of relationship of 0.33 predicted gains closest to the realised gains. Indications were that the effects were additive, and that very little or no heterosis had occurred. The statistical information suggested that outcrossing in the seed orchards was > 80%. This study provides an objective and quantitative assessment of the underlying assumptions used for estimating genetic parameters, and predicting gain in this population of Eucalyptus nitens. At the same time that genetic gain trials were established, F2 trials were planted, using seedlots collected from F1 seed orchards. Analysis of the two F2 trials showed that realised gains for diameter at breast height at 87 months were close to the predicted values and ranged from 1.02 cm to 1.90 cm. Two exceptions were the sites at Helvetia and Babanango, where gains were under- and over-predicted, respectively. Realised heritability estimates, which are related directly to the realised gain and the actual selection intensities used in the seed orchards, reflected this trend. Estimation of breeding values allowed for selection of elite individuals in top families. Both grand-maternal provenance origin and F1 maternal effects were significant in the F2 trials. A Type B genetic correlation of 0.61 for diameter at 87 months indicated the possible presence of genotype by environment interactions for the two F2 sites. A low narrow sense heritability estimate of 0.06 for diameter at breast height at 87 months at one F2 site indicated that more emphasis should be placed on family information rather than individual information at this site. A heritability estimate of 0.17 for diameter at breast height at 87 months at the second site, however, indicated that further improvement is possible in this population of Eucalyptus nitens. Modelling of predicted genetic gain using various breeding strategy scenarios can be a useful tool in assisting with the decision on which strategy or management plan will deliver the most genetic gains per unit time. Such modelling, using the parameters established in the first part of the study, played an important role in developing the advanced generation breeding strategy for Eucalyptus nitens. In addition, the modelling exercise highlighted various management options which could be used to increase gains in the existing production populations or orchards. Indications are that additional roguing of 1) existing Clonal Seed Orchards based on results of F2 trials (i.e., backward selection); and 2) F1 Breeding Seed Orchards based on stricter provenance selection, will markedly increase the quality of the seed produced from these orchards within one season. This study also highlighted the importance of shortening the breeding cycle in Eucalyptus nitens, particularly in view of the delays caused by reticent flowering and seed production in the species. The information and understanding gathered from this study led to the development of a proposal for an advanced generation breeding strategy in Eucalyptus nitens. This proposal uses parental reconstruction of open-pollinated progeny to secure pedigree information of forward selections, thus combining the benefits of increased genetic gain with a shortened breeding cycle. Recommendations on the management and adaption of current production populations to increase gains have been made, because establishment and management of improved material in seed orchards to ensure a sustainable supply of improved seed to the South African forestry industry, is a key objective of the ICFR Eucalyptus nitens breeding programme. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2013.
10

Horrifying Empathy : A comparative study of empathy in Stephen King's Pet Sematary and The Shining, with a discussion of the use of horror literature in the EFL-classroom

Petersson, Niklas January 2018 (has links)
This essay is a comparative analysis of the novels Pet Sematary and The Shining by Stephen King, where the empathy that the characters may invoke is analyzed. The focus lies on the children, mothers and fathers of the two families featured in the novels, who are analyzed in terms of Leake’s division of easy or difficult empathy. The essay also discusses the use of horror fiction in the EFL-classroom and how it may train students’ ability to empathize and motivate reluctant readers. The child characters mainly offer easy empathy since they experience negative emotions and victimization. The adult characters appear to be more nuanced, especially the two fathers who may invoke a combination of easy and difficult empathy through their change towards antagonists, or through their abusive behavior. Due to King’s complex characters, and suspenseful storytelling, it is possible that horror fiction of this kind can be used in the EFL-classroom to attract reluctant readers. As the students also come in contact with difficult empathy they can train their ability to understand and empathize with people who may act in ways that the students normally would disagree with. In that regard, it appears that horror fiction can have a pedagogical use in the EFL-classroom.

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