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Spatial and temporal distributions of sea turtles within the Florida current and surrounding watersUnknown Date (has links)
Assessing the spatial and temporal distributions of marine turtles in an open
system poses both observational and analytical challenges due to their migratory nature
and use of large current systems. Concentrations of animals can shift because turtles
undergo large-scale migrations and habitat shifts seasonally as well as a function of lifestage.
Surface counts of marine turtles in waters off Florida’s east coast were made in
and adjacent to the Florida Current using standard aerial surveys. While it is understood
that marine turtles use waters off the eastern coast of Florida, here we document the
magnitude of the shift in turtle presence each season throughout a two year study and
identify habitat characteristics where turtles occur most frequently. Our assessment of
marine turtles in the waters off southeast Florida provide valuable metrics describing the
in-water biology of sea turtles in this area to inform future management strategies of
these endangered species. / Includes bibliography. / Thesis (M.S.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2014. / FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
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Industry-scientist cooperative research : application to the West Coast groundfish fisheryHarms, John (John Howard) 13 April 1999 (has links)
Declining harvest levels, static agency research budgets, and increasing tension
among scientists, managers, and industry members are the legacy of the present research
and management institutions in the West Coast groundfish fishery. Cooperative research,
the active participation of the commercial fishing industry in scientific research, is
receiving increased attention as a potential alternative to current practices. Its strongest attributes are its potential to improve the spatial and temporal coverage of fisheries data collection and its potential to reduce marginal research costs. Despite these potential benefits, there are several obstacles to adopting cooperative research on a large scale including concerns about biased data, compatibility and continuity with current data gathering regimes, and the motivations of the participants.
This paper examines the role that attitudes, beliefs, and perceptions play in
influencing one's willingness to participate in cooperative research. Six focused
discussions were held with industry, scientists, and managers in the West Coast
groundfish fishery to define the key issues of cooperative research and to assist in
designing a written questionnaire. The questionnaire was mailed to scientists, managers,
and industry members in the groundfish fishery to elicit responses on issues including the current science and management process, uncertainty, industry-scientist working
relationships, and the costs and benefits of potential cooperative research projects.
Analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to examine response differences among groups,
and discriminant analysis was employed to identify characteristics that differentiated
among groups formed as a result of their survey responses.
Results indicated that both scientists and industry believe cooperative research has
potential for improving fisheries science, however there were significant differences
between the groups on most other issues. Generally, industry respondents were more
critical of the industry-scientist working relationship and scientists' and managers'
commitment to cooperation than were the scientists and managers themselves. Scientists
tended to be more skeptical than industry about the direct involvement of industry in
fisheries science projects such as port interview programs and independent industry scientist research organizations.
Both groups demonstrated considerable heterogeneity, although industry tended
to hold a greater diversity of opinions and perceptions than did scientists. Significant
differences on certain issues were often explained by one's degree of involvement in the
management process, state of residence, employer, job description, and gear type. The
results of this survey provide useful data for the selection and design of future
cooperative research projects and identify areas upon which scientists, managers, and
industry need to improve if cooperative research is to play a larger role in fisheries
science. / Graduation date: 2000
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U.S. MEDIATED PUBLIC DIPLOMACY IN A CRISIS: ROMANIAN CASE ANALYSIS OF ROMANIAN MEDIA VERSUS U.S. EMBASSY FRAMINGComan, Ioana Alexandra 01 May 2011 (has links)
This thesis studies a case of U.S. mediated public diplomacy in Romania by analyzing the Romanian media framing as compared to the U.S. embassy’s framing of a public diplomacy crisis. It seeks to participate in the discussion about public diplomacy in general and mediated public diplomacy in particular. The case, from 2004, concerns the death of Romanian rock star, Teo Peter, in a car accident caused by an American marine serving in the U.S. embassy. A public diplomacy crisis situation focuses on the U.S. mediated public diplomacy efforts to prevent damaging its image; and also intensifies media’s interest on writing about the subject. The analysis in this study is based on the investigation of the similarities and differences in the frames used in the press releases and news articles to construct the image of the same event. The thesis employs Entman’s concept of U.S. mediated public diplomacy when analyzing the framing process of two of the major actors presented in his model: the target nation media and the U.S. public and media diplomacy (U.S. officials in that country). Benoit’s model is used to better explain the press releases’ framing. Framing analysis was chosen as a qualitative research method, as this study aims to explore the images created by mass media or by public diplomacy efforts (through the press releases) when they construct a specific reality for the same public diplomacy crisis. Three major Romanian national, daily newspapers and the U.S. embassy’s press releases were analyzed. The findings revealed that the Romanian media framed the public diplomacy crisis in a different way than the U.S. officials framed it. It seems that the U.S. failed in promoting its framing of the public diplomacy crisis to the Romanian media and therefore the public.
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Student personnel services in Pacific Coast schools of ministerial trainingWood, Paul Hudson 01 October 1953 (has links)
Graduation date: 1954
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Goodwill : Skillnader och likheter mellan hur IFRS och U.S. GAAP behandlar goodwillKarlsson, Thomas, Oscar, Larsen January 2011 (has links)
Abstract Title: Goodwill – differences and similarities between how IFRS and U.S. GAAP treats goodwill Level: One year master, 15 credits Author: Oscar Larsen and Thomas Karlsson Supervisor: Leif Carlsson Examiner: Cecilia Lindh Year of publication: 2011 The main issue: What are the differences and similarities of the treatment of goodwill between the U.S. GAAP and IFRS? What can the transition from U.S. GAAP to IFRS imply to companies regarding goodwill? Aim: The aim with this thesis is to treat differences and similarities between U.S. GAAP and IFRS regarding how goodwill is generated and distributed in a business combination and also how the process of an impairment test of goodwill is carried through. The aim is further to treat possible effects that a transition may imply to companies regarding goodwill. Method: In this study a qualitative research method has been used where the gathered information has been collected from interviews that has been analyzed and compared with the theoretical studies. Conclusion: Differences described in theory doesn’t have to be confirmed with practices though it depends on how different companies in different industries interpret and apply these regulations Keywords: Goodwill, IFRS, U.S. GAAP, impairment, business combination
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The Research of the Relationship between the U.S., China and Taiwan After the 911 IncidentWang, Jih-ching 26 January 2005 (has links)
The Research of the Relationship between the U.S., China and Taiwan
After the 911 Incident
Abstract
The traditional diplomacy of America puts its main focus on Europe with little attention on Asia, however after having the 911 Attack in the U.S.2001, Bush junior administration has immediately adjusted the pace of global strategies. The main strategy has shifted its focus towards Asia, it shows that the US makes National Defences the first priority and seeks for the support of counter- terrorism from China in Asia. Before the 911 incident, China was not at the very heart of American policy in Asia policy, as a result of 1999 Chinese Embassy bombing in Belgrade in the former Yugoslavia Republic of Serbia and the April 2001 Hainan reconnaissance plane incident, there had been an awkward tension between U.S. and China. After seeking the cooperation of counter terrorism with China, it presented an opportunity that the U.S. and China can use to improve their relationship.
Since the normalisation between U.S. and China, it has been through from the ¡§strategy cooperation relations¡¨ which was established to against Russia to the neorealism of ¡§constructive relations,¡¨ Clinton era formed a ¡§comprehensive association¡¨ with mainland China and advanced it into ¡§ constructive strategy partnership,¡¨ yet, before 911 Attack, the relationship of Bush junior Administration and China were ¡§strategic competitors¡¨, then after 911 incident, due to the strategy transformation of U.S., both parties developed ¡§ Constructive cooperation relations, ¡¨ even though there are still conflicts on the benefits, U.S.-China relation has ameliorated to some extent.
As far as U.S. concerns, China is regarded a partner of counter terrorism and benefit exchanger by the world, yet U.S. recognises China as a potential strategic adversary, in some ways, U.S. still exposes the threatening gesture to China. Bush junior has indicated to China that U.S. does not support the independence of Taiwan, but if China force invades Taiwan on the premise that Taiwan does not declare independence, U.S. does not rule out the possibility of assisting Taiwan by the means of miliary. It has shown the U.S. strategy has changed from ¡§strategic ambiguity¡¨ to ¡§strategic clear¡¨ since Clinton to Bush junior.
After the 911 incident, the relationship of U.S. and China has definitely improved in a short period, in terms of the long run, both parties still have serious differences regarding to the problem of Taiwan, human rights, economics impacts and anti nuclear proliferation. These conflicts still restrain the development of U.S and China relationship, in addition, U.S. has troops in middle Asia, in terms of the military strategy, the benefit of Mainland China is deprived. In terms of long term U.S-China relationship, it represents a cooperative yet defensive relationship, on the basis of that Taiwan does not declare independence, according to U.S.-Taiwan relationship, U.S. will secure the safety of Taiwan, and maintain the peace cross-straits.
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Cultural production and genre formation in the U.S. recording industry, 1920-1935Barnett, Kyle Stewart 21 April 2015 (has links)
On the eve of 1920, the U.S. recording industry had been through a number of near-fatal economic downturns since its precarious emergence in the 1890s, and yet stood on the verge of its most influential decade to date. Already in its short history, the recording industry had nearly ceased to exist in the 1890s, saved itself by transforming the phonograph from office machine to nickel-in-the-slot novelty, survived the first of many format wars to come, and reinvented itself by introducing the phonograph into American homes. During the 1920s and 1930s, the recording industry participated in creating genre categories and identifying audiences for music that had previously gone unrecorded. By concentrating on both industry giants (Victor, Columbia) and smaller labels that were key to industry trends (Gennett, Paramount, Okeh), this dissertation's working hypothesis is that a new mode of production in the recording industry between the world wars -- based both on previous business strategies and new market conditions -- allowed a few large corporations to develop into a highly organized industry. This relationship between genre (understood as a configuration of social, cultural, ideological, and aesthetic beliefs) and mode of production (in its most concrete sense, how a given company operates) has continued to be an important one to the record industry, because with each new genre and sub-genre the industry has the potential to connect with underserved or unrecognized audiences. By combining industrial history with cultural analysis, this dissertation analyzes institutional cultures at various record companies and the contributions of musicians and various cultural intermediaries who helped shape U. S. popular music beginning in the early twentieth century. The central questions to which I continually return are: How did the consolidation of the recording industry into distinct company cultures shape the records that were made? What role did these cultures play in the shaping of genres, in terms of both creative control and technological formats? And finally, how do these various aspects interrelate in the context of the recording industry -- both as an industry involved in manufacturing culture and reflecting its own participation as a cultural institution? / text
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Reorienting America: Race, Geopolitics, and the Repeal of Asian Exclusion, 1940-1952Hong, Jane H 08 June 2015 (has links)
This dissertation examines the movement to repeal the Asian exclusion laws in the United States during World War II and the early Cold War years. It situates campaigns for repeal in the context of two interrelated developments: African American civil rights activism in the United States and shifting U.S. geopolitical interests in post-1940 Asia. As U.S. foreign policy priorities pivoted toward Asia beginning in World War II, Americans' view of the world changed in ways that, at times, allowed geopolitics to supersede restrictions based on race. Drawing from U.S., Indian, and Korean sources, the project charts how a transnational cast of American missionaries, U.S. and Asian state officials, and Asian and Asian American activists used the newly expedient language and logic of geopolitics to end the racial exclusion of Asians from immigration and naturalization eligibility. The study highlights a paradox at the heart of the repeal campaigns: beginning in World War II, the perceived foreignness that underwrote the historical exclusion of Asians as “aliens ineligible to citizenship” legitimized them as spokespersons for repeal. During a time when few Americans had knowledge of Asia, Asian American activists parlayed their presumptive expertise as Asian “insiders” to secure a foothold as lobbyists on Capitol Hill. The strategy undermined Asian Americans’ claims to inclusion in the long-term, however, by reinforcing their image as racial foreigners in America. The dissertation builds on a growing body of literature interrogating the relationship between international developments and U.S. racial reform. Comparatively little scholarship about this period has looked beyond a white-black racial binary, in spite of Japanese internment, U.S. military occupations in postwar Japan and Korea, and unprecedented American intervention across Cold War Asia. My study demonstrates how developments particular to Asia – the Pacific front of World War II, Asian decolonization, and the Korean War – both facilitated and constrained the scope of legislative reform activists achieved. / History
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Projected Effects of Climatic Variation Upon Water Availability in Western United States (Progress Report)Stockton, Charles W. 07 1900 (has links)
Cover states: Final Report submitted to the National Science Foundation / Grant No. ATM 79-24365 / Foreword states that this item is "in reality, a progress rather than a final report."
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Change in the U.S. Nuclear Nonproliferation Policy toward India (1998-2005):Accommodating the AnomalyBhatia, Vandana Unknown Date
No description available.
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