Books on the topic 'Building Materials Division'

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1

Y, Lee D., Shah S. P, American Society of Civil Engineers. Materials Engineering Division., and ASCE National Convention (1988 : St. Louis, Mo.), eds. New horizons in construction materials: Proceedings of a session sponsored by the Materials Engineering Division of the American Society of Civil Engineers in conjunction with ASCE National Convention in St. Louis, Missouri, October 26, 1988. New York, N.Y: American Society of Civil Engineers, 1988.

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2

T, Johnson William, American Society of Civil Engineers. Materials Engineering Division., and ASCE National Convention (1986 : Seattle, Wash.), eds. Construction materials for civil engineering projects: Proceedings of a session sponsored by the Materials Engineering Division of the American Society of Civil Engineers in conjunction with the ASCE Convention in Seattle, Washington, April 7, 1986. New York: American Society of Civil Engineers, 1986.

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3

Bock, Geoff. The end was to build well: A half-century of Australian government building research. [North Ryde, N.S.W.]: CSIRO Australia, Division of Building, Construction and Engineering, 1995.

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4

Technical Preservation Services' publications and online materials. Washington, D.C: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, National Park Service, Technical Preservation Services, 2007.

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5

Nader, Ghafoori, American Society of Civil Engineers. Materials Engineering Division., Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. Dept. of Civil Engineering and Mechanics., and ASCE National Convention (1993 : Dallas, Tex.), eds. Utilization of industrial by-products for construction materials: Proceedings of the session sponsored by the Materials Engineering Division in conjunction with the ASCE National Convention in Dallas, Texas, October 24-28, 1993. New York: American Society of Civil Engineers, 1993.

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6

R, Lesuer D., Srivatsan T. S, Minerals, Metals and Materials Society. Structural Materials Division, and Minerals, Metals and Materials Society. Fall Meeting, eds. Modelling the performance of engineering structural materials II: Proceedings of a symposium sponsored by the Structural Materials Division (SMD) of TMS (the Minerals, Metals & Materials Society) held during the fall meeting 2001 ; location, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA ; dates, November 4-8, 2001. Warrendale, Penn: TMS, 2001.

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7

1930-, Paris P. C., Soboyejo W. O, Srivatsan T. S, and Minerals, Metals and Materials Society. Structural Materials Division., eds. High cycle fatigue of structural materials: Symposium proceedings in honor of Professor Paul C. Paris : proceedings of a symposium sponsored by the Structural Materials Division (SMD) of the Minerals, Metals and Materials Society (TMS) held during Materials Week '97 in Indianapolis, IN, September 14-18, 1997, hosted by the Minerals, Metals and Materials Society and ASM International. Warrendale, Pa: The Society, 1997.

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8

Simmons, H. Leslie. Building materials: Dangerous properties of products in MasterFormat divisions 7 and 9. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1997.

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9

Office, General Accounting. General Services Administration: Response to follow-up questions related to building repairs and alterations and courthouse utilization : [report to] the Honorable Bob Franks, chairman, Subcommittee on Economic Development, Public Buildings, Hazardous Materials, and Pipeline Transportation, Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, House of Representatives. Washington, D.C: The Office, 2000.

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10

(Editor), D. R. Lesuer, and T. S. Srivatsan (Editor), eds. Modeling the Performance of Engineering Structural Materials II: Proceedings of a Symposium Sponsored by the Structural Materials Division (Smd) of Tms ... & Materials Society) Held During the fall. Tms, 2001.

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11

Musa, Mohd Jalaludin bin. Collection building and development of Malaysian materials in the National Collection Division of the University of Malaya Library: Problems and prospects. 1988.

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12

Meiton, Fredrik. Electrical Palestine. University of California Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520295889.001.0001.

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Like electricity, political power travels through physical materials whose properties govern its flow. Electrical Palestine charts the construction of Palestine’s electric grid in the interwar period and its implication in the area’s rapid and uneven development. It does so in an effort to rethink both the origins of the Arab-Israeli Conflict and the interplay of politics, capital, and technology more broadly. The study follows the coevolution of the power system and Zionist state building efforts in Palestine on the conceptual and material level. Conceptually, the design and construction of the system shaped Palestine as a precisely bounded entity with a distinct political, social, and economic character. Materially, the borders of the mandate were mapped onto the power system and structured an ethno-national division of capital, land, and labor. In 1948, these coevolving forces ultimately carried over into Jewish statehood and Palestinian statelessness.
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13

Leppo, Holly Williams. ARE Sample Exams: Nonstructural Divisions. Professional Publications (CA), 2007.

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14

Simmons, H. Leslie, and Lewis Richard J. Sr. Building Materials: Dangerous Properties of Products in MASTERFORMAT Divisions 7 And 9. Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, John, 1997.

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15

Trondman, Mats. Burning Schools/Building Bridges: Ethnographical Touchdowns in the Civil Sphere. Edited by Jeffrey C. Alexander, Ronald N. Jacobs, and Philip Smith. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195377767.013.15.

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This article demonstrates what ethnography can do for cultural sociology by investigating the struggles of Muslim immigrants for multicultural integration in Sweden, and native Swedish resistance to it. The discussion is based on the presupposition that data can speak to us, even “surprise” us, due to the theoretical attentiveness the ethnographer can bring to them. Such notion makes it possible for the reader to see that all possible aspects of encounters in everyday life “carry a meaning other than the simple fact of their existence.” The article considers the position of “cultural autonomy” in what less culturally musical sociologists take to be merely divisive material conflicts over boundary position. It shows that many Muslim immigrants, despite their anger and resentment, still yearn for recognition and for the success of Sweden’s social democratic ideals.
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16

Inayatullah, Naeem, and David L. Blaney. Units, Markets, Relations, and Flow: Beyond Interacting Parts to Unfolding Wholes. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228637.013.272.

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Heterodox work in Global Political Economy (GPE) finds its motive force in challenging the ontological atomism of International Political Economy (IPE) orthodoxy. Various strains of heterodoxy that have grown out of dependency theory and World-Systems Theory (WST), for example, emphasize the social whole: Individual parts are given form and meaning within social relations of domination produced by a history of violence and colonial conquest. An atomistic approach, they stress, seems designed to ignore this history of violence and relations of domination by making bargaining among independent units the key to explaining the current state of international institutions. For IPE, it is precisely this atomistic approach, largely inspired by the ostensible success of neoclassical economics, which justifies its claims to scientific rigor. International relations can be modeled as a market-like space, in which individual actors, with given preferences and endowments, bargain over the character of international institutional arrangements. Heterodox scholars’ treatment of social processes as indivisible wholes places them beyond the pale of acceptable scientific practice. Heterodoxy appears, then, as the constitutive outside of IPE orthodoxy.Heterodox GPE perhaps reached its zenith in the 1980s. Just as heterodox work was being cast out from the temple of International Relations (IR), heterodox scholars, building on earlier work, produced magisterial studies that continue to merit our attention. We focus on three texts: K. N. Chaudhuri’s Asia Before Europe (1990), Eric Wolf’s Europe and the People Without History (1982), and L. S. Stavrianos’s Global Rift (1981). We select these texts for their temporal and geographical sweep and their intellectual acuity. While Chaudhuri limits his scope to the Indian Ocean over a millennium, Wolf and Stavrianos attempt an anthropology and a history, respectively, of European expansion, colonialism, and the rise of capitalism in the modern era. Though the authors combine different elements of material, political, and social life, all three illustrate the power of seeing the “social process” as an “indivisible whole,” as Schumpeter discusses in the epigram below. “Economic facts,” the region, or time period they extract for detailed scrutiny are never disconnected from the “great stream” or process of social relations. More specifically, Chaudhuri’s work shows notably that we cannot take for granted the distinct units that comprise a social whole, as does the IPE orthodoxy. Rather, such units must be carefully assembled by the scholar from historical evidence, just as the institutions, practices, and material infrastructure that comprise the unit were and are constructed by people over the longue durée. Wolf starts with a world of interaction, but shows that European expansion and the rise and spread of capitalism intensified cultural encounters, encompassing them all within a global division of labor that conditioned the developmental prospects of each in relation to the others. Stavrianos carries out a systematic and relational history of the First and Third Worlds, in which both appear as structural positions conditioned by a capitalist political economy. By way of conclusion, we suggest that these three works collectively inspire an effort to overcome the reification and dualism of agents and structures that inform IR theory and arrive instead at “flow.”
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