Academic literature on the topic 'Dublin City Countil'

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Journal articles on the topic "Dublin City Countil"

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WALLACE, CIARÁN. "Civil society in search of a state: Dublin 1898–1922." Urban History 45, no. 3 (April 10, 2017): 426–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0963926817000244.

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ABSTRACT:A municipal boundary dispute between Dublin's nationalist city council and its independent unionist suburbs in the early twentieth century was symptomatic of a much deeper disagreement over national identity within the United Kingdom. Considering urban councils as the link between the state and local civil society (or subscriber democracy), and using theories proposed by Graeme Morton, R.J. Morris and Norton E. Long, along with illustrative contrasts from municipal behaviour in Edinburgh, this article examines these relationships in Edwardian Dublin. It argues that the modernization of Irish municipal government in 1898 empowered Dublin in unforeseen ways. By amplifying existing divergent identities, and providing a platform for the nascent Irish state, municipal government reforms contributed significantly to the break-up of the UK in 1922.
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Tormey, Thomas. "Dublin City Council and the 1916 Rising." Irish Studies Review 27, no. 3 (May 27, 2019): 448–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09670882.2019.1624358.

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A Hamilton, Julia, and Matthew Mullarkey. "Enabling Cities to Harness the Full Potential of the Internet of Things." Muma Case Review 6 (2021): 001–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/4861.

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Jamie Cudden, the Smart City Programme Manager for Dublin City Council (DCC), had just participated in the most recent review of the sensor-enabled smart gully project in Dublin city. Tasked with exploring how technology can help address city challenges to create a ‘smarter’ Dublin, Jamie wondered why more smart sensor applications were not being identified and deployed by DCC departments. He knew that smart sensors existed in the commercial marketplace for everything that could be measured and believed that most city services could be improved with better, real-time measurement. What he could not understand was why more sensor-enabled connected systems were not being deployed by operational service teams across the city. Over the last three years Smart Docklands, a smart city testbed in the Dublin Docklands, had facilitated a broad range of projects with DCC staff utilising Internet of Things (IoT) technology. While these projects demonstrated the value of IoT for specific applications – such as blocked gullies [Exhibit 1] and waste management - there still remained a relatively low utilisation of IoT across DCC’s operational services. Jamie thought, if IoT is really a better way of addressing these issues, why was there not a mass migration towards its use across the Council? Through talking with his colleagues, Jamie realised that a major barrier to IoT deployments was a lack of knowledge of what IoT was and how it would help address the challenges the Council was trying to solve. How would Jamie energise his current and future peers to identify more ways to use technology to connect the city? How would they learn about the power of IoT connected devices? How might each city department generate innovative smart solutions to identify and respond to critical issues with the infrastructure and services of the city? Jamie had recently attended an ‘Introduction to IoT’ workshop for DCC staff at Dogpatch Labs. The workshop highlighted that educating the city’s staff about IoT could encourage a move towards more sensor driven city operations. With this, he was now faced with the challenge of how best to design and deliver an education programme on a larger scale so cities across Ireland could capitalise on the on the benefits of IoT.
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Snesareva, Marina. "Palatalisation in Dublin Irish, or How to Speak Irish with a Dublin Accent." Studia Celtica Posnaniensia 2, no. 1 (January 27, 2017): 63–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/scp-2017-0004.

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Abstract This paper focuses on palatalisation in Irish spoken by Dublin-based bilinguals with English as their first language. As opposed to previous researches in Irish phonetics and phonology, this study examines new speakers of Irish, whose speech was recorded in November 2014. All informants were born and raised in Dublin, lived either in the city or in the neighbouring counties and demonstrated sufficient fluency in Irish, i.e. had no problems with reading, could actively participate in conversation and give detailed answers without switching to English. Computer analysis of their data has shown that even though in traditional Irish dialects palatalisation is not position-bound, there is a correlation between palatalisation of a consonant and its neighbouring vowel quality in the speech of Dublin bilingualsdue to English influence andother factors.
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M Dowling, Conor, Matthew Mullarkey, and Siobhán Clarke. "A District Approach to Smart Mobility." Muma Case Review 6 (2021): 001–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/4859.

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“As a Smart City district evolves, and its success as a business location of choice grows, we need to ensure that mobility challenges are addressed for all communities. Smart technologies are a major factor.” – Ronan Herron Ronan Herron had recently been appointed the Smart Dublin Coordinator with responsibility for Smart Sandyford and was travelling to its launch on the modern Luas light rail system. Ronan found himself marvelling at the changes to the Sandyford area since he first started working in the Council twelve years earlier: Gone was the old industrial landscape with pockets of sad-looking housing estates, and in its place was a vibrant business district with multiple household name multinational companies, nestled with modern residential areas. Sandyford was a short distance from Dublin city centre but just ten short years prior, few would have anticipated the economic and business transformation that had overcome this once maligned and side-lined district of Dublin. While Ronan had managed to get a seat on the packed Luas tram, he noticed multiple congested areas in and around the route to the launch. Clearly, this had become a very popular district indeed! Since starting in his post, Ronan had observed that the Dún Laoghaire Rathdown County Council (DLR), responsible for Smart Sandyford, was very excited about the future for the Sandyford district, anticipating (and indeed, planning for) significant growth in the number of businesses moving there, and additional residential areas. Ronan contemplated what impact this was likely to have on on-going mobility for everyone living and working in the district. Given his background in smart technologies, and Smart Sandyford’s position as a part of Smart Dublin, Ronan naturally found himself contemplating technology as a means to address Sandyford’s growing mobility challenges. He was on his way to launch Smart Sandyford, and surely, smart technology could contribute to solutions to those challenges. This Smart District offered a means to answer some of the pressing questions around mobility for Dublin: How might technology deployment improve mobility services? How would mobility solutions impact all stakeholders in the community? Can technology alleviate the impact of transport on the environment? How would the data needed to enable smart mobility be collected and analysed? What data would even be needed?
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O’Doherty, M. "Royal Academy of Medicine in Ireland and Dublin City Council Charles Lucas Tercentenary Symposium." Irish Journal of Medical Science (1971 -) 184, no. 3 (February 1, 2015): 539–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11845-015-1250-4.

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Gkartzios, Menelaos, and Mark Scott. "Countering counter-urbanisation: Spatial planning challenges in a dispersed city-region, the Greater Dublin Area." Town Planning Review 81, no. 1 (January 2010): 23–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/tpr.2009.22.

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Lecue, Freddy. "Diagnosing Changes in An Ontology Stream: A DL Reasoning Approach." Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence 26, no. 1 (September 20, 2021): 80–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v26i1.8113.

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Recently, ontology stream reasoning has been introduced as a multidisciplinary approach, merging synergies from Artificial Intelligence, Database and World-Wide-Web to reason on semantics-augmented data streams, thus a way to answering questions on real time events. However existing approaches do not consider stream change diagnosis i.e., identification of the nature and cause of changes, where explaining the logical connection of knowledge and inferring insight on time changing events are the main challenges. We exploit the Description Logics (DL)-based semantics of streams to tackle these challenges. Based on an analysis of stream behavior through change and inconsistency over DL axioms, we tackled change diagnosis by determining and constructing a comprehensive view on potential causes of inconsistencies. We report a large-scale evaluation of our approach in the context of live stream data from Dublin City Council.
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Lonergan, Roisín, Katie Kinsella, Marguerite Duggan, Sinead Jordan, Michael Hutchinson, and Niall Tubridy. "Discontinuing disease-modifying therapy in progressive multiple sclerosis: can we stop what we have started?" Multiple Sclerosis Journal 15, no. 12 (December 2009): 1528–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1352458509351730.

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Disease-modifying therapy is ineffective in disabled patients (Expanded Disability Status Scale [EDSS] > 6.5) with secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (MS) without relapses, or in primary progressive MS. Many patients with secondary progressive MS who initially had relapsing MS continue to use disease-modifying therapies. The enormous associated costs are a burden to health services. Regular assessment is recommended to guide discontinuation of disease-modifying therapies when no longer beneficial, but this is unavailable to many patients, particularly in rural areas. The objectives of this study are as follows: 1. To observe use of disease-modifying therapies in patients with progressive multiple sclerosis and EDSS > 6.5. 2. To examine approaches used by a group of international MS experts to stopping-disease modifying therapies in patients with secondary progressive MS without relapses. During an epidemiological study in three regions of Ireland (southeast Dublin city, and Wexford and Donegal Counties), we recorded details of disease-modifying therapies in patients with progressive MS and EDSS > 6.5. An e-questionnaire was sent to 26 neurologists with expert knowledge of MS, asking them to share their approach to stopping disease-modifying therapies in patients with secondary progressive MS. Three hundred and thirty-six patients were studied: 88 from southeast Dublin, 99 from Wexford and 149 from Donegal. Forty-four had EDSS > 6.5: 12 were still using disease-modifying therapies. Of the surveyed neurologists, 15 made efforts to stop disease-modifying therapies in progressive multiple sclerosis, but most did not insist. A significant proportion (12 of 44 patients with progressive MS and EDSS > 6.5) was considered to be receiving therapy without benefit. Eleven of the 12 were from rural counties, reflecting poorer access to neurology services. The costs of disease-modifying therapies in this group (>170,000 yearly) could be re-directed towards development of neurology services to optimize their management.
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Hicks, Pete, and Páraic Kerrigan. "An intersectional quantitative content analysis of the LGBTQ+ catalogue in Irish public libraries." Journal of Librarianship and Information Science 52, no. 4 (January 26, 2020): 1028–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0961000619898212.

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LGBTQ+ youths in the Republic of Ireland report statistically higher levels of depression, anxiety and suicidal thoughts than their heteronormative peers, which can be attributed to bullying and homophobic rhetoric. Research indicates that community services, such as public libraries, can play a role in mitigating the mental health risks of this group. However, there is no formal policy within the Irish public library system directing the collection and provision of LGBTQ+ materials and services to anyone, let alone youths. Previous international studies have shown that, in the absence of a guiding intersectional collection development policy, LGBTQ+ library materials are overwhelmingly representative of the gay, white, adult male experience, to the detriment of other groups within the LGBTQ+ community. Conducting a quantitative content analysis of the Dublin City Council Public Library catalogue through the lens of intersectionality theory confirms that the Irish public library system is not an exception to this trend. Results indicate that catalogue materials containing LGBTQ+ metadata favor the adult, gay, male experience – as well as the youth, gay, male experience – over adult and young women. This trend is particularly noticeable among the eBook catalogue, an area that the Irish public library system has directly identified as a strategic target for collection development. Conclusions align with previous qualitative studies on LGBTQ+ provision in Irish libraries in that a comprehensive organizational policy document is needed to provide direction and enable funding for the development of the LGBTQ+ section of the library system’s catalogue.
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Books on the topic "Dublin City Countil"

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Davenport, Fionn. Dublin: City Guide. 7th ed. Footscray, Victoria, Australia: Lonely Planet Publications, 2008.

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Dublin: City Guide. 8th ed. Footscray, Victoria, Australia: Lonely Planet Publications, 2010.

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Lennon, Colm. The lords of Dublin in the Age of Reformation. Blackrock, Co. Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 1989.

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Libraries, Dublin Public, and Dublin (Ireland) City Council, eds. The alderman: Alderman Tom Kelly (1868-1942) and Dublin Corporation. Dublin: Dublin City Council, Dublin City Public Library & Archive, 2007.

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Jim, Cooke. 75 years alive and flourishing: Sports and Cultural Council 75th anniversary 1935-2010. Edited by City of Dublin Vocational Education Committee. Sports and Cultural Council. Dublin: Sports and Cultural Council, City of Dublin Vocational Education Committee, 2010.

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City of Dublin Vocational Education Committee. Sports and Cultural Council. Participation and excellence: A sixty year history : diamond jubilee 1935-1995. Dublin: C.D.V.E.C. Sports & Cultural Council, 1995.

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City of Dublin Vocational Education Committee. Sports and Cultural Council. Participation and excellence: A sixty year history : Diamond Jubilee 1935-1995. Dublin: Sports & Cultural Council, City of Dublin Vocational Education Committee, 1995.

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Gibney, John. Dublin City Council and the 1916 Rising. Four Courts Press, 2016.

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Dublin City Council and the 1916 Rising. Four Courts Press, 2016.

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Boner, Patrick. A study of the campaign communications of successful candidates in the 1999 election to Dublin city council. 2003.

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Book chapters on the topic "Dublin City Countil"

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McDermott, Fiona. "Working in Beta: Testing Urban Experiments and Innovation Policy Within Dublin City Council." In The Hackable City, 171–86. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-2694-3_9.

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Dickson, David. "Workshop, Warehouse and the Primacy of Dublin." In The First Irish Cities, 95–119. Yale University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300229462.003.0006.

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This chapter highlights Dublin's commercial primacy and its status as a great pre-industrial manufacturing city. The chapter explores how Dublin became the country's principal port of entry for fine cloth, metal goods, and emerged as the national warehouse for imports. It reviews Dublin's contribution to customs revenue between 1615 and 1619 and the city's success in cornering the wholesale market in high-value imports. Being the principal high-value warehouse in the country brought about Dublin's transition to being the national workshop for luxury and quality goods — not the only such location, but the dominant one for more than a century. The chapter also discusses the expansion of the guild membership in Dublin, noting that the renaissance of Dublin's guilds in the seventeenth century was an enabling factor in the city's rapid development as a manufacturing hub. Ultimately, the chapter elaborates the growth of the apparatus of government and the arrival in the city of large numbers of upper-class families.
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Murphy, James H. "Undermined Authority: John Reynolds and Dublin Corporation." In Figures of Authority in Nineteenth-Century Ireland, 57–76. Liverpool University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781789622409.003.0004.

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This chapter sketches the municipal career of John Reynolds (1794-1868), a member of Dublin corporation, the city’s city council, between the 1840s and 1860s. Reynolds sat together with Daniel O’Connell on the corporation following the reform of that body in the early 1840s, yet he clashed with O’Connell over taxation. Later he campaigned for the abolition of minister’s money (a city tax to benefit the established church) and the freeman parliamentary franchise which favoured the Ascendancy and which may have cost him his own parliamentary seat. He had a disastrous year as Lord Mayor in 1850, easily allowing himself to be provoked into outbursts of rage, a habit that undermined his authority. Reynolds saw himself as combating the anti-Catholic sectarian animus of the former Dublin Tory ruling class but also sometimes played it up for his own advantage. The Tories on the corporation were riled by his pugilistic, populist approach to issues. With his early political and analytical skills much reduced, Reynolds never became the figure of authority he might have been.
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Remport, Eglantina Ibolya. "The Stones of Venice: Lady Augusta Gregory and John Ruskin." In John Ruskin’s Europe. A Collection of Cross-Cultural Essays With an Introductory Lecture by Salvatore Settis. Venice: Fondazione Università Ca’ Foscari, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.30687/978-88-6969-487-5/016.

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John Ruskin’s diaries, letters, lectures and published works are testimonies to his life-long interest in Venetian art and architecture. Lady Augusta Gregory of Coole Park, County Galway, Ireland, was amongst those Victorian genteel women who were influenced by Ruskin’s account of the political and artistic history of Venice, following in Ruskin’s footsteps during her visits to Sir Henry Austen Henry and Lady Enid Layard at Ca’ Capello on the Grand Canal. This article follows Lady Gregory’s footsteps around the maritime city, where she was often found sketching architectural details of churches and palaces. By doing so, it reveals the extent of the influence of Ruskin’s Italian travels on the formation of Lady Gregory’s aesthetic sensibilities during the 1880s and 1890s, before she founded the Abbey Theatre in Dublin with the Irish dramatist John Millington Synge and the Irish poet and dramatist William Butler Yeats in 1904. As part of the discussion, it reveals the true subject matter in one of Lady Gregory’s Venetian sketches for the first time, one that is now held in Dublin at the National Library of Ireland.
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Roche, Helen, and George Eogan. "A Re-Assessment of the Enclosure at Lugg, County Dublin, Ireland." In Communities and Connections. Oxford University Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199230341.003.0018.

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The purpose of this contribution is to re-evaluate Lugg, a somewhat unusual site and to assign it chronologically to the Late Bronze Age period. The site is in an area that is ‘facing the ocean’ to use Barry Cunliffe’s memorable phrase. This general area is well known to Barry, a region to which he has contributed so much over many years, both from the point of view of detailed Weldwork, interpretation and wider comparative studies. Time-wise the site fits into a main period of Barry’s interests and accordingly we oVer this contribution in appreciation of his academic work as well as the positive role that he has played in aiding the development of Irish archaeological studies. Lugg is one of at least a dozen archaeological sites located on Saggart Hill, about 18km southwest of Dublin city (figure 10.1). Prior to excavation in 1939 by Howard Kilbride-Jones, it was thought that the site with its enclosing bank and central mound might represent a disc-barrow. However, a preliminary survey (Kilbride-Jones 1950: 315) revealed that the mound had a surrounding ditch as well as the visible bank and this complex central monument was in turn surrounded by a bank and ditch, (enclosing an area about 37m in diameter), which alerted the excavator to the fact that the site might be more complex than previously envisaged (figure 10.2). Excavation subsequently revealed a complex range of features that were interpreted as representing three phases of activity and, based on the identification of the pottery, were assigned to the Iron Age period. Phase 1 representing the earliest activity consisted of a timber monument that was termed a ‘Sanctuary- Site’. The second phase was interpreted as representing a habitation site and the final phase was described as being a modified ‘henge’ monument (ibid. 1950: 316). The evidence for Kilbride-Jones’ earliest phase, which he referred to by the then popular term of a ‘sanctuary-site’, was located mainly beneath the central mound with further areas located in the wide level area (called a berm by Kilbride-Jones) between the inner and outer enclosures. The evidence consisted of three fireplaces, limited areas of paving and one hundred and sixty post- and stake-holes.
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Ojo, Sanya. "Place Consumption." In Exploring the Dynamics of Consumerism in Developing Nations, 218–42. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-7906-9.ch010.

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This chapter investigates the influence of country of origin's reputation on the notion of place brand and vice versa. Employing a case study methodology, cases of Lagos (Nigeria) and Dubai (UAE) are examined to generate a model of place brand/branding. This model highlights the flow of causality between a nation brand and a city brand. Four themes are highlighted as matters of interest to focus on when recommending a way forward for Lagos city to generate and improve its global reputation in order to increase the footfalls of visitors and expats.
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Dickinson, Harry T. "To the Right Honourable the Lord Mayor of the City of Dublin. The Counter Address of a Free Citizen." In Ireland in the Age of Revolution, 1760–1805, 79–85. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429348693-11.

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Finn, Chester E., and Andrew E. Scanlan. "In Suburbia." In Learning in the Fast Lane, 94–114. Princeton University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691178721.003.0007.

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This chapter explores the Advanced Placement (AP) program in suburban school districts. Even as urban centers like Fort Worth and New York typify today's livelier venues for AP expansion, the program has deep roots in the prosperous suburbs that abut them. Along with elite private schools, upscale suburban high schools were among the program's earliest adopters, and they remain natural habitats for a nationally benchmarked, high-status venture that gives strong students a head start on the college education that they are almost certainly going to get and perhaps an extra advantage in gaining admission to the universities they aspire to. Yet they are also ripe for attention as they struggle with equity and growth issues of their own. The chapter then reviews two well-known yet very different suburban districts: Dublin City Schools in Ohio and Montgomery County Public Schools in Maryland. Both are celebrated as education successes in their states and both boast long and impressive AP track records. Both, however, face distinctive challenges as they seek to serve today's constituents. Their stories illustrate how AP is functioning in places that know it well yet continue to evolve with it.
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Stokes, Joseph, Rachel Keegan, Mark Brown, and E. Alana James. "Digitalization of Higher Degree Research (HRD) and Its Benefit to Postgraduate Researchers." In Advances in Library and Information Science, 133–52. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-7065-3.ch007.

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Graduate Schools offer supports to enhance and improve the graduate skills development of their postgraduate research community not only in their research but also in preparing them for their future careers. The European University Association Council for Doctoral Education has identified the digitalization of doctoral education as necessary to the future to fully globalize the graduate school offerings. This vision is aligned, for example, to several of the objectives in Dublin City University 2017-2022 Strategic Plan. Online supports go towards the development of DCU as a global university allowing us to attract, and to provide aid to, research students who are studying primarily outside of Ireland. The same structured support also benefits staff who are involved in the life cycle of a research student. Therefore, it is important to assess the needs of our graduate researchers in terms of online supports and to provide them with such tools to ascertain if their needs can/are being met. Hence, this chapter begins this journey by determining what online resources our doctoral community use to move their studies forward and then follows on to measure the value of one resource “DoctoralNet,” which offers comprehensive support to such students. This chapter discusses surveyed material, yielding a positive message that our doctoral education requires such digital resources to meet their (students') educational needs.
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