Academic literature on the topic 'Engagements with the Past'

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Journal articles on the topic "Engagements with the Past"

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Weatherbee, Terrance G., Gabrielle Durepos, Albert Mills, and Jean Helms Mills. "Theorizing the Past: Critical engagements." Management & Organizational History 7, no. 3 (August 2012): 193–202. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1744935912444358.

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Chowdhury, Indira, and Srijan Mandal. "East of the West: Repossessing the Past In India." Public History Review 24 (January 4, 2018): 22–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.5130/phrj.v24i0.5763.

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Public history, as it is practised in India, defies easy attempts at classification. This is partially because hardly anything that would be recognised as public history is identified as such by its author(s). For the term, despite its ever-increasing acceptance outside India as a discipline and a practice distinct from history, has yet to gain any currency within India. Any attempt to identify works that are self-consciously public history in the Indian context will likely not yield much fruit. Nor, for that matter, will borrowing any of the many definitions of the term from the West and trying to find works that adhere to it in India. Instead, this chapter will try to highlight the myriad forms that public engagements with the past have taken place in India. This article focuses specifically on museums, arguably the preeminent site of public engagements with the past in India. To that end, it will look at a new generation of museums that are charting new paths towards enabling a better public engagement with the past. It will also analyse a few institutional forms of public engagements with the past.
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Orengo, Hector A., and David W. Robinson. "Contemporary Engagements Within Corridors of the Past." Journal of Material Culture 13, no. 3 (November 2008): 267–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1359183508095496.

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Statman, Meir. "Behaviorial Finance: Past Battles and Future Engagements." Financial Analysts Journal 55, no. 6 (November 1999): 18–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.2469/faj.v55.n6.2311.

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Van den Scott, Jeffrey, and Lisa-Jo K. Van den Scott. "Imagined Engagements: Interpreting the Musical Relationship with the Canadian North." Qualitative Sociology Review 15, no. 2 (April 30, 2019): 90–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.18778/1733-8077.15.2.07.

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In this article, we extend Benedict Anderson’s notion of imagined communities to examine the idea of an “imagined engagement” between or among people and groups that have not met. These imagined engagements include a blurring of temporal lines, as one group “interacts” with another’s past, present, or future. Imagined engagements are a form of failed interaction, and, as such, have their place in Goffman’s interaction order. We argue that musical language can comprise a meeting point of these engagements. We then demonstrate how two composers—one historic and one contemporary—have used the musical cultures of an Othered people, with a focus on Indigenous America, in an attempt to create a sense of community and common ties between the West and these Others—a sense of community in which the Othered have no part.
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Munz, Peter. "The Story of My Engagements with the Past." Rethinking History 8, no. 3 (September 2004): 465–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1364252042000248278.

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Jacobsen, Benjamin N., and David Beer. "Quantified Nostalgia: Social Media, Metrics, and Memory." Social Media + Society 7, no. 2 (April 2021): 205630512110088. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/20563051211008822.

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As social media platforms have developed over the past decade, they are no longer simply sites for interactions and networked sociality; they also now facilitate backwards glances to previous times, moments, and events. Users’ past content is turned into definable objects that can be scored, rated, and resurfaced as “memories.” There is, then, a need to understand how metrics have come to shape digital and social media memory practices, and how the relationship between memory, data, and metrics can be further understood. This article seeks to outline some of the relations between social media, metrics, and memory. It examines how metrics shape remembrance of the past within social media. Drawing on qualitative interviews as well as focus group data, the article examines the ways in which metrics are implicated in memory making and memory practices. This article explores the effect of social media “likes” on people’s memory attachments and emotional associations with the past. The article then examines how memory features incentivize users to keep remembering through accumulation. It also examines how numerating engagements leads to a sense of competition in how the digital past is approached and experienced. Finally, the article explores the tensions that arise in quantifying people’s engagements with their memories. This article proposes the notion of quantified nostalgia in order to examine how metrics are variously performative in memory making, and how regimes of ordinary measures can figure in the engagement and reconstruction of the digital past in multiple ways.
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Chin, Matthew, Izumi Sakamoto, Jane Ku, and Ai Yamamoto. "(Re)storying Japanese Canadian Histories: Artistic Engagements." Cultural Studies ↔ Critical Methodologies 21, no. 3 (January 19, 2021): 264–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1532708620987260.

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This paper examines how Japanese Canadian (JC) artists challenge discursive limitations of constructing representations of JC pasts. Their interventions into JC history-making are significant given the rise of interest in and proliferation of JC historical accounts, partly as a result of the accelerated passing of the remaining survivors of JC incarceration within a broader context of unsettled and unsettling discourses around incarceration in JC families and communities. Contrary to narratives of JC history premised on the conventions of academic history writing, we explore how JC artists engage with the past through their creative practices. Focusing on JC artist Emma Nishimura’s exhibit, The weight of what cannot be remembered, we suggest that JC creative history-making practices have important implications for processes of ethno-racial and-cultural identity formation. In so doing, we decenter state-bound history-making processes that reproduce colonial frameworks of JC subjectivity, temporal linearity, and “objectivity.” Instead, we focus on the temporally circuitous way that Nishimura and other JC artists engage with the past through the idiom of personal intimacy in ways that facilitate a more expansive notion of JC identity and community. Though Nishimura’s work is indexical as opposed to representative of contemporary JC art-making, it is significant in tapping into a common structure of feeling among JC artists that emphasizes a notion of JC’ness rooted in the active struggle to establish a relationship with the past. In attending to Nishimura’s work, we highlight the productivity of art-making as a method of (re)storying to expand meaning-making endeavors within and across communities.
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Altman, Meryl. "“The Past Is an Appeal”." Simone de Beauvoir Studies 30, no. 1 (December 16, 2019): 148–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/25897616-03001013.

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Abstract As the International Simone de Beauvoir Society celebrates the relaunch of Simone de Beauvoir Studies, the author looks back with gratitude to longtime editor Yolanda Patterson and reviews what the journal’s thirty-year history has to tell us about Beauvoir scholarship, past, present, and future. Topics discussed include the history of the Society; engagements with Beauvoir from the perspectives of literary criticism, philosophy, and the social sciences; and controversies over Beauvoir’s character, her response to the Occupation, her relationship to Sartre, and her legacy for feminism.
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Koirala, Kosh Raj. "Managing national security interests amidst military major powers' military engagements." Unity Journal 1 (February 1, 2020): 66–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/unityj.v1i0.35696.

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Existing literatures on the strategic competition between India, China and the US have largely focused on general patterns and trends of their cooperation and engagements in Nepal, including on how China has made its forays in Nepal with its assertive foreign policy overtures since 2008. What has been overlooked, however, is how these three countries are quietly competing with each other to enhance their engagement with the national army. The growing competition among these countries is likely to pose serious challenge to the national army as an institution to exercise its strategic autonomy in its decision making process if some cautions are not exercised in advance. This paper highlights on competing and conflicting interests of major powers to enhance their engagements with the national army in Nepal, and the ways to overcome potential challenges, such military engagements may entail in the future. It also offers a context of the discussion with a brief overview of changing strategic environment in the Asia Pacific in the past 10 years and how Nepal has transformed from a backwater to strategic epicenter for major powers.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Engagements with the Past"

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Antoniadou, Ioanna. "Looting deconstructed : a study of non-professional engagements with the material past in Kozani, Greece." Thesis, University of Southampton, 2014. https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/366612/.

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In dominant archaeological discourse, looting has been primarily discussed in connection with its assumed profit-related motives and the destruction it causes to the archaeological context of antiquities. Such ways of thinking, however valid they may be in some instances, result in an inadequate representation and understanding of looting, which conflates diverse forms of non-professional digging and search for antiquities, ignores the socio-cultural contexts they are embedded within, and undermines or disregards the objectives or perspectives of those perceived as ‘looters’. This thesis addresses these problems and attempts to deconstruct the blanket conceptualisation of looting that assimilates and denounces a range of acts, from a failure to register an antiquity, the unauthorised possession of an artefact, to an object’s sale for subsistence purposes. In light of this, I present and interpret cases of non-professional digging and collection (but not sale) of relics gathered from ethnographic research amongst local communities in Kozani in north-western Greece. The results of the ethnographic research, interwoven with the critically analysed impact of official archaeology’s epistemology and practice (applied in Greece and elsewhere), offers a multi-layered understanding of looting, which goes beyond professionalised notions and ethics. I contend that rather than being inspired by economic objectives, looting phenomena often involve an array of diverse, complex and ambiguous social activities, embedded in daily practices. This study of looting is essentially a study of non-professionals, who physically engage with the material past, in order to control the past’s materiality and symbolic meaning and eventually construct social power for themselves. On one level, it attempts to scrutinize the complex forms of reaction and resistance of ordinary people towards official archaeology. On a deeper level, it hopes to reveal the hybrid character of seemingly opposing practices. The control over antiquities and the desire for the symbolic and social power it generates, transcend professional and non-professional behaviours towards the material past.
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Kleinitz, Cornelia. "Dialogues in stone : past and present engagements with rock art in sub-Saharan Mali, West Africa." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 2006. http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1446432/.

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Rock art remains a tangible part of landscapes for hundreds or thousands of years due to its fixation in space and its potential durability, making it especially valuable in understanding synchronic and diachronic processes of human symbolic engagement with their landscapes. The accretional nature of rock art at sites and in wider landscapes, embodying visible traces of meaningful past human (or ancestral or supernatural) action at specific places, has provoked reactions and response by successive populations. Many rock art sites show evidence of continuous and discontinuous use over considerable periods of time, and many, if not most rock art sites have undergone additions or modifications of pictographs and/or petroglyphs after an initial marking event. Rock art sites often appear to have been attributed significance by their successive users and may have been modified to suit changing perceptions and uses of these places and the wider landscapes. Rock art site- and landscapes are thus 'updated' and transformed during successive marking episodes. Over time they have evolved into palimpsests of 'past' and 'present' marks and marked places. Rock art making and use is, consequently, a dynamic process reflecting changing attitudes to and understandings of places and landscapes. Under these premises the present study introduces and discusses a regional sample of one of the least known bodies of rock art on the African continent, that of sub-Saharan Mali. Based on a substantial corpus of newly recorded rock art from the Baoule-Bakoye region of south-western Mali detailed descriptions of motifs in their site and landscape contexts are provided according to a consistent set of definitions and terms. The discussion of this rock art corpus focuses on the use of graphic symbolism and space at rock art sites in synchronic and diachronic perspectives, including issues of access and audiences, which hint at differences in social contexts of marking. The process of transforming or 'updating' of symbolic landscapes over time is followed in this study by discussing the 'life-histories' of rock art panels, sites and landscapes in the study region. 'Life-histories' of rock art sites comprise an initial marking event (which may have been triggered by a pre-existing importance attached to the particular locality) as well as often multiple subsequent marking events and episodes. The latter may include a variety of reactions to existing rock art, such as modifications of motifs, or the addition of new pictographs or petroglyphs to existing panels, sometimes in superimposition or juxtaposition to existing motifs. Such palimpsests thus inform about changing perceptions and uses of past markings and marked places in the past. Sub-Saharan Mali in addition provides a rare example of a contemporary rock art tradition, that of the Dogon people of the Bandiagara region in the centre of the country, which informs us not only about the social contexts of rock art making and use, but also illustrates interrelationships between symbolically marked places and the construction of personal and group identities. A case study of the Dogon circumcision rock shelter at Songo, where marking and re-marking takes place in a ritual context, follows the life- history of this site over the past century on the basis of a photographic documentation. Songo consequently provides a contemporary example of the dynamic nature and temporality of rock art making and use. It also shows how additions to and modifications of rock art sites in turn influence and transform human engagement with these localities over time. This thesis thus goes beyond the common stylistic approach to rock art in sub-Saharan West Africa, highlighting the dynamic nature of rock art making and use. It introduces contextual and in particular landscape approaches to the recording and study of rock art in sub-Saharan West Africa, while also considering almost a century of documentation and discussion of the rock art imagery. The thesis challenges current understandings of the character, age-range and the presumed social and cultural contexts of rock art in sub-Saharan Mali, and proposes new hypotheses as to the historical and archaeological contexts of this diverse rock art corpus in a diachronic perspective.
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Kana, Maria Perpetua, and res cand@acu edu au. "Christian Mission in Malaysia : Past emphasis, present engagement and future possibilities." Australian Catholic University. School of Theology, 2004. http://dlibrary.acu.edu.au/digitaltheses/public/adt-acuvp68.25092005.

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The course of Christian mission in Malaysia spans a period of almost fivehundred years. It traversed a path that began as a military crusade but then fellshort of its goals in the centuries after and has now arrived once more at thecrossroads. This dissertation reflects upon the course taken thus far and fromits present juncture ponders the passage ahead. The starting-point is mission as it was perceived in the past: an enterprise of
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Kana, Maria Perpetua. "Christian Mission in Malaysia: Past emphasis, present engagement and future possibilities." Thesis, Australian Catholic University, 2004. https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/download/67c502bfbb42903b9b987cd9ab9edd56c1f11206ff06e66fb0c2b670e54dc655/496485/64941_downloaded_stream_166.pdf.

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The course of Christian mission in Malaysia spans a period of almost fivehundred years. It traversed a path that began as a military crusade but then fellshort of its goals in the centuries after and has now arrived once more at thecrossroads. This dissertation reflects upon the course taken thus far and fromits present juncture ponders the passage ahead. The starting-point is mission as it was perceived in the past: an enterprise of""saving souls"" and ""planting churches"" with the inculturation of the Christian faith all but neglected. Viewed as an institution of Western colonialism, the Church attained a degree of prestige and influence in society that has since been unsurpassed. With the birth of the new Malaysian nation in 1963, however, the marginalisation of the Church is increasingly apparent. Within the Church itself there is tension as it strives to understand mission not just in the traditional terms of conversion and church growth but as public engagement for common life in the Malaysian pIural society. Such tension is evident in the different responses of the church hierarchy and the laity in the Malaysian Borneo state of Sabah to the powerful force of state-sponsored Islamisation during the early 1970s. In the final analysis this study finds that socio-political forces operative in the contemporary Malaysian situation provide the greatest impetus for the emergence of a new approach to mission. This involves looking beyond church-centered goals to making a positive Christian contribution to national life. The fact that the Christian community is a marginal minority articulating its Christian viewpoint from within a context of religious pluralism means that the emphasis must necessarily be placed on interfaith dialogue as an integral part of the development of Christian missionary understanding today.
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Mazzeo, Maren. "Visions of the Past: Engagement and Avoidance Through Nostalgia in My Ántonia." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2015. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/5797.

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In Willa Cather's My Ántonia, nostalgia marks both the ambience of the novel and its critical focus. This thesis illuminates Cather's self-aware deployment of nostalgia as an artistic tool and nostalgia's role in Jim Burden's agenda-driven narrative. Jim adopts nostalgic narrative as propaganda to justify and glorify his past and present life, presenting his past as a simplified and romanticized origin myth. However, through the novel's frame narrative and the frequent, jarring vignettes of violence and discord, Cather undermines Jim's authority as a narrator and prompts reconsideration of Cather's endorsement of his nostalgic creation. By appreciating the complex deployment of nostalgia within the text we are prompted to reconsider assumptions about nostalgia, Cather, and Cather's interest in representations of the past.
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Khunji, Othman Mohamed Mr. "Rituals, Our Past, Present & Future. Glimpses of Islamic Enrichment." VCU Scholars Compass, 2015. http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/3834.

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A Muslim should be encouraged to comprehend the benefit and value behind every aspect of Islamic practice and wisdom, and not just practice their religion because they were told to do so. The products proposed in this thesis aim to achieve this by inviting and encouraging a Muslim to practice The Five Pillars of Islam while comprehending their value through the use of modern means such as Arduino technology, 3D printing and visual computing programing. I am provoked by the fact that the circle of Gulf-region Muslims I’m surrounded by, and have been exposed to since childhood, belong to one of two stereotypes: those against or afraid of change who force adherence to religious chapter and verse, or those straying further and further away from our religion’s rituals and traditions. Can the practice of religion, and the values that it teaches us, be made more accessible and engaging by incorporating the very technology that is often accused of distracting us from its practice?
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Kaci, Maxime. "À la croisée des politiques : circulation des mots d'ordre et engagements collectifs à la frontière septentrionale (1791-1793)." Lille 3, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011LIL30024.

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La séquence 1791-1793 de la Révolution française constitue un moment d'incertitude et de refondation dans les engagements politiques. Du département du Pas-de-Calais à celui des Ardennes, les territoires frontaliers français peuvent être envisagés comme un carrefour de circulation des hommes et des supports d'expression entre Paris, l'Angleterre et la Belgique. L'analyse quantitative des thématiques présentes dans les pétitions, les adresses, les chansons souligne le partage, par des groupes sociopolitiques différents, de mêmes références : la défense de la Patrie ou encore la lutte contre les complots. Toutefois, l'étude des émeutes et des cérémonies civiques révèle les usages concurrents de ces références. L'appropriation politique, c'est-à-dire l'adaptation partisane et locale de mots d'ordre généraux, s'intensifie durant une période où s'affirment de nouveaux intermédiaires tels que les membres des sociétés poltiiques ou les soldats. Cette adaptation de thématiques politiques générales aux aspirations matérielles et aux craintes militaires des populations encourage les identifications collectives et provoque des engagements élargis. En même temps, les appropriations induisent des détournements de sens qui empêchent tout encadrement strict des interventions collectives. Les impératifs de Salut public et les stratégies partisanes conduisent alors les détenteurs de fonctions officielles et les militants à mettre en œuvre de nouvelles structures de contrôle pour stabiliser l'ordre local et national. Nous proposons donc une contribution à l'histoire de la politisation et des dynamiques révolutionnaires qui restitue la multiplicité des interactions et des possibles
The French Revolution's period that stretches from 1791 to 1793 stands as a time of uncertainty and reconstruction as far as political commitments are concerned. From Pas-de-Calais to Ardennes, French border territories may be considered as a crossroads where men and ideas circulate between Paris, England, and Belgium. The quantitative analysis of the themes tackled in petitions, adresses, songs underscores the fact that groups from different socio-political origins share the same references : the defence of the motherland or the struggle against conspiracies. However, the study of riots or civil ceremonies reveals thet the various ways of using these references compete against each other. The political endorsement, which can be defined as the local adaptation of general topics, becomes more obvious at a time when new intermediaries - such as soldiers or members of political societies - manifest themselves more openly. This adaptation of general political themes to the material aspirations as well as the military fears of population encourages collective identifications and causes wider commitments. At the same time, these endorsements entail distortions of meaning, making it impossible for any collective entity to control them. The neccesary public safety, as well as politically biased strategies, thus lead officials and political activists to establish new structures of control whose aim is to stabilize local and national order. Therefore, we offer a contribution to the history of politization and revolutionary forces, whose ambition is to account for the numerous interactions and possibilities
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IYER, SHARANYA. "HYBRID SPACE FOR ENGAGING WITH THE LIVING PAST: COMMUNITY CENTER FOR TOURISTS AND LOCALS AT HYDERABAD INDIA." University of Cincinnati / OhioLINK, 2007. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ucin1193884424.

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Plumer, Martin John. "How Can Community Engagement in the Local Past and Archaeological Research Be Mutually Beneficial? A Case Study in Community Archaeology from Sauvie Island, Oregon." PDXScholar, 2018. https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/4543.

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Community archaeology's broader objectives include increasing public understanding of archaeology and making archaeology more relevant to people's day to day lives. Fulfilling these goals could be beneficial to the public in terms of their gaining more agency in, and more access to, archaeology; and it could be beneficial to archaeologists in terms of increasing public support for archaeological work. While many community archaeologists report success, few authors critically evaluate the experience and outcomes of community archaeology. As a result, little data-based understanding exists about what is gained through community archaeology. This project explores that question through three primary means: 1) a community archaeology field research project on Sauvie Island in Portland, Oregon, in which I interview public (n=16) and professional (n=6) participants before and after their involvement in fieldwork, 2) interviews with local professional archaeologists (n=15) from various backgrounds, and 3) a broad baseline face-to-face survey of the Portland area public (n=254). The latter two data collection methods provide supporting and comparative information intended to add layers of meaning to the analysis of the Sauvie Island field project participants' thoughts, feelings, and experiences related to the field project. My results show that the majority of the non-archaeologist public have positive and often enthusiastic attitudes towards archaeology. These attitudes remain or are reinforced through participation in community archaeology. This trend appears to exist irrespective of partial public understandings of archaeology, wherein many members of the public are aware of real aspects of archaeology, but simultaneously express inaccurate perceptions of the nature of archaeology. Archaeologists demonstrate misunderstandings of the public, particularly in terms of public participation in community archaeology leading to the destruction of sites or the breakdown of scientific rigor. These fears often lack data-based or experiential support, and are less present in archaeologists with more experience working with the public. Generally, archaeologists enjoy interaction with the public in participatory contexts, and see various benefits to public involvement. My research shows that tying archaeology to present day life, to intimate technical details of the archaeological fieldwork experience, and to engagement with the natural landscape, are crucial aspects of increasing archaeology's relevance to the public. Despite misunderstandings on both sides, mutually beneficial public/professional involvement in community archaeology is possible.
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Vankeerberghen, Audrey. "Etre agriculteur bio: engagements individuels, engagements collectifs." Doctoral thesis, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/209890.

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Cette thèse se propose d'explorer ce que signifie "être agriculteur bio" aujourd'hui en Wallonie. Après une analyse socio-historique du développement de l'agriculture biologique dans cette région d'Europe, la première partie s'attache à comprendre en finesse les parcours de vie des agriculteurs bio wallons, leurs pratiques ainsi que la construction de leurs identités professionnelles. La deuxième partie se penche quant à elle sur les aspects institutionnels de l'agriculture bio :sur la structuration du secteur syndical et associatif ainsi que sur les interactions entre les pratiques des agriculteurs et la législation encadrant l'agriculture biologique.
Doctorat en Sciences politiques et sociales
info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
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Books on the topic "Engagements with the Past"

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Trimm, Cindy. The rules of engagement for overcoming your past. Lake Mary, Florida: Charisma House, 2014.

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Sebastian, J. Jayakiran. Enlivening the past: An Asian theologian's engagement with the early teachers of faith. Piscataway, NJ: Gorgias Press, 2009.

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Enlivening the past: An Asian theologian's engagement with the early teachers of faith. Piscataway, NJ: Gorgias Press, 2009.

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Millennials, news, and social media: Is news engagement a thing of the past? New York: Peter Lang, 2012.

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Agacinski, Sylviane. Engagements. Paris: Seuil, 2007.

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Engagements. [Paris]: Seuil, 2007.

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Jacquemain, Marc. Engagements actuels, actualité des engagements. Louvain-la-Neuve: Academia-Bruylant, 2010.

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Cavallo, Dominick. A fiction of the past: The sixties in American history. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1999.

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The new Russian engagement with Latin America: Strategic position, commerce, and dreams of the past. Carlisle Barracks, PA: United States Army War College Press, 2015.

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Engagement with the past : the lives and works of the World War II generation of historians. Lexington, Ky: University Press of Kentucky, 2001.

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Book chapters on the topic "Engagements with the Past"

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Jardine, Nicholas. "Philosophical engagements with distant sciences." In Science in the Forest, Science in the Past, 11–26. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003242383-3.

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Blain, Jenny, and Robert J. Wallis. "Negotiating Archaeology/Spirituality: Pagan Engagements with the Prehistoric Past in Britain." In Archaeology of Spiritualities, 47–68. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-3354-5_3.

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Gren, Nina. "Healed pasts, multiple belongings and multifocal engagements." In Routledge Handbook on Middle Eastern Diasporas, 328–40. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429266102-30.

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Mayzell, George. "Moving Past Burnout to Engagement and Joy." In The Resilient Healthcare Organization, 165–78. New York, NY : Routledge, 2020.: Productivity Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429286025-12.

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Broom, Catherine, Anthony Di Mascio, and Douglas Fleming. "Citizenship Education in Canada, Past and Present." In Youth Civic Engagement in a Globalized World, 15–36. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-56533-4_2.

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Takaya, Keiichi. "Citizenship Education in Japan: Past, Present, and Future." In Youth Civic Engagement in a Globalized World, 127–44. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-56533-4_7.

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Kim, Ji Koung, and Jeffery A. LePine. "Employee Engagement: The Past, the Present, and the Future." In The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management, 371–86. 1 Oliver's Yard, 55 City Road London EC1Y 1SP: SAGE Publications Ltd, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781529714852.n22.

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Parsons, Meg, Karen Fisher, and Roa Petra Crease. "‘The past is always in front of us’: Locating Historical Māori Waterscapes at the Centre of Discussions of Current and Future Freshwater Management." In Decolonising Blue Spaces in the Anthropocene, 75–119. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-61071-5_3.

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AbstractThis chapter examines the historical waterscapes of Indigenous Māori iwi (tribes) and hapū (sub-tribes) in the Waipā River (Aotearoa New Zealand). We highlight some of the principles of Te Ao Māori (the Māori world) that shaped Māori understandings and engagements with their ancestral waters and lands prior to colonisation. We explore how the arrival of Europeans resulted in Māori embracing new technologies, ideas, and biota, but always situating and adapting these new imports to fit within their Indigenous ontologies and epistemologies. In contrast, British colonial officials were unwilling to embrace such cross-cultural learnings nor allow Te Ao Māori to peacefully co-existent with their own world (Te Ao Pākehā). Military invasion, war, and the confiscation of Māori land occurred, which laid the foundations for environmental injustices.
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Dyas, Dee. "The Role of Sensory Engagement with Place, Past, and Present." In Pilgrimage and England's Cathedrals, 193–213. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-48032-5_9.

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Sullivan, Laura Specker, and Judy Illes. "Models of Engagement in Neuroethics Programs: Past, Present, and Future." In Debates About Neuroethics, 165–81. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-54651-3_12.

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Conference papers on the topic "Engagements with the Past"

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Wang, Jue, and Derek Yip-Hoi. "A Feature-Based Approach for Cutter/Workpiece Engagement Calculation in 2-1/2D End Milling." In ASME 2006 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. ASMEDC, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2006-99378.

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Machining process modeling requires cutter/workpiece engagement geometry in order to predict cutting forces. The calculation of these engagements is challenging due to the complicated and changing intersection geometry that occurs between the cutter and the in-process workpiece. Solid modelers can be used to perform these calculations by executing intersection operations between cutter and workpiece surfaces at successive cutter locations. These operations utilize parametric surface/surface intersection (SSI) algorithms. For the large number of engagements that can occur in machining a complicated workpiece this can be a time-consuming and sometimes unreliable process. In this paper, in-process machining features are introduced into machining process modeling for 2 1/2 D end milling, and a feature based approach is presented for addressing the computational complexity and robustness issues in the cutter/workpiece engagement calculations. Geometric Invariant (giF) and Form Invariant Machining Features (fiF) are modeled to help represent engagement conditions analytically. Volume decomposition and composition algorithms are described that extract these two types of machining features from the removal volumes generated at each tool pass. Cutter/workpiece engagements can be analytically extracted from giFs and fiFs without applying repetitive SSI operations. This paper presents one part of ongoing collaborative research into developing Virtual Machining Systems. The engagement conditions that are found are inputs to machining process models that identify cutting forces, predict stability and that optimize the process.
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Zhou, Jing, Derek Yip-Hoi, and Xuemei Huang. "A Hybrid Analytical, Solid Modeler and Feature-Based Methodology for Extracting Tool-Workpiece Engagements in Turning." In ASME 2005 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. ASMEDC, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2005-85604.

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In order to optimize turning processes cutting forces need to be accurately predicted. This in turn requires accurate extraction of the geometry of tool-workpiece engagements (TWE) at critical points during machining. TWE extraction is challenging because the in-process workpiece geometry is continually changing as each tool pass is executed. This paper describes research on a hybrid analytical, solid modeler and feature-based methodology for extracting TWEs generated during general turning. While a pure solid modeler based solution can be developed it will be shown that because of the ability to capture different cutting tool inserts with similar geometry and to model the process in 2D, an analytical solution can be used instead of the solid modeler in many instances. This leads to more efficient computation during extraction. Further, by identifying features in the removal volumes where the engagement conditions are not changing or changing predictably additional enhancements in the efficiency of the TWE extraction can be achieved. The methodology developed will be demonstrated in extracting engagements for a typical industrial component. TWE extraction is one component in a Virtual Machining system currently under development.
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Aras, Eyyup, and Derek Yip-Hoi. "A Solid Modeler Approach for Extracting Cutter Workpiece Engagements in Milling." In ASME 2008 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. ASMEDC, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2008-49598.

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This paper presents a Solid modeling methodology for finding Cutter Workpiece Engagements (CWEs) generated during 3+2 -axis machining (spindle can tilt) of free – form surfaces using a range of different types of cutting tools and tool paths. Swept volumes of the cutters are generated utilizing the envelope theory. For the CWE extractions the removal volumes of the cutter constituent surfaces are used. For this purpose the cutter surfaces are decomposed with respect to the tool feed direction and then they intersected with their removal volumes for obtaining the boundary curves of the closed CWE area. The CWE boundary curves are mapped from Euclidean space to a parametric space defined by the engagement angle and the depth-of-cut for a given tool geometry. The reported method has been implemented using a commercial geometric modeler (ACIS) which is selected to be the kernel around which the geometric simulator is built. The described geometric methodology is being developed as part of a Virtual Milling methodology that combines the geometric modeling aspects of milling material removal with the modeling of the process.
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Jayaram, Uma, Hrishikesh Tirumali, Sankar Jayaram, and Kevin Lyons. "A Tool/Part/Human Interaction Model for Assembly in Virtual Environments." In ASME 2000 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2000/cie-14584.

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Abstract Current virtual assembly environments primarily allow assembly operations involving pick and place manipulations with hands. In some applications, assembly tools snap onto screws and are constrained. Some non-immersive systems create tool motion script models for the tool to execute the assembly operation. The inclusion of tools and realistic tool operations is a significant step in creating a better virtual assembly environment. We propose a technique to model hand held tools and the corresponding assembly operations in a virtual environment. Intermediate-location constraints and tool engagement constraints obtained from the CAD model are used to model the intermediate positions and engagements of a fastener tool, tool-part, and base-part. In addition, tool-based motion dependent on the rotation of the tool and the pitch of the thread has been achieved for a fastener part This allows us to simulate the physical reality of these interactions without using expensive collide, penetrate, correct, and align methods. The tools and tool/hand/part interactions have been modeled and tested in a virtual assembly and design environment successfully. This capability also allows tool accessibility and tool operability to be verified.
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Yip-Hoi, Derek, and Xuemei Huang. "Cutter Engagement Feature Extraction From Solid Models for End Milling." In ASME 2004 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. ASMEDC, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2004-62015.

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Accurate process modeling requires the calculation of cutter/workpiece engagement (CWE) geometry. This is challenging when the geometry of the workpiece is changing un-predictably as is the case for most machined components of moderate complexity. Solid modelers are increasingly being considered as a computational engine for performing these calculations. This is largely due to increased robustness and computing efficiency that is evolving within this technology. The vast majority of reported research using solid modelers focuses on the domain of 2 1/2 D machining with flat end mills. While significant there remain restrictions in the types of inprocess workpiece geometry that can be processed with these approaches. In particular, they assume a constant axial engagement for a connected set of tool paths. This assumption cannot be made when the initial workpiece geometry is non-rectangular prismatic stock, when multiple setups are machined and when tool changes introduce tools of different diameters. In these cases the depth of engagement can vary over a single rotation of the cutter even though there is no axial feed motion. In this paper a solid modeling based solution is presented for calculating these engagements when multiple setups and tool changes are considered. Orthogonal setups and flat end mills are assumed so as to preclude cutter engagement on inclined workpiece faces. Classes of Cutter Engagement Features (ceFs) are defined to support this approach. Algorithms for ceF extraction are provided and validated using a test part. This research introduces the use of features and extends the capabilities of solid modeling techniques for cutting force prediction.
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Yi, Sue, Kevin Lumbard, Nicole B. Damen, Matt Germonprez, and Christine A. Toh. "Towards an Information Archetypes Framework: Exploring the Types of Information Used in Open Source Design Engagements." In ASME 2019 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2019-97956.

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Abstract Across disciplines such as software engineering to architectural design, it is well acknowledged that the different types of information employed during the design process impacts the potential of the final design. However, a lack of understanding exists about how designers utilize and navigate the abundance of complex information types, making it difficult to develop design methodologies that support the development of competitive products and services. As part of an ongoing effort to develop an Information Archetypes Framework, this study focuses on identifying the emergence of information dimensions and archetypes during decision making. This was accomplished through a detailed analysis of interviews with designers who engage in open source work as part of their employment. The findings of this study provide empirical evidence of the types of information used during the design process, validates existing information archetypes, and identifies new archetypes that emerge from co-occurring information dimensions.
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Yang, Ying-Chieh. "The Buffering Effects of a User's Perceived Past Negative Experience on Social Commerce Engagement." In ICEME 2021: The 2021 12th International Conference on E-business, Management and Economics. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3481127.3481192.

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Velikov, Kathy. "Posthuman Engagements." In ACADIA 2016: Post-Human Frontiers. ACADIA, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.52842/conf.acadia.2016.342.

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Boppe, C. W., and R. P. Martorella. "Thrust Vectoring/Reversing Tactics in Air-to-Air Combat." In ASME 1992 International Gas Turbine and Aeroengine Congress and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/92-gt-362.

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Considerable effort is now underway to develop technologies for enhancing fighter maneuvering limits. This has in part been motivated by the capabilities of advanced air-to-air missiles. One approach to enhanced combat effectiveness involves flight envelope expansion and improved controllability via engine thrust-vectoring and thrust-reversing. The complexity of fighter combat, however, makes it difficult to perform engineering analyses for assessing potential technological enhancements and risks. This paper describes a digital simulation that has been used to identify benefits associated with improved maneuverability. The Navy/Grumman F-14 aircraft provides the flight characteristics database. Combat tactics are developed as part of the solution process and are based solely on characteristics of the combatants and weapons employed. Head-on and co-directional neutral start combat engagements are used to illustrate study results.
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Trainer, Erik H., Chalalai Chaihirunkarn, Arun Kalyanasundaram, and James D. Herbsleb. "Community Code Engagements." In the 18th International Conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2660398.2660420.

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Reports on the topic "Engagements with the Past"

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Manhiça, Anésio, Alex Shankland, Kátia Taela, Euclides Gonçalves, Catija Maivasse, and Mariz Tadros. Alternative Expressions of Citizen Voices: The Protest Song and Popular Engagements with the Mozambican State. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), November 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/ids.2020.001.

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This study examines Mozambican popular music to investigate three questions: Are notions of empowerment and accountability present in popular music in Mozambique? If so, what can these existing notions of empowerment and accountability reveal about relations between citizens and state institutions in general and about citizen-led social and political action in particular? In what ways is popular music used to support citizen mobilisation in Mozambique? The discussion is based on an analysis of 46 protest songs, interviews with musicians, music producers and event promoters as well as field interviews and observations among audiences at selected popular music concerts and public workshops in Maputo city. Secondary data were drawn from radio broadcasts, digital media, and social networks. The songs analysed were widely played in the past two decades (1998–2018), a period in which three different presidents led the country. Our focus is on the protest song, conceived as those musical products that are concerned with public affairs, particularly public policy and how it affects citizens’ social, political and economic life, and the relationship between citizens and the state.
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Dalglish, Chris, and Sarah Tarlow, eds. Modern Scotland: Archaeology, the Modern past and the Modern present. Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, September 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.9750/scarf.09.2012.163.

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The main recommendations of the panel report can be summarised under five key headings:  HUMANITY The Panel recommends recognition that research in this field should be geared towards the development of critical understandings of self and society in the modern world. Archaeological research into the modern past should be ambitious in seeking to contribute to understanding of the major social, economic and environmental developments through which the modern world came into being. Modern-world archaeology can add significantly to knowledge of Scotland’s historical relationships with the rest of the British Isles, Europe and the wider world. Archaeology offers a new perspective on what it has meant to be a modern person and a member of modern society, inhabiting a modern world.  MATERIALITY The Panel recommends approaches to research which focus on the materiality of the recent past (i.e. the character of relationships between people and their material world). Archaeology’s contribution to understandings of the modern world lies in its ability to situate, humanise and contextualise broader historical developments. Archaeological research can provide new insights into the modern past by investigating historical trends not as abstract phenomena but as changes to real lives, affecting different localities in different ways. Archaeology can take a long-term perspective on major modern developments, researching their ‘prehistory’ (which often extends back into the Middle Ages) and their material legacy in the present. Archaeology can humanise and contextualise long-term processes and global connections by working outwards from individual life stories, developing biographies of individual artefacts and buildings and evidencing the reciprocity of people, things, places and landscapes. The modern person and modern social relationships were formed in and through material environments and, to understand modern humanity, it is crucial that we understand humanity’s material relationships in the modern world.  PERSPECTIVE The Panel recommends the development, realisation and promotion of work which takes a critical perspective on the present from a deeper understanding of the recent past. Research into the modern past provides a critical perspective on the present, uncovering the origins of our current ways of life and of relating to each other and to the world around us. It is important that this relevance is acknowledged, understood, developed and mobilised to connect past, present and future. The material approach of archaeology can enhance understanding, challenge assumptions and develop new and alternative histories. Modern Scotland: Archaeology, the Modern past and the Modern present vi Archaeology can evidence varied experience of social, environmental and economic change in the past. It can consider questions of local distinctiveness and global homogeneity in complex and nuanced ways. It can reveal the hidden histories of those whose ways of life diverged from the historical mainstream. Archaeology can challenge simplistic, essentialist understandings of the recent Scottish past, providing insights into the historical character and interaction of Scottish, British and other identities and ideologies.  COLLABORATION The Panel recommends the development of integrated and collaborative research practices. Perhaps above all other periods of the past, the modern past is a field of enquiry where there is great potential benefit in collaboration between different specialist sectors within archaeology, between different disciplines, between Scottish-based researchers and researchers elsewhere in the world and between professionals and the public. The Panel advocates the development of new ways of working involving integrated and collaborative investigation of the modern past. Extending beyond previous modes of inter-disciplinary practice, these new approaches should involve active engagement between different interests developing collaborative responses to common questions and problems.  REFLECTION The Panel recommends that a reflexive approach is taken to the archaeology of the modern past, requiring research into the nature of academic, professional and public engagements with the modern past and the development of new reflexive modes of practice. Archaeology investigates the past but it does so from its position in the present. Research should develop a greater understanding of modern-period archaeology as a scholarly pursuit and social practice in the present. Research should provide insights into the ways in which the modern past is presented and represented in particular contexts. Work is required to better evidence popular understandings of and engagements with the modern past and to understand the politics of the recent past, particularly its material aspect. Research should seek to advance knowledge and understanding of the moral and ethical viewpoints held by professionals and members of the public in relation to the archaeology of the recent past. There is a need to critically review public engagement practices in modern-world archaeology and develop new modes of public-professional collaboration and to generate practices through which archaeology can make positive interventions in the world. And there is a need to embed processes of ethical reflection and beneficial action into archaeological practice relating to the modern past.
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Seybold, Patricia. Secret to Successful Customer Engagements. Boston, MA: Patricia Seybold Group, September 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1571/me09-26-13cc.

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G. CANAVAN. ANALYSIS OF DECISIONS IN MULTILATERAL ENGAGEMENTS. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), March 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/775433.

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Plumer, Martin. How Can Community Engagement in the Local Past and Archaeological Research Be Mutually Beneficial? A Case Study in Community Archaeology from Sauvie Island, Oregon. Portland State University Library, January 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.6428.

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Reeve, Sophie, Alice Mutimer, Susanna Cartmell, and Olivia Frost. Investing in Social Media Pays Big Dividends. APRA, Future Agricultures Consortium, April 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/apra.2022.026.

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Over the past six years, the use of social media, including Twitter, Facebook and WhatsApp, has been a vital part of APRA’s Communications Strategy in raising awareness of the programme’s activities and outputs. Since 2016, APRA’s social media profile has been embedded within the Future Agricultures Consortium’s (FAC) well-established online channels – including Facebook and Twitter – with the view to increase FAC’s followings and enhance APRA’s visibility. The Impact, Communication and Engagement team has been responsible for developing APRA’s Digital Strategy and tracking the impact of social media activities, including sharing APRA’s publications and news on events, and promoting APRA’s key research messages. This report explores this impact, what went well, and what could be improved as future programmes plan their own social media efforts.
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Hwu, Jih-Ru, and Dave Winkler. FACS in the 21st century. AsiaChem Magazine, November 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.51167/acm00002.

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FACS is ideally positioned to be a powerful, inclusive, an outward-facing federation of chemical and allied societies in the Asia Pacific region. The Federation promotes networking and collaboration within the region and strong engagement in the broader international chemical community. Over the past three years, FACS has been refocused to capture these opportunities by the restructuring of three critical aspects of the FACS operations.
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Thorne, Sarah, Daniel Kovacs, Joseph Gailani, and Burton Suedel. Informing the community engagement framework for natural and nature-based projects : an annotated review of leading stakeholder and community engagement practices. Engineer Research and Development Center (U.S.), September 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.21079/11681/45400.

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In its infrastructure development work, the US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) engages and collaborates with numerous local, state, and national stakeholders. Projects incorporating innovative approaches, such as beneficial use (BU) of dredged materials and other natural and nature-based features (NNBF), are often not well-understood by stakeholders, including those at the community level. This often results in conflicts and project delays. By sponsoring the development of a Community Engagement Framework, the Dredging Operations and Environmental Research (DOER) program hopes to systematically improve how project teams design, conduct, and measure effective community engagement on infrastructure projects. The purpose of this focused Review was to assesses leading stakeholder and community engagement practices that reflect the state of practice of stakeholder engagement within USACE, and by other leading organizations in the US and internationally, to inform development of the Community Engagement Framework. While the resulting Framework will be particularly well-suited for community engagement on projects incorporating BU and other NNBF, it will be applicable to a broad range of USACE Civil Works’ initiatives where effective stakeholder engagement is critical to project success. The assessment showed the practice of stakeholder engagement has evolved significantly over the past 30 years, with much more focus today on ensuring that engagement processes are purposeful, meaningful, collaborative, and inclusive - reflecting stakeholders’ desire to participate in co-creating sustainable solutions that produce environmental, economic, and social benefits. This, and other key findings, are informing development of the Community Engagement Framework which is scalable and adaptable to a broad range of projects across the USACE missions.
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Przemieniecki, J. S. Mathematical Modeling of Combat Engagements by Heterogeneous Forces. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, September 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada213274.

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Marshak, Ronni. Tips for Email Communications for Customer-Facing Engagements. Boston, MA: Patricia Seybold Group, May 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1571/me05-09-12cc.

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