Academic literature on the topic 'Homes missions'

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Journal articles on the topic "Homes missions"

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Bukit, Pilemon. "“Misi dan Strategi Gereja: Penjangkauan Mahasiswa Non Teologi Sebagai Mitra Gereja Untuk Bermisi”." SOTIRIA (Jurnal Theologia dan Pendidikan Agama Kristen) 5, no. 1 (June 29, 2022): 1–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.47166/sot.v5i1.47.

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Many people when they hear the word mission, immediately think of a difficult, heavy and complicated job, because mission means having to go to someone else's country. In terms of mission and mission it doesn't have to be like that. Mission and mission means going to do something, in this case proclaiming that Jesus is Lord and the savior sent by God to mankind. For this mission, a strategy is needed and an effective and efficient strategy is to serve non-theological students to know and believe in Jesus and then develop it. With them they already know and believe in Jesus, so since they became students, they have been able to make missions on campus, in boarding houses, at their parents' homes, in churches and in their hometown during their holidays and especially after they have completed their education
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Mann, Kristin Dutcher. "Christmas in the Missions of Northern New Spain." Americas 66, no. 03 (January 2010): 331–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003161500005769.

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In 1982, native historian Joe Sando vividly described the Christmas season at Jémez Pueblo in northern New Mexico. Throughout the pueblo, figures of the Christ Child lay on display in homes in prominent, specially-decorated areas representing the stable in Bethlehem. During his childhood, Sando remembered that Hemish families roasted corn in their fireplaces, while elders drew pictures of wild game animals and birds, as well as important crops, on the wall next to the fireplace, in hopes that the birth of Christ would also result in the birth of the animals and plants drawn on the wall. In Jémez today, although the roasting of corn and drawings on the fireplace walls have been replaced by the exchange of gifts and watching television, some seasonal customs continue. Pine logs for communal bonfires rest neatly in square piles in front of each home. Christmas Eve bonfires attract the newborn Infant Jesus, and children gleefully play and dance around them. When the fires die out, the Hemish return to their homes to await midnight mass. After mass at the church, worshipers follow the newborn Infant in procession through the community. The next morning, as the first rays of daylight become visible in the east, animal dancers appear on the hilly skyline to the east and southwest. By the time the sun leaves the eastern horizon, the animals have arrived in the village, gathering in front of the drummers, who sing welcoming songs. The people arrive to welcome the animals, who process to the plaza, where they dance all day.
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Mann, Kristin Dutcher. "Christmas in the Missions of Northern New Spain." Americas 66, no. 3 (January 2010): 331–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/tam.0.0214.

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In 1982, native historian Joe Sando vividly described the Christmas season at Jémez Pueblo in northern New Mexico. Throughout the pueblo, figures of the Christ Child lay on display in homes in prominent, specially-decorated areas representing the stable in Bethlehem. During his childhood, Sando remembered that Hemish families roasted corn in their fireplaces, while elders drew pictures of wild game animals and birds, as well as important crops, on the wall next to the fireplace, in hopes that the birth of Christ would also result in the birth of the animals and plants drawn on the wall. In Jémez today, although the roasting of corn and drawings on the fireplace walls have been replaced by the exchange of gifts and watching television, some seasonal customs continue. Pine logs for communal bonfires rest neatly in square piles in front of each home. Christmas Eve bonfires attract the newborn Infant Jesus, and children gleefully play and dance around them. When the fires die out, the Hemish return to their homes to await midnight mass. After mass at the church, worshipers follow the newborn Infant in procession through the community. The next morning, as the first rays of daylight become visible in the east, animal dancers appear on the hilly skyline to the east and southwest. By the time the sun leaves the eastern horizon, the animals have arrived in the village, gathering in front of the drummers, who sing welcoming songs. The people arrive to welcome the animals, who process to the plaza, where they dance all day.
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Couillet, Audrey, Jean-Louis Terra, Nassima Brochard, and Nicolas Chauliac. "Barriers to the Prevention of Suicide in Nursing Homes." Crisis 38, no. 6 (September 2017): 423–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1027/0227-5910/a000466.

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Abstract. Background: The suicide rate in older people is high. Gatekeeper training is recommended for at-risk populations in the detection and management of suicidal residents in nursing homes. Aims: This study focuses on how caregivers in nursing homes consider suicide in older people from a social perspective, and to what extent these social representations are an obstacle to the prevention of suicide. Method: This study is both observational and qualitative, and is based on semi-directed one-to-one interviews with caregivers. Results: We met with 18 caregivers from three nursing homes in 2015. We show that the social representations of caregivers working in nursing homes are essentially identical to those of the general population and those found in other studies on paramedics. Suicide is seen as an expression of autonomy, a response to the suffering associated with aging and the living conditions imposed on older people in our society, particularly in nursing homes. Limitations: Our study highlights the problems inherent to the position of caregiver, in which we can observe a conflict between professional missions and personal ideology. Conclusion: This study confirms the need to continue training on suicide prevention in nursing homes.
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Bradley, Suzanne F. "Issues in the Management of Resistant Bacteria in Long-Term–Care Facilities." Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology 20, no. 05 (May 1999): 362–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/501637.

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AbstractThe prevalence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in the long-term–care setting and the risk to nursing home residents is still unknown. Few studies have been done in community-based nursing homes, and most have focused on colonization rather than infection rates. Concerns about methicillin-resistantStaphylococcus aureusand vancomycin-resistant enterococci have been expressed most often, while relatively scant attention has been paid to the problem of antibiotic resistance in gram-negative bacilli. Antibiotic resistance precautions need to be developed for nursing homes that are simple, effective, inexpensive, and recognize the unique rehabilitative and long-term custodial missions of chronic-care facilities.
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Rubin, Margareta. "Experiences from the World Health Organization Missions in Sarajevo, 1992–1993." Prehospital and Disaster Medicine 9, S1 (June 1994): S8—S10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1049023x00041091.

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As a physician and aid worker for the World Health Organization (WHO), I spent some months during the winter (1992-1993) in the besieged city of Sarajevo and another month during the spring (1993) in northeastern Bosnia.Impressions from such an experience, in the middle of a war in Europe, naturally mark one's mind. As one who has seen Sarajevo's people desperately fight to survive the winter, during constant bombardment, and with lack of everything associated with basic needs such as fuel, food, water, and drugs, I will never forget. I could speak a long time about the hardship, as well as the helpfulness, friendship, and even happiness amid grief and misery. There were joyful parties with Bosnian songs and music, dinners with food made of almost nothing at all and held in homes seriously damaged by shelling. Sarajevo, that magic city, became a mysterious attraction to us foreigners. Once we had been there, we had to go back to see how the city was surviving. We all had the “Sarajevo Syndrome.”
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Garrich Ribera, Montserrat. "Els vestits a les memòries de les missions de recerca de Palmira Jaquetti per a l’Obra del Cançoner Popular de Catalunya." Estudis de Literatura Oral Popular / Studies in Oral Folk Literature, no. 12 (December 19, 2023): 93–114. http://dx.doi.org/10.17345/elop20233223.

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L’article se centra en la manera de vestir de la població catalana i les peces comunes que componen el vestit a partir de la informació continguda a les memòries de les missions de recerca de cançons que va fer Palmira Jaquetti (Barcelona, 21 de setembre de 1895 - Els Monjos, 8 de maig de 1963) per encàrrec de l’Obra del Cançoner Popular de Catalunya, en companyia de Maria Carbó, de Mercè Porta o d’Enric d’Aoust, entre el 1925 i el 1940. La informació es presenta agrupada en els apartats sobre els vestits de Palmira Jaquetti, els vestits dels homes, els vestits de les dones, els cabells, els vestits dels infants i la roba de la llar. Les memòries de les missions de recerca de Palmira Jaquetti constitueixen un testimoni rellevant de primera mà que documenta el canvi de manera de vestir entre 1926 i 1936, quan s’abandonen les peces d’ús habitual fins a finals del segle xix (calces, barretina, gec, gipó, etc.) i se substitueixen per altres que s’imposen (gorra, pantalons, brusa, etc.).
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Geisler, Charles, and Essy Letsoalo. "Rethinking Land Reform in South Africa: An Alternative Approach to Environmental Justice." Sociological Research Online 5, no. 2 (September 2000): 80–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.5153/sro.496.

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Worldwide, millions of rural people inhabiting marginal lands have been evicted from their homes in the name of conservation. Africa is no exception, nor is South Africa, the focus of this paper. Our central concern is whether land reform in South Africa can accomplish both social and environmental justice in a context of widespread and longstanding human displacement and opportunity costs as the country's national parks and game refuges expand. The costs of ecological expropriation are illustrated, as are instances from other countries where land reform simultaneously serves social and environmental objectives. Recommendations are advanced for greening South Africa's land reform without sacrificing its social and economic missions.
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Williamson, Adam. "We Faithful Few." General: Brock University Undergraduate Journal of History 5 (April 11, 2020): 30–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.26522/tg.v5i1.2385.

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This article focuses on the Jesuit missions into Elizabethan England and the Jesuit relationship with the Catholic gentry and why the gentry were crucial to Jesuit mission’s survival. This is done by looking at the various ways that the gentry class were involved with and supported the Jesuit’s efforts. Gentry homes were an important aspect of gentry support because of their multi-purpose functions in hiding the priests from state authorities, their ideal place for planning operations and for holding mass because of their hidden countryside location. The gentry class were also personally involved, aiding the Jesuits through their actions as escorts as well as running illegal printing presses and distributing catholic propaganda around England. They also served as a vital connection for the Jesuits to the laymen people and resulted in the development of local catholic communities structured around the gentry class which supported the Jesuit of goal of sustaining Catholic communities. While this shows how the gentry were important to the Jesuits, it also demonstrates how the Jesuit’s became increasingly reliant on the gentry class which opens up additional avenues of research into how their relationship evolved during the reign of King James I.
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Giorgi, S., N. Guguahsvili, T. Oniani, G. Kanaldarishvili, and E. Lelashvili. "Predictors of Post-traumatic Stress Disorder in Military Personnel Deployed to Peacekeeping Missions." European Psychiatry 41, S1 (April 2017): S724. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2017.01.1313.

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BackgroundThe following study shows that PTSD, depression and anxiety present actual and urgent problem in military field. These disorders appear to be highly co-morbid that results in much more complicated treatment process and outcome. Service members of Georgian armed forces participate in various international peacekeeping operations on the regular basis, though there are no researches conducted so far to provide evidence for mental health problem prevalence in Georgian deployed military personnel.MethodCollection of the data took place during the period of 2014–2015 years after six months of service members returning from the international peacekeeping mission back to their homes. The sample for this research were represented by 2799 servicemen who actively engaged in ISAF peacekeeping missions. All of them were male, with average age: M = 29.3 (SD = 6.3). The data for the following research were collected using self-administered assessment measures, namely PCL-5 for PTSD screening and PHQ for depression and Anxiety and somatic complaints assessment.ResultsPTSD appeared to be significantly predicted by range/level of anxiety and depression symptom urgency, nevertheless after joint/combine integration of these variables in one regressional equation, just symptoms of depression remained as statistically reliable explanatory factor for the significant percentage of the somatic symptom range variation.ConclusionIt would be wise to recommend mental health care specialists particularly to bear in mind the possibility of co-existing depression and anxiety symptoms in patients with PTSD.Disclosure of interestThe authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Homes missions"

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Kennerly, Alston. "British seamen's missions and sailors' homes 1815 to 1970 : voluntary welfare provision for serving seafarers." Thesis, University of Plymouth, 1989. http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/788.

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From the 1820s an ever present feature of most British ports has been the voluntary societies, little- studied before, offering spiritual and social welfare support to serving seafarers. The perspective taken in this study is that although there were numerous individual societies voluntary effort for seafarers constitutes a single movement. The continued existence of many societies well into the twentieth century suggests that the movement should be examined longitudinally in order to assess its contribution in relation to the changing context in which such welfare operated. To establish the internal operations of seamen's missions and. sailors' homes. the records of a selprtirnn nflarge and small societies quantifiable data as well as Particular attention has been target population - seafarers using contemporary sources; using public records, and to changing religious context has that of of social policy, a welfare state. have been examined for other forms of evidence. paid to the nature of the - and the situation in port, to involvement of the State the industrial context. The been examined closely, as has s it progressed towards the The study reveals the considerable voluntary effort which contributed to the movement, confirming the wide coverage of British ports which was achieved and the extent to which it was able to match the growing numbers of seafarers. The product of evangelical interest in the well-being of others, there was particular concern for rescuing the seafarer from the evils of port districts, especially crimping. Though to many seafarers. marginal in religious terms, seafarers' charities were more significant in social terms as the sole providers of social support throughout much of the period of this study. Although some local societies survived to the 1970s, by the 1890s the movement had changed from a mass of local societies to domination by the branch networks of a few national societies. Apart from control of seafaring employment, State intervention was not significant in seafaring welfare except in the 1940s, while the role of the shipping industry was small. The decline of the movement in Britain was linked with the effects of inflation, changing patterns of seafaring and the decline of the British shipping industry. In the broader religious and social welfare contexts, seamen's missions and homes were typical products of the nineteenth century and in their evolution to 1970 paralleled closely developments in religion and social welfare in Britain.
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Fincher, James 'Chico'. "The development of a missions link through spiritual interactions between an inner-city congregation and residents of University Homes public housing community (Georgia)." DigitalCommons@Robert W. Woodruff Library, Atlanta University Center, 1997. http://digitalcommons.auctr.edu/dissertations/AAIDP14668.

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This paper documents the activities of the leadership team of Central United Methodist Church (CUMC) in its outreach mission to University Homes. University Homes is a public-owned housing project located in the heart of the Atlanta University Center community. The primary methodology was the corporate use of an intercessory prayer book, Forty Days for Five People by G. Ross Freeman. The thesis is that spirituality consisting of contemplation and prayer with a foundation of Christian Education are significant tools of empowerment---especially for persons with no previous history of mission outreach---which allow Christians to become committed and involved in order to undertake a coordinated effort of missions to poor and underprivileged persons living in public housing. Also, church leaders and other laity in an affluent middle class church with no previous history of mission involvement with public housing can be equipped spiritually through the vehicle of prayer to undertake a vital mission project. Therefore, the church will begin impacting its community by adhering to its mission statement to impact the community by inviting children, youth and adults to Christ. The leaders were challenged to spend time reflecting and praying for designated people of the community. After this phase, these persons voluntarily visited those for whom they had been interceding in order to openly communicate what the Spirit of Cod had revealed to the leadership, and to lay a foundation in order to build meaningful relationships. This project will focus on the dynamics and praxis of the local church's attempt to participate in vital missions in a public housing project, and the role of the associate pastor as mediator/facilitator between the public housing community and the church. The purpose of this study is to examine the reasons inner-city churches have problems engaging in missions to local public housing residents. This project will also present a model with specific alternatives for inner-city churches to become better neighbors in missions to their local communities. Chapter I outlines the overall purpose for the study, presenting the ministry setting and the associate pastor's role in developing strategies for missions praxis. Chapter II focuses on the project in action and the phases of this outreach ministry. Chapter III recounts the history of missions, highlights the relationship of the black church to its community, and reviews the literature on urban mission models for inner-city churches. Chapter IV provides insight into the implications of this project through discussions of spirituality and Christian Education. Chapter V concludes with evaluations, project summary, and reflections.
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Emberger, Robert A. "The application of biblical counseling theory and practice to a rescue mission a case study of the Whosoever Gospel Mission and Rescue Home /." Theological Research Exchange Network (TREN), 1993. http://www.tren.com.

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Rogers, David W. "The development and implementation of missions and evangelism training for students participating in NE-1 in northeast England." Theological Research Exchange Network (TREN), access this title online, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.2986/tren.085-0023.

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Hood, Rachel Rebecca. ""Reclaiming the Child": Mountain Mission School as a Successful Appalachian Home Mission." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2007. https://dc.etsu.edu/etd/2146.

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Mountain Mission School of Grundy, Virginia, founded by Samuel Robinson Hurley in 1921, is an anomaly of the mission school era of 1880 to 1940. Unlike other mission schools, Mountain Mission School was independent from its inception and was founded by a self-taught, self-made millionaire from southwest Virginia. The school's purpose to "reclaim" the child from material and spiritual poverty lay in Hurley's desire to develop a child's mind, body, and soul through a Christian, industrial education. Through personal commitment to the school and tireless fund-raising efforts for the school, he inspired others to continue the mission he began. Primary sources from Radford University, Milligan College, and Mountain Mission School, plus contemporary articles published in the Christian Standard, defend these claims.
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Beggs, Douglas C. "An historical analysis of church extension in the Southern Baptist Convention from 1845 to 2000." Online full text .pdf document, available to Fuller patrons only, 2002. http://www.tren.com.

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Moon, Moon Chan. "A world mission counterpart of the Korean church : from the advance of home mission to the partnership of overseas mission." Thesis, University of Wales Trinity Saint David, 2001. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.683295.

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Johanson, Kendra A. "Crossroads Center, Homeless Mission and Transitional Shelter." Thesis, Virginia Tech, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/50584.

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My thesis is an exploration of sacred space in architecture. The vehicle for this exploration is a homeless mission and transitional shelter in Alexandria, Virginia. Homelessness is a constant battle for both individuals and communities, precipitating disjointed and fragmented lives. I hoped to design a dignified urban dwelling where man is able to remember who he is, his purpose, and his direction, while also participating in healthy and fruitful community.
Master of Architecture
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Balloud, Simon. "Les hommes d'Eglise français dans la migration vers le Canada, 1842-1914." Thesis, La Rochelle, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018LAROF002.

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Tout au long du XIXe siècle et jusqu’au début du XXe siècle, des gens d’Église membres des communautés religieuses quittent la France pour rejoindre le Canada. Ils franchissent l’Océan Atlantique pour suivre la voie missionnaire, accomplir une carrière ecclésiastique et professionnelle, ou pour préserver une vocation religieuse menacée par la politique anticléricale d’un gouvernement. Ce phénomène particulier, négligé par l’histoire religieuse et l’histoire des migrations, alimente un système migratoire missionnaire transatlantique en marche depuis le début du XIXe siècle. À la croisée de plusieurs champs historiographiques, cette thèse propose l’étude de ce mouvement migratoire particulier, tant à l’échelle collective qu’individuelle, afin de comprendre la place qu’occupe le Canada dans le parcours migratoire des religieux français entre 1842 et 1914
Throughout the nineteenth century and early twentieth century, Catholic community members of Roman Catholic religious orders left France to join Canada. They crossed the Atlantic Ocean to follow the call of missionary appeal, to pursue an ecclesiastical and professional career, or to save a religious vocation threatened by the anticlerical policy of the French government. This particular phenomenon, neglected in religious and migration history, fueled a transatlantic missionary migration system since the beginning of the nineteenth century. At the crossroads of several historiographical fields, this thesis addresses the study of this peculiar migratory movement, both at the collective and individual level, in order to understand the place occupied by Canada in the migratory path of French clerics between 1842 and 1914
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Saint-Esprit, Congrégation du. "Mémoire Spiritaine: La mission au gré de l'histoire tumultueuse des hommes." Congrégation du Saint-Esprit, 2006. http://digital.library.duq.edu/u?/cdm-memspir,4056.

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no. 23 -- premier semestre 2006 -- Liminaire -- (pg. 3) -- Paul Coulon : Le compte à rebours a commencé -- La mission au gré de l'histoire tumultueuse des hommes -- (pg. 10) -- Pierre Trichet -- Le père Augustin Planque (1826- 1907) et la création du vicariat apostolique du Dahomey, confié à la société des Missions Africaines – (pg. 31) -- René Charrier Notre agent à Corfou ou les aventures ioniennes du père Loevenbruck (1848-1849) -- (pg. 59) -- Bernadette Truchet -- Un début d'inculturation en Chine au dix-neuvième siècle Le père Joseph Gonnet, jésuite (1815-1895) -- (pg. 80) -- Gérard Vieira -- En des lieux et en des temps agités, un missionnaire comme beaucoup d'autres : le père Eugène Ehrhart (1865-1949) -- (pg. 114) -- Côme Kinata -- Le père Jean Morizur et la formation du clergé indigene en Afrique Équatoriale Française (1946-1953). -- Chroniques & commentaires -- (pg. 147) -- Sœur Paul Girolet -- Petite chronique topographique et historique sur les déplacements de la maison mère des Sœurs missionnaires du Saint-Esprit -- (pg. 165) -- Paul Coulon -- Frédéric Ozanam et François Libermann : Quelques réflexions à partir d'un grand livre de Gérard Cholvy -- Recensions -- (pg. 175) -- P. Trichet, P. Saulnier, V. O'Toole, Ph. Delisle ont lu : Guillaume Yameogo, Joe Egan et Brendan Me Convery, Bruno Semplicio, Pietro Lupo
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Books on the topic "Homes missions"

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R, L. N. The missing link, or, Bible-Women in the homes of the London poor. New York: Robert Carter, 1986.

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Carmen, Jusué Simonena, and Navarre (Spain), eds. Itinerario universal de Francisco de Javier. Pamplona: Gobierno de Navarra, 2002.

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Parish, Helen Rand. Las Casas en México: Historia y obra desconocidas. México: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1992.

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Kahrl, Faith Jessup. The memoirs of Faith Jessup Kahrl. Columbus, Ohio: R.O. Joyce, 1989.

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Espinel, José Luis. Colón en Salamanca: Los dominicos. Salamanca: Caja de Ahorros y Monte de Piedad de Salamanca, 1988.

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Parvin, Earl. Missions U.S.A. Chicago, IL: Moody Press, 1985.

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Diocesan Church Society of New Brunswick. Work north of Woodstock. [Saint John, N.B.?: s.n., 1994.

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Allen, Edith H. Home missions in action. New York: Revell, 1990.

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Üffing, Martin. Die deutsche Kirche und Mission: Konsequenzen aus dem nachkonziliaren Missionsverständnis für die deutsche Kirche. Nettetal: Steyler Verlag, 1994.

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Guernsey, Alice M. Under our flag: A study of conditions in America from the standpoint of woman's home missionary work. New York: Fleming H. Revell, 1986.

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Book chapters on the topic "Homes missions"

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Paul, Subhadeep. "The Kinetic Mission of Kalimpong: The Enduring Legacy of Reverend Dr. John Anderson Graham and Dr. Graham's Homes in the History of Scottish Foreign Missions." In Lakshmi’s Footprints and Paisley Patterns, 115–28. London: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003436959-9.

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Gaylard, Gerald. "Missing Persons." In At Home with Ivan Vladislavić, 39–58. New York: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003318996-3.

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Ratschiller Nasim, Linda Maria. "The Religious Space of Knowledge: The Basel Mission, Worldwide Webs and Pietist Purity." In Cambridge Imperial and Post-Colonial Studies, 49–103. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-27128-1_2.

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AbstractThis chapter examines the ideological and social context in which the Basel Mission emerged and scrutinises the changing meaning of Pietist purity over the nineteenth century. The Basel Mission drew upon the support of wealthy and powerful patrician families from Basel and far-flung Pietist networks across Europe and beyond. However, it swiftly transformed into a grassroots movement, funded by small donations from a large number of people in urban and rural areas of Switzerland and Germany. The Basel Mission’s evangelising efforts abroad were linked to charitable activities at home, which tackled the ostensible problem of de-Christianisation within Europe and fundamentally depended on voluntary work, especially by women and children. Although healing had been part of Pietism ever since the movement gained momentum, most adherents had reservations about the morality and efficacy of scientific medicine, discernible in their preference for healing and deliverance theology. The Basel missionaries’ prolonged experience of death and illness in West Africa, however, allowed for the reformulation of Pietist concepts of purity and healing through the integration of scientific theories of disease and hygiene.
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Xing, Liudong, Guilin Zhao, and Yisha Xiang. "Phased-Mission Modelling of Physical Layer Reliability for Smart Homes." In Stochastic Models in Reliability Engineering, 317–30. First edition. | Boca Raton, FL : CRC Press/Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.: CRC Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9780429331527-20.

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Rofe, J. Simon. "Increasingly Forlorn: Welles Heads Home via Rome." In Franklin Roosevelt’s Foreign Policy and the Welles Mission, 155–73. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230604896_7.

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Bayne, Brandon L. "Deserted." In Missions Begin with Blood, 133–69. Fordham University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5422/fordham/9780823294206.003.0005.

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Alongside the celebration of “red” martyrs who died in hatred of the faith, Jesuits also cultivated “white” martyrdoms of prolonged suffering. Red, or “wet,” martyrs had planted the seed with their bodies and watered it with their blood. However, countless others never had that opportunity. These remaining priests wrestled with more quotidian struggles like travel, hunger, climate, language, homesickness, solitude, and sickness. For them, the notion that everyday ordeals constituted a separate, but equally valid, form of martyrdom became a compelling way of reconciling with failures. In eighteenth-century California and Sonora, Jesuits increasingly emphasized their physical and psychological desolation. Whereas previous priests had uprooted weeds of idolatry in direct confrontations with shamans or seen abundant harvests of conversion spring from dramatic deaths, these mostly German Jesuits imagined themselves in desert isolation without much to show for their labors. Distant from their homes and disenchanted with the prospect of lasting conversions, they turned to earlier Christian idioms of spiritual desolation as they sought consolation in the belief that with enough sweat and tears even those deserts would one day bloom.
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"Home Mission." In Protestant Nonconformist Texts, edited by David Bebbington, Kenneth Dix, and Alan Ruston, 259–71. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351151160-32.

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Pascoe, Peggy. "Homes Outside the Rescue Homes." In Relations Of Rescue, 146–74. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195060089.003.0005.

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Abstract On Saturday, April 13, 1878, several home mission women at tended a wedding in San Jose, California. The bride, Ah Fah, had resided in the San Francisco Chinese Mission Home for two years. She was employed as a domestic servant; her groom, Ng Noy, was a Chinese Christian who worked in a nearby household. The white women could not understand the words of the ceremony, which was conducted in Chinese by a Presbyterian missionary. They were, however, convinced that this “organization of a home on Christian principles” was “the first step upwards from heathenism to civilization.” One of the white guests wrote a lengthy account of the event for a Christian newspaper.
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Hill, Kimberly D. "Industrial Education and Symbolic Home Building in the Congo Free State, 1898–1907." In A Higher Mission, 17–46. University Press of Kentucky, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813179810.003.0002.

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Chapter 1 explains trends in the African American Protestant missions movement up to 1907 with a focus on William Henry Sheppard and the black staff of the American Presbyterian Congo Mission. The literary and musical accomplishments of Althea Brown are introduced in the context of her classical training at Fisk University. The role that Alonzo Edmiston played in developing industrial education at the Congo Mission is introduced through his childhood working on a Tennessee plantation and his education at Stillman Institute. The final section explains how both ministers applied their academic backgrounds and the lessons of previous black missionaries to rebuilding a mission station despite political turmoil in the region.
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Müller, Retief. "Other(ing) Identity Formations: From Mission Field Ecumenism to Home Church Controversy." In The Scots Afrikaners, 127–53. Edinburgh University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474462952.003.0006.

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This chapter resumes the thread of the narrative left off in chapter 4 with the focus on events and discussions involving Nyasaland/Malawi. Of central importance here are negotiations leading up to and eventually concluding in the DRC’s Nkhoma mission’s amalgamation with the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian, which was the indigenous church being founded by the Free Church of Scotland’s Livingstonia mission and the Blantyre mission of the Church of Scotland. It further discusses the fallout generated in the DRC of South Africa due to this ecumenical venture participated in by their Malawian mission, a project which was controversial due to the supposedly liberal and heterodox views of the Scottish mission partners.
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Conference papers on the topic "Homes missions"

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ZAKHAROV, A. F. "MEASURING PARAMETERS OF SUPERMASSIVE BLACK HOLES WITH SPACE MISSIONS." In Proceedings of the 12th Regional Conference. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812770523_0045.

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Lee, William H. "Gamma-Ray Bursts from Accreting Black Holes." In GAMMA-RAY BURST AND AFTERGLOW ASTRONOMY 2001: A Workshop Celebrating the First Year of the HETE Mission. AIP, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1579342.

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Haettasch, Martin. "Medium Density Beyond the Missing Middle." In 109th ACSA Annual Meeting Paper Proceedings. ACSA Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.35483/acsa.am.109.89.

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The question of housing in America’s growing urban centers has gravitated towards extremes in recent years: efforts at densification have sparked massive developments of multi-story apartment blocks, on the other hand the free standing single family house remains to date the unchallenged ideal of many Americans. Austin, TX is no exception to this trend: Single-family homes continue to make up by far the largest share of housing while large multifamily structures have seen a steady increase by about 40% over the last decade1. This development has led to spatial and social disparities. While multi-unit structures have accelerated the urbanization of a few neighborhoods and corridors, and cater to a transient population of young professionals, rising property values have made the “house” an increasingly unattainable dream for many middle class families. This lack of a middle ground has been aptly identified within the discourse of New Urbanism as the “Missing Middle,”2 referring to the density range between the apartment block and the single family house as much as a vanishing “middle class”. The Missing Middle promotes walkable neighborhoods with housing densities able to sustain local amenities and businesses without sacrificing essential comforts of the single family home. Gaining ground throughout planning departments across North America, the idea has increasingly come to be reflected in the rewriting of zoning codes.3. But despite the groundwork being laid, a true design discourse to give form(s) to the idea has yet to emerge. All too often, Missing Middle housing is reduced to a mere zoning problem or entangled in a retrogressive formal agenda and the desire to create a simulacrum of a pre-modern city based on pre-WWII housing types. All but absent from this discourse is the rich legacy of modernist experimental housing that explored the medium density range – often already perceived as counter model to CIAM’s pre-war doctrine of the functionalist city. Regardless of successes or failures, this discourse hinged on two crucial recognitions. First: the unit always prefigures a (possible) city, and the smallest domestic space begins to suggest attitudes towards the relationship between individuals, architecture, and the city; and second: these relationships are inherently a design problem.
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Conley, Catharine A., and Linda Billings. "Don't Leave Home Without It: Planetary Protection for Robotic and Human Missions." In 2008 IEEE Aerospace Conference. IEEE, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/aero.2008.4526252.

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Malyshev, Denys, Emmanuel Moulin, and Andrea Santangelo. "Limits on the Primordial Black Holes Dark Matter with current and future missions." In Multifrequency Behaviour of High Energy Cosmic Sources XIV. Trieste, Italy: Sissa Medialab, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.22323/1.447.0018.

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Erdmann, Tony, and Mara Krachten. "Lessons-learned from teaching satellite operations in a novel hands-on student project utilizing in-orbit spacecraft during the COVID-19 pandemic." In Symposium on Space Educational Activities (SSAE). Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5821/conference-9788419184405.062.

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The Chair of Space Technology at TU Berlin continuously develops new satellite technology and software that is verified and used in various missions in orbit. 27 satellites were launched as of 2022. Many of these satellites by far outreach their design lifetime and work until today. At the same time, an increasing number of satellites not only in the academic domain is demanding for qualified operators. Hence, some of the satellites at TU Berlin are not fully operated anymore. To enable an efficient and sustainable use of those satellites, a novel hands-on student-driven project was implemented in order to utilize these aged but functional satellites to train a new generation of satellite operators. In this lecture course, students with various backgrounds are introduced to the basics of satellite operations by student tutors. Using a laboratory model of a CubeSat as a hardware-in-the-loop operations simulation, participants can collect first experiences in the university’s own Mission Control Center (MCC). Besides theoretical and practical foundations of satellite operations they gain skills in managing and coordinating satellite missions. After finishing the basic course in a theoretical and practical operations test, students qualify to participate in the advanced project giving them the opportunity to work with and operate the available satellites in orbit under supervision. Each semester, several interdisciplinary teams conduct experiments such as Earth Observation scenarios or work on related tasks like the improvement of the operations software or Human Factors of satellite operations. The pandemic has posed new challenges to this innovative educational concept, but was also a motivation to find alternative ways to teach satellite operations. The setup of simulated operations in the MCC was transformed into a combined setup of remote access and video conference. In this way, students are enabled to practice satellite operations from home. Theoretical lectures are prepared as screencasts. Further, the advanced project work was transferred to a remote manner. Students planned satellite scenarios from home, which subsequently were conducted by the student tutors, who provided the acquired telemetry data to the participants for analysis. Among the results of the project are several images with the focus on environmental monitoring of Earth, a software update for a satellite and the continuous analysis and documentation of degradation of components that have been in orbit for many years. These achievements do not only provide exciting hands-on classes and new skills to the students but often even contribute to the institution’s research
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Owens, Jennifer, and Ellen Riddle. "The HOMER mission - Building a NASA sounding rocket in a university setting." In 36th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting and Exhibit. Reston, Virigina: American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.2514/6.1998-14.

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Muraleedharan, Rajani, and Lisa Ann Osadciw. "Secure self-adaptive mission-critical communication for distributed smart home sensor network." In 6th Annual International Conference on Mobile and Ubiquitous Systems: Computing, Networking and Services. IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.4108/icst.mobiquitous2009.7059.

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Yu, Keyang, and Dong Chen. "PAROS: The Missing “Puzzle” in Smart Home Router Operating Systems." In 2023 32nd International Conference on Computer Communications and Networks (ICCCN). IEEE, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icccn58024.2023.10230103.

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Xu, Hongsheng, Guirong Li, and Hao Tan. "A novel method about detecting missing holes on the motor carling." In Other Applications. SPIE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2288090.

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Reports on the topic "Homes missions"

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Donegan, Indira R. Mission Training Complex Sites Enabling Home Station Education. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, January 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada587414.

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Lacayo, Carlos. Comparative Analysis about the Monitoring and Evaluation Systems: Debate about the Social Protection Policy and System - The Case of the Social Protection Net Program from Nicaragua (RPS) and a Proposal about a System of Unique Register of Poverty Family Beneficiaries. Inter-American Development Bank, November 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0012288.

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The general mission of this policy is "to contribute to the social inclusion of the people, homes and communities in vulnerability condition, so that they participate of the development benefits in a sustainable way".
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Schuurmans, Thomas E. Should Army National Guard Force Structure be Based on the Federal Warfight Mission for the Emerging Home Land Security Mission? Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, April 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada401865.

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Manitoba Indigenous Tuberculosis History Project (MITHP). Missing Patients Research Guide. Manitoba Indigenous Tuberculosis History Project (MITHP), Department of History, University of Winnipeg, February 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.36939/ir.202402141551.

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This Missing Patients Research Guide contains directions for finding out more about Indigenous patients who entered tuberculosis (TB) sanatoriums and hospitals in Manitoba and never returned home. Part One of the guide presents helpful start-up information. First it explains how to gather useful details including names, dates, and locations that will help in the search as well as how to move forward with your research. Then it outlines three useful “Research Tips”: all of the various names of TB treatment hospitals in Manitoba commonly attended by Indigenous patients; instructions for undertaking database searches using keywords; and techniques for linking information between Indian Residential Schools and hospitals. Last, a “Research Case Study” demonstrates some of the techniques and challenges you may encounter when researching Vital Statistics and Indian Residential School records by looking at the lives of three TB patients, Elie Caribou, Joseph Michel, and Albert Linklater. Part Two of the guide explains how to research the location of patient burials associated with nine hospitals where Indigenous patients were treated in Manitoba, including treatment for TB: Dynevor Indian Hospital, Clearwater Lake Indian Hospital, Brandon Indian Sanatorium, Ninette Sanatorium, St. Boniface / St. Vital Sanatorium, Fort Churchill Military Hospital, Norway House Indian Hospital, Fisher River Indian Hospital and Pine Falls Indian Hospital at Fort Alexander. Some of the general research information found in Part One is repeated under the individual hospitals and sanatoriums along with the specific information that may assist in searching for missing patients at each location. At the end of the guide, in Appendix A, you will find a checklist to help you in your research. Appendix B provides contact information for the organizations mentioned in this guide so that you can reach out by phone, email, or mail. Appendix C discusses accessing the records held by The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation.
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Regan, Jack, Julie Bryant, and Craig Weinschenk. Analysis of the Coordination of Suppression and Ventilation in Single-Family Homes. UL Firefighter Safety Research Institute, March 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.54206/102376/slzh7498.

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Prior full-scale research with the fire service was primarily designed to isolate specific tactics, most often either ventilation or suppression, which allowed researchers to develop science-based recommendations related to the specific components of fireground operations studied in relatively controlled conditions. The current project went beyond earlier research by conducting twenty experiments in eight acquired, single-family residential structures and that combined fireground tactics to quantify the impact of coordination between ventilation and suppression actions. This experimental series included second-story bedroom fires (14 experiments) and first-floor kitchen fires (6 experiments). The main control variables studied included the position of initial application of water, the ventilation method, and the timing of ventilation relative to water application. The ventilation tactics examined in these experiments included horizontal, vertical, positive pressure, and hydraulic ventilation, while the suppression tactics included both interior water application and initial exterior water application followed by interior water application. While some elements of the experiments (e.g. structure floor plan and weather) resulted in increased variability, the lessons learned highlighted the importance of having a systematic approach to the implementation of tactics. Most importantly, there was no meaningful increase in temperature outside of fire rooms when ventilation tactics were executed in coordination with (shortly after or shortly before) the onset of suppression. The effectiveness of suppression actions in extinguishing the fire were dependent on the ability of those actions to 1) cool surfaces in the fire room and 2) wet unburned fuel. Exterior suppression actions on second-floor bedroom fires resulted in a decrease in temperatures throughout the second floor, followed by regrowth prior to final suppression through interior streams. When exterior suppression was performed on first-floor kitchen fires, where more complete fuel wetting was possible, regrowth was not observed prior to interior suppression. When surface cooling or fuel wetting are not possible due to the elevation of the fire room, missing ceiling, or obstacles, firefighters should consider alternative means of water distribution to improve the effectiveness of suppression actions from outside the fire room. Suppression actions, whether interior or exterior, generally resulted in a decrease in temperatures and gas concentrations at locations where occupants may potentially be located. Conditions improved most quickly at locations closest in proximity to the inlet of the flow path established between the front door and the fire room. For this reason, opening an exterior door to gain access should be thought of as an important ventilation action, both in terms of its potential to cause fire growth and its potential to improve conditions for potentially trapped occupants. After effective suppression, structure ventilation operations should similarly be cognizant of gas flows, with the aim of establishing flow throughout all areas where occupants may be located.
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Moorehead, Stewart. Unsettled Topics in Obstacle Detection for Autonomous Agricultural Vehicles. SAE International, December 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4271/epr2021029.

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Agricultural vehicles often drive along the same terrain day after day or year after year. Yet, they still must detect if a moveable object, such as another vehicle or an animal, happens to be on their path or if environmental conditions have caused muddy spots or washouts. Obstacle detection is one of the major missing pieces that can remove humans from highly automated agricultural machines today and enable the autonomous vehicles of the future. Unsettled Topics in Obstacle Detection for Autonomous Agricultural Vehicles examines the challenges of environmental object detection and collision prevention, including air obscurants, holes and soft spots, prior maps, vehicle geometry, standards, and close contact with large objects.
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Shammo, Turkiya, Diana Amin Saleh, and Nassima Khalaf. Displaced Yazidi Women in Iraq: Persecution and Discrimination Based on Gender, Religion, Ethnic Identity and Displacement. Institute of Development Studies, December 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/creid.2022.010.

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This CREID Policy Briefing provides recommendations to address the marginalisation, discrimination and exclusion faced by displaced Yazidi women in Iraq. Throughout the history of their presence in Iraq, the Yazidis have experienced harassment, persecution, killing and displacement. Most recently, they have been exposed to genocide from the Islamic State (ISIS) group after they took control of Sinjar district and the cities of Bahzani and Bashiqa in the Nineveh Plain in 2014, destroying Yazidi homes, schools, businesses and places of worship. Yazidi people were killed or forced to convert to Islam. Over 6,000 were kidnapped, including over 3,500 women and girls, many of whom were forced into sexual slavery. Men and boys were murdered or forced to become soldiers. Any remaining citizens were displaced. Seven years later, more than 2,000 Yazidi women and children were still missing or in captivity, more than 100,000 Yazidis had migrated abroad, and over 200,000 Yazidi people were still displaced, living in camps.
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Osadchyi, Volodymyr, Olesya Zavaliy, Liudmyla Palamarchuk, Oleg Skrynyk, Valeriy Osypov, Dmytro Oshurok, and Vladyslav Sidenko. Ukrainian gridded monthly air temperature (min, max, mean) and atmospheric precipitation data (1946-2020). Ukrainian Hydrometeorological Institute (UHMI), July 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.15407/uhmi.report.02.

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The dataset contains long gridded time series of monthly minimum, maximum and mean air temperature and atmospheric precipitation for Ukraine, covering the period of 1946-2020. The dataset was built through the thorough historical climate data processing, which included all mandatory steps: data rescue/digitization of missing values and/or periods in station time series from paper sources, their quality control and homogenization, and interpolation on 0.1x0.1 grid. The station data comprised monthly values of 178 stations for air temperature (for each of three parameters) and 224 stations for atmospheric precipitation. The quality assurance and homogenization were performed by means of the widely used homogenization software HOMER (HOMogEnization in R), while the well-known interpolation software MISH (Meteorological Interpolation based on Surface Homogenized data basis) was used to perform the gridding.
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Doo, Johnny. The Use of eVTOL Aircraft for First Responder, Police, and Medical Transport Applications. 400 Commonwealth Drive, Warrendale, PA, United States: SAE International, September 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4271/epr2023020.

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<div class="section abstract"><div class="htmlview paragraph">Advancements in electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) aircraft have generated significant interest within and beyond the traditional aviation industry. One particularly promising application involves on-demand, rapid-response use cases to broaden first responders, police, and medical transport mission capabilities. With the dynamic and varying public service operations, eVTOL aircraft can offer potentially cost-effective aerial mobility components to the overall solution, including significant lifesaving benefits.</div><div class="htmlview paragraph"><b>Multi-agent Collaborative Perception for Autonomous Driving: Unsettled Aspects</b> discusses the challenges need to be addressed before identified capabilities and benefits can be realized at scale: <ul class="list disc"><li class="list-item"><div class="htmlview paragraph">Mission-specific eVTOL vehicle development </div></li><li class="list-item"><div class="htmlview paragraph">Operator- and patient-specific accommodations</div></li><li class="list-item"><div class="htmlview paragraph">Detect-and-avoid capabilities in complex and challenging operating environments</div></li><li class="list-item"><div class="htmlview paragraph">Autonomous and artificial intelligence-enhanced mission capabilities</div></li><li class="list-item"><div class="htmlview paragraph">Home-base charging systems for battery power platforms</div></li><li class="list-item"><div class="htmlview paragraph">Simplified operator and support training</div></li><li class="list-item"><div class="htmlview paragraph"> Vehicle/fleet maintenance and support</div></li><li class="list-item"><div class="htmlview paragraph">Acceptance and participation from stakeholder services, local and state-level leadership, field operators, and support team members</div></li></ul></div><div class="htmlview paragraph"><a href="https://www.sae.org/publications/edge-research-reports" target="_blank">Click here to access the full SAE EDGE</a><sup>TM</sup><a href="https://www.sae.org/publications/edge-research-reports" target="_blank"> Research Report portfolio.</a></div></div>
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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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